1928 Gallmeyer & Livingston Table Saw

December 24, 2006 – 11:45 am

Gallmeyer & Livingston Co. 12″ Table saw
‘Union’ No. 1276 (~1928)
I found this baby in a scrap pile, patiently waiting to be cut up and melted down into who -knows-what. It is mostly complete and has been retrofitted with pillowblocks and a belt drive in place of the original direct-drive motor. Thankfully the original motor mount is intact.

Gallmeyer & Livingston Table Saw Ad 1928
Saw as shown in the 1928 Catalogue.

I am looking for a miter guage for it.

All of G&H’s machines have a signature built-in popup caster system that lets you steer with the third caster.

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Cabinet with table taken off

Direct-drive motor mount

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Name Plate

UPDATE
I’ve sold this machine.

  1. 3 Responses to “1928 Gallmeyer & Livingston Table Saw”

  2. I have a similar machine in my woodshop at the school where I teach, and have been curious to learn more about it. Unfortunately, an hour spent Googling around hasn’t turned up anything better than your article. Mine says “Union” on it, and has a model number 106926. It has a planer bed that can be coupled to the motor when it is disconnected from the saw blade (which must be lowered in order to couple the plane). I’d guess the machine dates back to the 1940s, and probably hasn’t been touched in the 25 years the teacher before me was at the job, and maybe even longer, before her. It runs like a charm for the most part, except I can’t seem to keep the planer coupled for more than a short pass over a board. It may need an adjustment, but I have no papers for the machine, so I don’t want to fiddle with it too much. Got any ideas where I might find even a photocopy of the manual that surely came with the original?

    By Lidia Fouto on Jan 19, 2008

  3. Lidia,

    Most of the machines from this era didn’t come with a manual. You can find scans of the G&L catalogues over at the owwm.com site though.

    By Luke on Dec 18, 2008

  4. I have one of these, outfitted with a Bess. type fence. It has the direct drive 3 hp motor. I use it daily, with a 14″ rip blade. Someone gave it to me to remove it from an old school that was going to be torn down. I do not use the tilt table anymore. I have tried it and it works very well. the board dort of rests on the fence and slides over the blade.

    By Tom Bennett on Mar 29, 2009

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