VINTAGE J.K. "Awaiting the Call" 750+ pc Wooden Puzzle (1940's?) RARE!!!

This beautiful wooden puzzle hails from the late 1940's (see historical text below)--a palpable opportunity to interact in a hands-on way with puzzle history. 

PLEASE NOTE: I purchased this among a set of puzzles from the estate sale of a Bay Area billionaire. I have not assembled the puzzle so I do not know if it is complete. That said, the picture on the cover does have writing to suggest that there are four pieces missing. The puzzle is a 750-piece puzzle. I hand-counted 748. I have priced the puzzle accordingly. 

The pieces that are there are solid, clean, and fill the box fully, safely stored in a ziplock bag. The box itself has a few damage spots, as you might expect from a nearly 80-year-old box. 

Shipping is determined just by what it costs me to send from CA. Check out my other listings for more puzzles and games (including others of this set)--if you win more than one auction, I'm happy to offer a discount on shipping. 

Or even better if you're in the SF Bay Area: come pick the puzzle up in person and you won't have to pay any shipping!

Please check out my 100% positive feedback rating. It's comforting to buy from someone you can trust. : )


Puzzles cut by Joseph K. Straus Products Corp

Brooklyn, NY (1930s to 1970s)

Joseph Straus set up his own puzzle business along with his wife, in Brooklyn, NY in 1933. The Company became known for its basic no-frills puzzles sold at affordable prices. They often used stack cutting to keep costs down with a standard strip-cut pattern without any color line cutting or figure pieces. Their earliest puzzles were packaged in plain orange/red boxes with no picture but by the late '40s they were using plain blue, tan or mottled boxes with a small guide picture on the cover. After incorporating in 1957 they adopted a blue and white box with a puzzle design on the cover and a guide picture on the bottom of the box. In addition to their standard puzzles, they produced more elaborate lines such as sculptured puzzles cut in 2 layers; outline puzzles with much of the background cut away; round, triangle, and other shaped puzzles; a quality line called Regal with better plywood, cutting and some figure pieces; and even limited edition puzzles such as the Lindbergh Tapistry puzzle distributed by American Heritage displayed below. They also sold puzzles under the F.A.O. Schwartz label. The firm closed in 1974 when the last family member retired. For over 30 years they were a prolific producer of puzzles, especially after WW II. For more information on Straus puzzles, see ch. 2 of Anne Williams' book which is the source of the above information: "Jigsaw Puzzles: An Illustrated History and Price Guide", Wallace-Homestead Book Company, Radnor, PA (1990).