Showing posts with label Riedell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Riedell. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 3, 2025

The Riedell Family Reunion

The Riedell Repeating Pencils are what I refer to as one of those “cult” brands. You either like them for their weirdness, their unusual appearance, and their history, or you don’t like them because of their weirdness, their unusual appearance, and . . . well, if you don’t like history, you are reading the wrong blog.

This was the image I had taken of the full length Riedells with clips in my collection back in back in October, 2021.


I thought I’d be waiting for some time to circle back around to the Riedell, since all that new example added was another pretty color. I buy them whenever I find them hoping to glean some new information from these, but that new addition had the same imprint they all have: “Riedell Corp. N.Y. U.S.A. Pat. Pend’g.”


The patent which was pending was that of Hugo Hasselquist, best known as the co-inventor of the military clip used on metal and hard rubber Eversharp pencils. He was enticed away from Wahl by Charles Keeran to briefly join Autopoint, then filed a patent application for what would become the Riedell on June 5, 1922. The patent examiners apparently didn’t know what to make of it, because it took seven years for the patent to finally issue as number 1,720,417 on July 9, 1929:



While these don’t look too unconventional on the outside, with the exception of those neat faceted caps, on the inside they look like something a character in Whoville might wield in a Dr. Seuss book:


These images are from the articles I wrote about the Riedell in 2014; unfortunately, those articles were destroyed in the great Googlef*** of 2018, in which images were wiped from some 700 articles here. The articles do live on in the print version, starting with “An Entirely New Take On the Riedell” (October 9, 2014: Volume 3, page 41).

That first article covered the history of the brand as well as I knew it, but it proved only to be the setup for “The Email From March,” which ran the following day (October 10, 2014: Volume 3, page 43). Bob Leslie, the grandson of Charles Martin Riedell, the New Jersey CPA for whom the pencil was named, had stumbled across my blog. After a few emails back and forth, he shared with me some pictures that his sister Lynn Riedell had of some Riedell stuff that had been kept in the family for all these years:


Including a picture of a tube of Riedell pencil leads with a new bit of information – the “thread that unknits the whole sweater,” I called it. The leads provided the company’s address in New York as well as a link to Demley, Inc., a New York specialties dealer and cigarette lighter manufacturer.


(Editor’s note: mea culpa . . . I don’t know where I got the idea that Lynn was Bob’s brother rather than his sister, and I mistakenly referred to Lynn as a “he.” If you have the book, break out the whiteout and fix that one for me.)

I revisited the Riedell in “Stars of the Show” (May 25, 2020: Volume 6, page 128), mostly to introduce a few new varieties to the collection, partly to republish some images that were destroyed from those earlier articles, and also to discuss Hasselquist’s design patent number 66,797, which he applied for around the time his utility patents were issued but which he received much more quickly, on March 17, 1925.

The last time I talked about these pencils, I included a Riedell in “The King” (August 9, 2021: Volume 7, page 325), an article which delved into the factors that make these old pencils desirable to collectors and in which I crowned what I consider the King of all mechanical pencils. The Riedell didn’t win, but I included it in a discussion of how design ingenuity enhances desirability for collectors.

And with that, things went quiet for a few years . . . until everything burst open again at once, starting with a couple that turned up at the 2025 Chicago show this May. A couple more surfaced in Bob Speerbrecher’s online auctions in late May (many of you know him as “Speerbob”). After I scooped up all the ones Speerbob offered, he brought a few more with him to the Raleigh Show in June. 

The universe was talking to me.


It was the first time I’d seen a full-sized Riedell in jade, and here’s three of them popping up within a month. The price tags add a bit of context, too:


As extraordinary as it was for six of these rare birds to turn up within a month, a couple new variations aren’t what has me circling back around. By chance, after the Raleigh show I received another email from Bob Leslie (Riedell’s grandson). He and his wife would be passing through Ohio from Virginia on the way to a train show in Michigan, and he wondered . . . could he stop by and see the collection? 

