New England pipe box is a reproduction of a 1750 box on display at Strawberry Banke Museum (Portsmouth, NH). Originally used for storing tobacco (in a small drawer) and long-stem pipes. Overall dimensions: 17" tall, 7" wide, 5" deep.
AMERICAN WOODWORKER Sep-Oct 1989 (v.5#5) pg. 31
Roadhouse pipe box. Wall-hung box for clay pipes features a small drawer in the base.
POPULAR WOODWORKING #107 Mar 1999 (v.19#1) pg. 40, Insert
Wall-hung wooden box for holding delicate, long-stemmed items (such as clay pipes or long-handled matches).
WOOD MAGAZINE #36 Aug 1990 (v.7#4) pg. 43
Nathan Hale pipe box. Reproduction of a wall box originally used to hold clay smoking pipes in the open top compartment and tobacco in the single drawer at the base.
WOOD MAGAZINE #130 Feb 2001 (v.18#1) pg. 72
Colonial pipe box. Wall-hung box with a small drawer and deep storage compartments. Patterned after those used in the 18th century to store long, delicate clay pipes.
WOODWORKER'S JOURNAL Jan-Feb 1977 (v.1#1) pg. 15
Correction WOODWORKER'S JOURNAL Mar-Apr 1977 (v.1#2) pg. 16
Colonial pipe box (wall box) is very suitable as a mail holder. Overall dimensions: 20" tall, 7" wide, 4" deep.
WOODWORKER'S JOURNAL Jul-Aug 1984 (v.8#4) pg. 41
Old-time pipe box features dovetails at all four corners of the small drawer. Overall dimensions: 14" tall, 8" wide, 5" deep.
WOODWORKER'S JOURNAL May-Jun 1988 (v.12#3) pg. 42
Fireside match box is an adaptation of an 18th-century pipe box used to hold long-stem clay pipes and loose tobacco. Overall dimensions: 19"x6"x3".
WORKBENCH Jan-Feb 1988 (v.44#1) pg. 63