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That accommodation clip perfectly matches a typical Brown & Bigelow clip, but it’s topped with cutouts in the shape of “BB”:
In fact, I was so taken with this cool little clip that I looked no further before bidding. When it arrived, I was pleasantly surprised to see there was more to it:
That top could only signify another example of “Granddaddy of Bug,” and this one even has a little arrow on the cap to show which way to turn it in order to release it:
This one has the same imprint found on the other example: “REDIPOINT / Pat. Pdg. B&B St. Paul,” but it also says something else:
“Providence Art Metal Co. / Edgar E. Craddock, Gen. Mgr.” Now stop for a second and think about that: “Art Metal” suggests a company that makes all sorts of metal “specialties,” including mechanical pencils. Ronson Penciliters, for example, were made by the Aronson’s “Art Metal Works.” As I detailed in “Granddaddy of Bug” recently, these repeating pencils were made at the very dawn of Brown & Bigelow’s foray into mechanical pencils – before these were made, the company only made advertising calendars and such.
Let's weigh the two possibilities this pencil suggests. The first is that a Minnesota advertising calendar company suddenly filed patent applications for a new mechanical pencil, invested a significant amount of capital needed for large-scale production of the pencils, and sold some of the very first ones the company made to an art metal company which was already set up to make these pencils themselves. That’s like finding a Sheaffer pearlie with an advertisement for Parker on the side. If that’s what happened, old man Bigelow was truly the greatest salesman in history, literally selling ice cream to eskimoes.
The second possibility is that Brown & Bigelow had the design but hired out the manufacture of a new and unproven product line to a fabricating shop. No contest - this second scenario has to be right. Even better, I now suspect that the likely manufacturer was some outfit called the “Providence Art Metal Company,” about which I have been able to find absolutely nothing.
Maybe the Providence Art Metal Company was a standalone concern. Maybe it was set up by Brown & Bigelow as a separate company to test the waters in the mechanical pencil field, quickly folded back into B&B when the pencils were commercially successful.
And to think I only bought the damned thing because I liked the clip!
I’ve been scouring the web for details regarding both Wahl Eversharps and Redipoint pencils, and your blog seems to be the main source for primary source documentation. This has been incredibly helpful for narrowing down dates. It has also been eye opening regarding the mind blowing variety of pencils and manufacturers of the era. Thank you for all this.
ReplyDeleteI recently purchased a similar flared top, “bug” storage, nickel plated pencil marked “Redipoint PAT.PDG.B.&B.St.Paul”. Where yours is marked Providence Art Metal, mine is stamped ‘THE HOLT MANUFACTURING COMPANY SPOKANE, WASHINGTON “CATERPILLAR” TRACTORS, HARVESTERS’(3 lines of text).
I bring this up because I respectfully disagree with the conjecture that B&B were outsourcing the pencil manufacturing to Providence. “Art metals” could mean anything from jewelry quality pieces to architectural black ironwork and beyond. Providence Art Metals does not seem to exist anymore, but Providence, RI is home to Cathedral Art Metals, which does seem to produce these more architectural items. The conjecture is entertaining, and did inspire me to attempt to confirm whether it might be true. But without more evidence, it seems the more reasonable assumption would be that PMA simply commissioned advertising pencils from B&B—admittedly not nearly as exciting.
Thank you for all the information you have provided here. Without it, I would have no frame of reference or knowledge of what I have collected.