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The early development of Sheaffer’s Fineline utility pencils, “in working togs,” is well-documented in Sheaffer’s catalogs. Recently, I found a better home for my crowded Sheaffer archive at an antique mall up in Amish County:
The bulk of my Sheaffer collection formerly resided in that short, gray printer’s cabinet - the move to the larger cabinet on the right gave me a long-overdue opportunity to stretch things out a little bit and reorganize things; time to show how things developed.
Sheaffer’s utility pencil program began in 1936 with the Model LL, a rear-drive pencil with a one-piece barrel. It was cataloged only in black in 1936 and 1937, and in its final year of production, 1938, it was joined by the Model MM, in “grey pearl” (see Volume 5, page 237):
The LL and MM models appear in the 1938 catalog on a page of “Sheaffer’s Regular Pencils.” Another page in the 1938 catalog passes the torch to Sheaffer’s new breed of utility pencils, using “Fineline” .9mm leads supplied by the Joseph Dixon Crucible Company. The “Working Togs” model is shown at the bottom of the page, and the text indicates it was available only in black as Model LE:
Note that Sheaffer’s new model is the only one on this page fitted with a throwback clip, the flat-ball “Sheaffer’s” clip found on Sheaffer’s regular line earlier in the 1930s. Note also a thin metal band separating the top piece from the barrel, a carryover from the earlier MM and LL pencils.
The fact that these were offered only in black for 1938 probably explains why so many more of these are found in that color than any other:
I theorize that all four of these are from 1938, because they also have the ordinary “Sheaffer’s” imprints, another carryover from the LL and MM line:
At the time, “Fineline” was a feature offered by Sheaffer, a slick mechanism for a thinner lead. Sheaffer would soon establish a dedicated “Fineline Division” to manufacture lower-priced and utility pencils. For the 1939 catalog, only “Working Togs” models appear on the “Fineline” page:
Sheaffer’s 1939 catalog indicates that these pencils were now offered in new colors – in addition to the black LE, there were also red, brown, green and blue pencils, somewhat unimaginatively designated RE, BE, GE and . . . well, since brown already took BE the blue was model TE.
No, I haven’t seen a red one yet. A pattern emerges from this small sampling: the colored ones have a “Fineline” imprint on the side opposite from the clip, as opposed to a “Sheaffer’s” imprint below it:
That leads me to believe that black examples, identical to those pictured earlier, were made in 1939 or 1940 when they are found with this Fineline imprint:
Maybe . . . that green example is the exception to the rule, sporting what otherwise appears to be a 1938 imprint.
In 1940, Sheaffer’s catalog illustrates “pearl center” pencils for the first time; note, however, that the pencils illustrated abandon the flat ball clip in favor of a more streamlined version:
At some point Sheaffer decided green should look nicer than the mousy, pea-green in use since 1939. As for the red, white and blue example at bottom, of course those can be “made” by mismatching parts, but “red, white and blue” was specifically cataloged by Sheaffer in 1941, as model IRTE (I for pearl center, R for red, and T – since brown already hogged the letter B – stood for blue) along with one other interesting innovation in the series:
In the lower corner of the 1941 Sheaffer catalog page, illustrating the series, customers were provided the option to have a Sheaffer working togs pencil in either twist (“Turn Type”) or button-activated repeater (“Push Type”). Repeaters were cataloged in solid colors only, given the suffix “J” to the model name (so a black twist pencil was model LE, but a “clicker push type” was LJ).
Brown and blue “clicker push type” pencils have eluded me thus far, but the examples I have provide some good insights:
Then, that little scuffle known as World War II came along. Sheaffer, along with most other American industries, was called upon to help with the war effort, and product development screeched to a halt. The next Sheaffer catalog in the Pen Collectors of America’s online library is from 1951, and by that time Sheaffer’s Fineline Division was a freestanding enterprise – none of the company’s utility models appear in the catalog. Matt McColm did find an advertisement for a pearl center pencil in The Kiowa (Kansas) News on October 1, 1947:
If the artwork is accurate, the Sheaffer clip was still in use, but it's narrower, like the regular Sheaffer lines were from the era. The two-tone tip had been adopted, the barrel is only partly ribbed, and the metal ring at the top is gone – exactly like the black pearl center pencil shown above.
In February, 1948, Sheaffer’s company magazine, Sheaffer Review, illustrated the Fineline Division’s new budget fountain pens and pencils, which sported clips imprinted with a script “Fineline” rather than the Sheaffer name. A Sheaffer Fineline brochure in the Pen Collectors of America’s online library and dated June 1951 shows that the clip had been adopted on the Working togs line, as well.
Other clip variations followed, and I illustrated many of them in The Catalogue. Some lazy Sunday, I’ll try to better refine when these variations were introduced, but for now I’ll leave you with a couple weird variations that don’t fit the norm.
The black example turned up at the Baltimore Show a few years ago. It is a “turn type” with a Fineline imprint and fully ribbed lower barrel, suggesting production in 1939 or later. The other, with a fully ribbed lower barrel and a chrome-plated ball clip – something not seen anywhere in the working togs series – is explained by its imprint.
Made in Canada.
As for the black one, I don’t know . . . that finished cap at the top of the clip rather than an exposed eraser is all that is different about it, so I’m unsure whether it’s factory or whether someone had a bit of fun modifying one. Until some documentation surfaces to explain it, I just enjoy it as a curiosity.
2 comments:
A really enjoyable read- I’m late to the game, but after purchasing and reading the Leadhead Pencil Blog books- I’m collecting more Sheaffer Fineline Pen & Pencil knowledge!
i recently discovered a modern replacement eraser that fits the
Tog!
i gave 2 of these to a co-worker as a christmas gift and,
of course, the erasers were rock hard. eraser toppers look gaudy,
to say the least.
by accident i found this -
Staedtler Mars Plastic Eraser Refillable Holder,
Includes Eraser (52850BK)
if you take the eraser part out of this pen-shaped eraser, it can
be cut down to size and fits perfectly! the old erasers left dried
chunks that had to be cleaned, and my solution was to use my
gun cleaning kit's bronze bore brushes to remove these chunks.
just thought this might be useful,
they don't make 'em like they used to...
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