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Old 11-12-2020, 09:23 AM
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Default Did Spalding Sell Other Companies' Products?

For those with Spalding catalogs from the teens through the 30s, do you know if Spalding sold products made by other companies in addition to Spalding goods? Or did they sell 100% Spalding products?

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Old 11-12-2020, 11:48 AM
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In the early teens Spalding advertised only their own products in their guides. In the 1930s, both Reach and Spalding advertised each other’s products in their guides.
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Old 11-12-2020, 09:51 PM
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Thanks!
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Old 11-13-2020, 04:20 AM
Huysmans Huysmans is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by horzverti View Post
In the early teens Spalding advertised only their own products in their guides. In the 1930s, both Reach and Spalding advertised each other’s products in their guides.
Despite the Reach name living-on and being continuously used, the company was purchased by Spalding around 1890. This is why you see both names utilized on products found in Spalding guides.
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Old 11-13-2020, 08:13 AM
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The history of manufacturers can get quite tangled. As a cap collector, I see that Spalding caps practically disappear around 1950 when McAuliffe becomes a big player in the game. It's my understanding that some sort of partnership between Tim McAullffe and the Leslie Company included taking over Spalding's cap business. Yet I have a late 50s Spalding White Sox gamer, and a mid 60s Spalding Astros cap that's probably a salesman sample. You see the same sort of relationship between Goldsmith and MacGregor.
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Old 11-13-2020, 10:42 AM
steve B steve B is offline
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And there's the question of what Spalding stuff was.
For a while they sold bicycles, branded Spalding.
The chances they actually made their own are small compared to them being simply being from one of the big manufacturers, all of them branded bikes for other companies.

I would think that some other products were produced for Spalding by someone else. And that some smaller brands of some items were actually produced by Spalding.
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Old 11-13-2020, 03:53 PM
bigfanNY bigfanNY is offline
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Well Sports geek that I am I know a litte bit about Spaulding bikes. They did in fact make their own bikes ,very well made. They had a contract with the US army to make bikes for troops. The 43rd Mountain more famously know as Buffalo Soldiers were tasked with testing them and determining the value bikes would have in combat. This would be around the time of WW1.
I looked them up because I have a very old Spaulding pin with a bike wheel background.
Hope this helps.
J
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