Of course, I said, and on July 11 the Leslies stopped by for an evening. I expected they would just want to see the Riedells, but Bob is a man after my own heart: he wanted to see everything, and those who have toured the museum know that is quite a feat to see everything in a day or a week, maybe a month to do it properly.

Bob brought some vintage pencils that he wanted to ask about - I fitted each of them with a new piece of lead so he could write with them, and he was delighted to learn that one of them had a stanhope viewer with a picture of the Statue of Liberty.

Bob didn’t come empty handed: he brought something he knew that I would appreciate, which would trigger me to write this article:


There is a family photo of our man Charles Martin Riedell, finally putting a face on the man behind these wonderful pencils. At the end of our visit I also had the chance to have a photo with the man behind the photo of the man:




Monday, May 25, 2020

Stars of the Show

This article has been edited and included in The Leadhead's Pencil Blog Volume 6, now on sale at The Legendary Lead Company.  I have just a few hard copies left of the first printing, available here, and an ebook version in pdf format is available for download here.

If you don't want the book but you enjoy this article, please consider supporting the Blog project here.

A while back I posted pictures of a large lot of pencils I had plucked from the garden of online shopping:


Offhand, I had mentioned that two items in this mess of mostly junk would pay for the whole party, at least as far as I was concerned.  After all, you might have spotted in this mess two unusual looking pencils:


Those gawky looking tops and long metal noses are dead giveaways that these are Riedells, among the most interesting and goofy pencils ever made:


The Riedell is listed in The Catalogue, and the picture on page 126 says it all about how weird these pencils were:


And then, as if on cue and arriving just in the nick of time to include in this article . . . these two examples also turned up:


A while back I posted a couple articles detailing the full history of the Riedell Corporation and its quirky accountant-turned-pencil-tycoon, Charles M. Riedell (The Leadhead’s Pencil Blog Volume 3, page 41-46).  Thanks to the Riedell family, I had a fairly good idea of the extent of the known universe of Riedell pencils after Lynn Riedell forwarded me pictures of the sales sample cases he had inherited:


Over the years I’ve managed to find examples of most of what is shown in these cases, including the full sized models in six colors and two trim levels (the teal and bronze marble was the first example I found, but there wasn’t one in the Riedell family archive).


The Riedell family has several examples with price bands - with these latest two additions, I've got three, designating that the base model with nickel plated trim was $2.50, gold filled trim was $3.50 and gold filled trim in fancy colors sold for a whopping $5.00:



Ringtops have proven more difficult to come by. I’ve only found three varieties:


As detailed in my previous articles, the Riedell was named for and marketed by Charles Riedell beginning in late 1928, but it was invented by Hugo Hasselquist, best known among pencil guys as the inventor of Wahl’s “military clip” used on metal pencils.

In A Century of Autopoint, I documented Hasselquist’s departure from Wahl to join Charles Keeran with his new business venture, and Hasselquist became the first vice president of the newly formed Autopoint Pencil Company in 1920 (page 16).   The first incarnation of Autopoint quickly ran into financial difficulty, and Hasselquist disappears from the slate of officers at Autopoint when the new leadership team was elected in April, 1921.  I haven’t been able to trace his movements after then; by June 5, 1922, when he filed the patent application for what would become the Riedell, it appears he was on his own living in Chicago - the patent was not assigned to anyone:



It would be more than seven years for Hasselquist’s patent to be granted, on July 9, 1929.  If I ever found a Riedell with that patent date on it, I’d believe they were produced for more than just a few months.  But I’ve never seen one with the date - all of the examples I found indicate that the patent was still pending:


There was one patent for the Riedell which had been issued by the time the first pencils were marketed in late 1928:  Hasselquist also secured a design patent for that distinctive faceted cap, which applied for around the same time he applied for the utility patent for the Riedell.  However, his design patent (number 66,797) was issued much more quickly – on St. Patrick’s Day, 1925.


Legitimately, Riedell pencils could have been stamped with this patent date when they were introduced in late 1928; why they weren’t is a mystery to me, since both the utility and design patents were held by Hasselquist.  That’s the thing about these research projects – I knew I wasn’t quite finished writing about these pencils in 2014, and although I’ve added a few more details in 2020, I know this story isn’t complete - yet.

