At first glance, the object looks like something you might find in a forgotten corner of a garage or displayed behind glass in a small-town museum. Heavy metal framing, wire cages, a strange upright structure, and a badge that reads like it belongs to another era. Most people today would walk past it without a second thought. But this unassuming device is actually an early electric kitchen appliance with a surprisingly important place in everyday household history: a 1920s-era turnover toaster, commonly associated with the Westinghouse Electric Corporation and the Copeman manufacturing line.
Before appliances like this existed, making toast was far more hands-on—and far less consistent. Bread was often toasted over open flames, cast-iron grills, or primitive heating racks. The arrival of early electric toasters in the 1920s marked a major shift during the rapid spread of home electrification across the United States, transforming a simple breakfast task into something faster, cleaner, and more repeatable.
What makes this device stand out is its “turnover” design. Unlike modern pop-up toasters, this model didn’t automatically eject bread when it was done. Instead, it relied on manual operation. Slices of bread were placed into wire cages mounted on a metal frame, positioned near a central heating element. The user would watch the bread carefully as it browned and then physically rotate it using side knobs to toast the other side evenly. The experience was part cooking, part observation, and part timing—very different from the push-and-wait convenience we take for granted today.
So when someone asks, “Do you know what this is?” the answer isn’t just about identifying an old appliance. It’s about recognizing a small but meaningful step in how modern life became what it is today—one slice of bread at a time