Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Must Be a PGF?

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At the Ohio Show last November, I purchased a large collection of pencils from Chicago collector Jim Ryan, who passed away last year.  These two were among them:


I pulled them aside as something that interested me; I couldn’t put my finger on what they were at first, but I knew they were something I didn’t want to let go.  The lines on the barrel are reminiscent of something made by Hicks:


I think that’s what threw me off – if these had the plain smooth barrels I was used to seeing, I like to think it wouldn’t have taken me so long to place what they were:


These are Esterbrook PS pencils, cataloged in 1934.  I wrote about them here in October, 2016 (https://leadheadpencils.blogspot.com/2016/10/the-end-or-beginning.html) and mused about the similarities between the Esterbrook and the Selfeed, a repeating pencil that disappeared just before the PS appeared on the scene. 

I pulled the caps off to check the imprints, and there they were - as good as can be expected, since the imprints were put right where the cap rubs against the top of the barrel.  The lettering on the gold filled example fared a little better:


The sterling one would be tough to make out if you didn’t know what you were supposed to be seeing, but the “brook” part of the imprint is still legible:


A sterling example surfaced a couple of years ago on Fountain Pen Network in this ringed pattern – leading Brian Anderson to comment on the extreme rarity of the Esterbrook PS in general, compounded by the uniqueness of the ringed engine turning.  A gold filled example? I haven’t been able to find any references that they have been documented

In fact, think about it . . . the Esterbrook PS was named for the fact that it was a “Push” (repeating pencil), in sterling . . . PS.  So the only named by which we know to refer to these doesn’t fit what it is.  So what might this have been?  A PGF for Push in gold fill?

Or an SDPGF, for a super deluxe Push pencil in gold fill?

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