I just keeping tugging on the loose strings thinking maybe one of these days the rest of the sweater will be unknitted.

Friday, October 10, 2014

The Email from March

Note:  this is part two of a series.  Part one is found at http://leadheadpencils.blogspot.com/2014/10/an-entirely-new-take-on-riedell.html

Last March, as all the pieces were falling into place with respect to the Riedell Repeating Pencil and I thought I had a pretty good handle on things, I received an email from a guy named Bob Leslie that set me back on my heels. Bob had been doing a bit of genealogy research, and while he was scouting around for whatever he could find concerning the "Riedell" branch of his family tree, he stumbled across my Mechanical Pencil Museum.

Bob doesn’t collect mechanical pencils, but he already knew more about the Riedell than I did. He indicated that his grandfather, Charles Martin Riedell, was a CPA from New Jersey with offices in New York – and that in the late 1920s, he embarked on a little side venture selling the Riedell Repeating Pencil. Even more exciting was that Bob's grandfather had passed down some of the pencils to his family members, several of whom - including Bob - still had them in their possession!

I replied to Bob quick as a jackrabbit and asked him if any of his family members would be willing to share pictures of what they had with me, and Bob said he’d check with his cousins and let me know. Shortly after that, I started receiving pictures from Lynn Riedell, and I was delighted to see that in addition to Riedell pencils, the family also kept this great advertising sign:



Lynn also shared with me pictures of some of the pencils he has – the largest spread of Riedell Repeating Pencils I’ve ever seen, in fact . . .

To learn more, this full article is included in The Leadhead's Pencil Blog Volume 3, available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble and everywhere else you buy books, or you can order a copy signed by yours truly through the Legendary Lead Company HERE.


Thursday, October 9, 2014

An Entirely New Take on the Riedell

Here’s a pair of pencils that turned up at the Ohio Show last November: 


When I find one Riedell at a show, it’s been a great show. When I find two, it’s been twice as great. The green ringtop is an example I’ve admired for years, in the collection of the late Frank Tedesco; I became its successor custodian during the Saturday night auction. The full-sized red in a dealer’s junk box just an hour or so before the end of the show on Sunday – while I wonder how many times I walked right by it over the course of a four-day weekend, I can assure you that I didn’t walk right by it that last time!

The Riedell is one of those brands I’ve always bought no matter how many I’ve got at home - all in the hopes that if I examine them closely enough, I’ll find something imprinted on it to let me know something about their history. Alas . . . no matter how closely I looked, all I could find on these was the same markings I always see:


"Riedell Corp. NY Pat Pend’g." Oh well, I thought . . . at least these two help fill out the family a bit, and it was great to have Frank’s ringtop in the group:


Fortunately, this story does not end here. As I reviewed writing instrument patents one by one in the course of researching American Writing Instrument Patents Volume 2: 1911-1945, I ran across this one, for a repeating pencil that operated, just like the Riedell, by twisting and releasing the nose cone . . .

To learn more, this full article is included in The Leadhead's Pencil Blog Volume 3, available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble and everywhere else you buy books, or you can order a copy signed by yours truly through the Legendary Lead Company HERE.


Saturday, January 19, 2013

Joe and I are on top of these

Joe Nemecek scooped me at the Ohio Show with this find:


To learn more, this full article is included in The Leadhead's Pencil Blog Volume 2, available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble and everywhere else you buy books, or you can order a copy signed by yours truly through the Legendary Lead Company HERE.



Saturday, September 22, 2012

Odd Ducks

The Riedell, as the title of today’s article suggests, is an odd duck. It appears on page 126 of The Catalogue, and in addition to the fact that I’ve never had one in working condition, I can’t figure out how they ever did.

The internal workings look like they were designed by Dr. Seuss – here’s the picture from page 126 showing the tip removed . . .

NOTE:  This article is now included in the print version of The Leadhead's Pencil Blog, available anywhere you buy books, or also from The Legendary Lead Company.

To order, here's the link:  Volume 1 at Legendary Lead Company