Showing posts with label Spencerian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spencerian. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Duh

This article has been edited and included in The Leadhead's Pencil Blog Volume 4; 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.

It’s hard now not to add the word “duh” to the following sentence: “This pencil, marked Spencerian, was made by Conklin.”


That’s the picture from page 150 of The Catalogue, written at a time when I thought “Spencerian” was a reference to the handwriting method in the generic sense, rather than to the Spencerian Pen Company, although I did note there was a “Spencerian Pen Company” in New York.  Mea culpa . . . all I can say is that if people waited until they knew everything to write a book, nobody would ever write a book.

Four years later, I’ve read Alfonso Mur’s book, The Conklin Legacy, and I’ve taken a few minutes to pose my Spencerian next to two of the Conklin Symetrik pencils pictured on page 34 of The Catalogue:


Double duh, huh? Notice that the celluloid on the Conklins is a solid piece of plastic which has been drilled, while the Spencerian shows those barbershop-pole seams that are a dead giveaway that the celluloid has been wrapped around a mandrel.  As for the clip, it matches pens from The Spencerian Pen Company’s 250 series, with “Accountants’ Extra Fine Points” according to the brochure published by Alfonso in his book.




But what about Spencerian’s 500 series, the I-N-K-S-E-E model?  Was there a matching “L-E-A-D-S-E-E” pencil for it?  If there is, I haven’t run across one yet.  But I have seen that clip before:


The upper two examples are marked “L.T. Waterbury,” and I posted an article a few months ago with everything I could find on the company . . . suggesting, at the end, that I suspected the L.T. Waterbury Co. was another of Joseph Starr’s shell operations (http://leadheadpencils.blogspot.com/2015/01/one-heckuva-clip.html).


Now it’s your turn to say “duh.”  The Starr Pen Company acquired what was left of Conklin in 1941 as the company began its downward spiral into oblivion.  With the same clip turning up on Spencerians and Waterburys, Since Waterbury pens were advertised in 1938 and defunct by 1941, when Starr acquired Conklin, I’m just going to put this out there right now as a hypothesis:

L.T. Waterbury’s pens and pencils, as bad as they were, were made by Conklin.  We can’t blame this one on Joseph Starr.

And there’s another little bit of bad news for those who think the Conklin Pen Company walked on water until that nasty Joe Starr ruined things.  Did you notice the name on the third pencil?


Pencils, pens and combos marked “Packard” are among the ugliest and worst quality writing instruments ever made.  On page 110 of The Catalogue, I said only “$3-5" because if you can’t say anything nice, don’t say anything at all.

But this one example has that same Spencerian-styled clip, although the detail on it isn’t quite as pronounced as it is on the Waterburys.  That raises the question: when were the Packard pens and pencils made?


Well folks, the Packard Pen Company of St. Paul, Minnesota was advertising a sackless, vacuum-filled fountain pen in 1936, when the Packard was already "famous," at the same time Conklin was making a very similar pen for The Spencerian Pen Company.

So I’m going to put something else out there, because this is where all the evidence is pointing.  The Starr Pen Company was founded in 1935, the same year Conklin apparently started making Spencerian pens.  Collectors’ lore is that Conklin was sold to a Chicago syndicate in 1938, after which quality began to slip a little, then sold again to Starr Pen Company in 1941, which immediately tarnished the once-proud company’s reputation by discontinuing the last quality products Conklin Toledo made and starting the production of . . . for lack of a better word . . . crap.

The evidence strongly suggests that Conklin didn’t start making crap in 1941 when Starr acquired it – Conklin continued making the same crap it had been making since 1935 for a number of different companies, including at least L.T. Waterbury and Packard.

And once those first two dominoes fall, there’s dozens of other third-tier, gawd-awful names lined up right behind these two.   I think we will find in the years to come that while Conklin fought valiantly to survive the Great Depression making quality writing instruments, it was quietly doing whatever it could to stave off its inevitable demise.  I believe Conklin may have manufactured many if not most of the simply awful third-tier brands in the years leading up to the outbreak of the Second World War.  If that’s true, it would make sense that the company did so very quietly, since having such lousy products associated with Conklin would damage the company’s reputation.

Oooh.  That pains me as much to say as it pains you to hear.

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Revealed At Last

This article has been edited and included in The Leadhead's Pencil Blog Volume 4; 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.

One of my self-imposed and frequently ignored rules in collecting mechanical pencils is that it has to be marked, unless it is either (1) directly attributable to a manufacturer, or (2) freakishly awesome.  When I picked this one up, no question it fit in the freakishly awesome department:


I bought this pencil for the one and only reason you would buy this pencil.


The rest of the pencil is pretty awful, but that clip is special in two ways: first, how fun is it that a pencil has a quill pen for a clip?  And second . . . well, just look at it!

And so, for several years, this one has enjoyed a comfortable retirement in the freakishly awesome but unmarked pencil section at the museum, until I picked up a copy of Alfonso Mur’s outstanding book, The Conklin Legacy.  There, on pages 236, was all the information I needed to move this one over to the Conklin section.

Well, not directly the Conklin section . . .


Thanks to Alfonso for allowing me to use this picture.  The pencil with a quill pen for a clip was made by Conklin for The Spencerian Pen Company in New York, a company better known for its steel dip pen nibs.  According to this 1935 brochure, the company offered three product lines, with this clip distinguishing Spencerian’s 200 series of “Easy Quill Action” pens . . . and apparently, its pencils, too.

And there are two other clip styles shown in this brochure (and lots of pictures of the pens that used them).  More on the other two tomorrow . . .