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McKinnon Small Fry B15 Baseball Mitt

Wolverine Shoe & Tanning Corp.

1976 Woolco Winfield Baseball Glove ad  
1976 Woolco Winfield Baseball Glove ad

1952 Yale Juvenile Baseball and Glove set
1952 Yale Juvenile Baseball and Glove  set

Pennant
(Butler Brothers)

1960 Gambles Baseball Glove ad

Wimberly and Thomas Hardware Co.


 KeyMan Collectibles  NEWSLETTER September 2019  
Lessor Known and In-Store Brand Baseball Gloves
 Steven KeyMan
Steven KeyMan
 - By Steven KeyMan
Founder of Keymancollectibles.com, and a long time collector, Steven KeyMan has more than 30 years of experience in researching, and cataloging information on Baseball Memorabilia. Researching his own personal collection, and helping others find information on their collectibles, the website grew into the largest online resource for baseball memorabilia
 

   Ask Steven: Direct your questions or feedback, about Baseball Memorabilia to Steven KeyMan Steve@keymancollectibles.com You can also Send KeyMan pictures of your personal Memorabilia Display, and get your own Free  Collectors Showcase Room featured on the website..   
 
 As far back as the earliest days of baseball, companies that manufactured general leather goods took advantage of the great demand for baseball gloves. Producing their own brand, it was a way of generating extra income for their business especially during tough times brought on by the Great Depression. Small Sporting stores, hardware, drug, discount, and department stores commonly had privately branded baseball gloves made for them, to help promote their business.

  Established in 1857, the Morrison-Ricker Mfg company of Grinnell, Iowa was most famous for their driving gloves. They manufactured all styles of gloves, in addition to a line of baseball gloves. Athletic goods such as baseball gloves were not their standard production item but were only made in slack times at the factory.

 They had an interest in the sporting goods business and in 1923 Morrison-Ricker merged
with the Lannom Mfg. company from Tennessee. In 1921 George Lannon established the "Worth" trademark for the sporting goods division of Lannom Manufacturing company.

  From 1908 until 1961 Sears, Roebuck & Company sold a wide variety of sporting goods, under the brand name "J. C. Higgins." John Higgins was the manager of the headquarters' office bookkeepers, and consented to Sears use of his name for a new line of sporting goods.

 Since he did not have a middle initial, Sears added the "C." In 1908, the Western Sporting Goods Company (Wilson) began putting J.C. Higgins on baseball gloves sold in Sears catalogs. The J.C. Higgins brand disappeared shortly after Sears introduced the Ted Williams brand of sporting and recreation goods in 1961.

 
Alex Taylor & Co. which at one time was one of the major Sporting Goods store located in New York, N.Y. was established in 1897. The company carried a large line of equipment for a variety of sports that included; basketball, lacrosse, fencing, skiing, golf, tennis, Football & baseball. It is not known when the company went out of business but like most of the independent outlets, they most likely succumbed to the onset of the large chains.

  The Diamond MFG, Co. "Diamond Brand" is the in-store brand for the Shapleigh Hardware Co. St. Louis, Missouri. Founded in 1843, by the early 1900's the Hardware supplier carried a full range of household goods, hardware, guns, and knives with the private brand "Diamond Edge" logo.

In 1901 Saunders Norvell of Simmons Hardware, bought into the company and used the name, Norvell-Shapleigh Hardware. In 1918 the name was changed to Shapleigh Hardware Co. Their catalog included a line of baseball gloves.

 
Founded in 1876 the McKinnon Dash Co. was a manufacturer of dashboards for horse drawn buggies and carriages. The company also manufactured other products such as bicycles, canvas goods and welded chain. In 1927, the McKinnon Dash Co. purchased Bon Tober Sporting Goods, a manufacture of baseball gloves and balls. After 1930 McKinnon began producing a complete line of leather sporting goods, under the "McKinnon" brand name.

 
The "Reliance" brand baseball gloves with the anchor logo were made by the H. Niedecken Company, which was founded in 1847 by Henry Niedecken Sr. in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

 It was a well respected bookbinder and blank-book manufacture that later produced and sold, office supplies, office furniture, stationary, and among other items that included toys, decorative china, "Holiday Novelties" druggists' sundries, and Base Ball Goods. Based on newspaper ads, their baseball equipment, bats, gloves, and mitts, are loosely dated to about 1900-1909.

 
Winfield was a line of Juvenile, toy and discount store quality baseball gloves carried by the "Five-and-Dimes" variety store F. W. Woolworth Company. The brand seems to have been taken from the founder, Frank Winfield Woolworth's middle name.

 The baseball gloves were also part of "Junior Baseball Sets" that also included a baseball & wooden Winfield baseball bat. The Woolco company, founded in 1962 by the Woolworth Company, also carried the Winfield Diamond-Pro line of baseball gloves. Woolco closed in 1983, while the parent company Woolworth, closed in 1997.


 
Incorporated in 1906 the Mortimer Newman Company, a manufacture of golf caps, conducted business as the Moneco Company of New Haven. Yale is the brand name for the Moneco Company, a manufacture of Juvenile sporting goods, that included, punching bags, medicine balls, footballs, soccer balls, boxing gloves, and baseball gloves.

 By the 1940's the Moneco Co. was distributing their athletic equipment, to drug, hardware and discount stores throughout the country.

  Lawlor's Sporting Goods was established in Lincoln, Nebraska, as the Lawlor Cycle Co., in 1896 by Nicholas Lawlor.  Among the earliest product lines sold were Harley Davidson motorcycles. The company later expanded, operating two stores in Lincoln, and two in Omaha.

Following market trends Lawlor's supplied customers with items such as phonographs, records, hardware, household appliances, and always maintained a full line of sporting goods. The Lawlor's brand baseball gloves were manufactured by Hutch Sporting goods. Known models produced in the late '40's early 50's include; No. 100 DiMaggio, and the No. 500 Connie Ryan.

 
Hiawatha was the in-store brand for Gambles department store. The Hiawatha brand name was a Gambles registered trademark filed in 1949, and was used for some of their sporting good products such as outboards, fishing rods, bicycles, baseball bats, and gloves.

The catalog numbers for their baseball gloves started with the prefix 25- followed  by a 4 digit number. The Denkert Sporting Goods Co. made baseball gloves for Gambles, using the Hiawatha brand name.

  Founded in 1880, the Ripon Knitting Works company of Wisconsin manufactured an extensive line of casual footwear, slippers socks, hosiery, gloves and mittens. In 1942 the company won a contract to manufacture mitten shels for the U.S. Army and Navy.

The company also started producing baseball gloves for the Army during the war. After the war in 1946 Ripon issued their first catalog to the Sporting Goods Trade. Models featured in their catalogs issue through 1946, and 1948 include, The No. 10Z - Zipper Heel, No. 42 - ambidextrous baseball glove, and No. 40, raised padding baseball/softball glove.

 
 
  MISCELLANEOUS & STORE BRAND BASEBALL GLOVE INDEX  
  A guide to help identify and date your miscellaneous and lesser known branded baseball gloves. A catalog of private in-store brands of baseball gloves sold by; hardware, drug, discount, and department stores. Samples with links lead to additional company information on baseball glove manufactures, retainers, and wholesale distributors.  
 
 
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  KeyMan Collectibles Forum - A great option for those that "Don't do facebook"  Post Questions and comments relating to Baseball Collectibles and Memorabilia  
 
 
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