Totally understandable (keeping it) and you should! Just write something up about it... have a 'package' of info that can go with it to a future generation or in case you get hit by a bus. That way the history does not die. There were tens of thousands of those toolboxes used in WW2 and beyond. I bet that fewer than a dozen of them have a documented history. Flight jackets? Dime a dozen. Cool pilot stuff? Everywhere. But there were far more mechanics and ground crew than there were aircrew. And because that was boring and they didn't make movies about the mechanics... noone saved anything or documented it. Even though those folks were the backbone of the AAC. Yours has a known history. That makes yours... important.I want to keep it. Grandpa was domestic. Worked for Remington ammunition plant in Salt Lake. Made 30 cal and 50 cal ammo. He lived 1913-2008.
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Keep it... for sure!!! But have a plan to make sure that a treasure stays that way. And some nephew or heir doesn't turn it in to recycling or get $2.00 at a yard sale. Because without its history, it's just junk.
Too much stuff ends up losing its significance... and that is a piece of history for sure!!!
Sirhr