This article has been edited and included in The Leadhead's Pencil Blog Volume 5; copies are available print on demand through Amazon here, and I offer an ebook version in pdf format at the Legendary Lead Company here.
If you don't want the book but you enjoy this article, please consider supporting the Blog project here.
The top one in that first picture I had to keep just fort the size of it - large magic pencils are a commanding sight, and they don’t come around all that often. The imprint on the extender did my heart good to see, too:
That F in a shield signifieds Fairchild & Co., and I’ve got a soft spot in my heart for all things Fairchild due in part to the fact that my friend David Nishimura wrote a substantial piece of Fairchild which appeared in the last issue of the Pennant I edited (“Leroy W. Fairchild: The Little-Known History of a Well-Known Company,” Winter, 2016).
In the article, David indicates that after the shuttering of Leroy W. Fairchild’s operations in 1896 and subsequent takeover of the firm’s assets by a firm established by his son, Leroy C. Fairchild, another of Fairchild’s sons, Harry P. Fairchild, established a firm with Ephraim S. Johnson, Jr. (The son of another famous New York maker, Ephraim Johnson) in October, 1898. The firm, Fairchild & Johnson, used a hallmark of a F and a J inside a shield separated by a diagonal line.
The center pencil from that first picture has the Fairchild & Johnson mark:
After Ephraim apparently got bored with the enterprise and left to pursue other interests in 1905, the company name was changed to Fairchild & Co., and the J was deleted from the shield.
The lower pencil is unusual since it’s hexagonal - and like the first pencil, it has the Fairchild & Co. hallmark:
Then there was this other pencil in Fingerman’s stash, one that I just couldn’t bear to let slip away:
Such an interesting shape certainly calls to mind Fairchild & Johnson. Unfortunately, the hallmark isn’t very clear:
It looks like it might be the top of an F stamped on there, but without any shield around it. Or maybe it’s something else . . .
I don't think the twist-pattern pencil is Fairchild. The sterling imprint with serifs isn't typical for later Fairchild items, more for Aikin Lambert, Mabie Todd, and others. I do believe that I've seen this particular design clearly marked as ALC.
ReplyDelete