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William Schollhorn Company: Antique Bernard Pliers

superautobacs

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Oct 31, 2008
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Vancouver, BC
I recently walked into a local antiques store and found some really unique tools. One such tool was this parallel-jaw plier with a built-in diagonal cutter in an arrangement that I've never seen in modern tools. It had a price tag of $13 and I was being cheap, not wanting to pay any more than $5 for a pair of used pliers. Needless to say, it was an antique and a very unique peice, so I ended up paying $10 for it.

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Just incidentally, I was browsing through a June 1952 Popular Mechanics magazine and I found the same exact pliers, but it was produced by a different name--Sargent. I thought, "what a total rip of the Schollhorn plier!".

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I did some research on the internet and this is what I found out about the original manufacturer and the connection with Sargent:

Directly quoting from AA:
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"The William Schollhorn Company of New Haven, Connecticut was a well-known maker of parallel-jaw pliers and other tools in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The company was incorporated in 1891 and remained active through the first part of the 20th century, and was eventually acquired by the Sargent Company in 1948.

Schollhorn is probably best known for its distinctive parallel-jaw pliers, produced under the numerous patents issued to W.A. Bernard. These pliers featured precisely-formed sheet metal handles with embossed designs, a type of construction that offered lighter weight and lower cost than comparable forged handles. "

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"Fig. 102 shows a pair of Schollhorn "Bernard" 4 Inch parallel-jaw pliers with cutting blades on the side. The pliers are stamped "W. Schollhorn Co." and "New Haven, Conn." around the pivot, with "Made in U.S.A." above and "Pat. 6-17-1913" below. (The Schollhorn name is partially obscured by rust.)

The handles are also stamped "Bernard" in a center panel, a reference to the inventor of these and many other similar models.

The overall length is 4.5 inches, and the finish is nickel plating.

The patent date refers to patent #1,064,956, filed by W.A. Bernard in 1907 but not issued until 1913. The patent describes a method of forming sheet-metal handles for pliers."
 
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lbgradwell

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No sweat.:beer:

Another member just scored a pair of those within the past few days too; can't find the thread right now...
 

Stuart in MN

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I have a set of those pliers that I got from my dad, I still use them all the time. Mine have a black oxide finish, I think my dad got them from military surplus in the 1950s but I'm not sure.
 

Doug13850

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Aug 6, 2012
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I have a set of these. One with the cutting blade on the side, and one without. Both are about 8". Mine are not shiny like the pictures above. My best guess is 30's vintage. They were in my father's toolbox, and he used the one with cutter blades all the time. Was an electrician.
 

goodspeed

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Jul 26, 2012
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I have a pair that's awfully similar to those, minus the cutters on the side, that I picked up in a kennedy 520 box from a pawn shop for 20 bucks (didn't know what they had).

sargenttypeplier.jpg


Mine look like the ones in the bottom of this advertisement. Honestly, they're the handiest pliers that I have in my garage, and use them more than any others I own. I'd love to find that pair to match them at a good price.
 

1982fxr

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Jan 7, 2012
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Phoenix
found a pair of the sargent ones in the bottom of a toolbox in the garage about 6 months ago. The action is really smooth on them and I like how they are balanced. I use em whenever I get the chance just for the hell of it.
 

chard98

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Cleveland, Ohio
I got a set in the 70's from the Route drive who dropped off my papers. We used the side cutters on the wire wraps, til they switched to plastic wraps. They are good pliers!
 

Fej

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Jul 27, 2009
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I know this is dead thread but I couldn't resist reviving it. Apologies.

I found a pair of the same exact pliers as the first post in my grandpas tackle box after he died and smuggled them out under my crazy aunts nose. I was curious about the "Bernard" engraving since that is our last name, found this thread after googling them. I'd been thinking it was a custom engraving, wonder if W.A. Bernard is a relative. They certainly are the coolest pliers I've seen so far.
 
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G_P

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I have a pair I keep in my tackle box as well. Great for removing hooks and cutting line.
 

neophyte

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Pennsylvannia
I have a pair I keep in my tackle box as well. Great for removing hooks and cutting line.

A company called Manley Industries in Lakewood, NJ sells similar pliers for fishermen. They call them Manley Super Pliers. They're available in both a 6 1/2" spring loaded version and a 5" version without the spring. A picture of them I've seen has "made in England" stamped on the pliers which means the pliers are likely made by Maun Industries.

http://www.maun-industries.co.uk/search.asp?cmbCategory=Parallel+Action+Pliers


Sargent also sells a Stainless Steel version of the pliers for fishing. Sargent calls their version the Sportmate Fishing Pliers model SM1028 NN.

C.S. Osborne & Co. also used to sell the English made Maun pliers under their name.

I actually have a pair of army surplus pliers from France in the spring loaded design. The pliers have a black oxide finish, cutters and are spring loaded. They have "ARMEE FRANCAISE" "41P 1992 006" stamped on them.
 

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thebreeze2012

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That is the only other pair I've ever seen besides the pair I own, they were my G-Pa's

They have a different stamping then the OP's around the pivot and doesn't have the name on handle, here's some pics.
 

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thebreeze2012

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I just re-read and the OP's wrench is 4 1/2'' and mine is 7'' and also patent is different, mine has a pat.# applied for in 1890 and OP's is 1907.
 

Bugeyed Earl

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Davie, Florida
I've always thought of these as "fishing pliers" because I've only seen them in tackle boxes and sporting goods stores. I suppose they'd be useful for snipping leaders and removing hooks, but I don't think I ever used them, they just sat in the bottom of the toolbox until they were too rusty to keep...
 

sawin

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Mar 1, 2009
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Central Maine
That is the only other pair I've ever seen besides the pair I own, they were my G-Pa's

They have a different stamping then the OP's around the pivot and doesn't have the name on handle, here's some pics.



I have the exact same pair as you. Under the "Pat. May 6, 1890", mine, like yours say "July 19, 1892". Any idea what this second date refers to.

The handles are quite heavy. In today's world they are probably heavier than some solid ones.

Used it for breaking glass along score lines. Nowadays they are just nice to use and think about.
 

systemBuilder

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Dec 6, 2013
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I recently walked into a local antiques store and found some really unique tools. One such tool was this parallel-jaw plier with a built-in diagonal cutter in an arrangement that I've never seen in modern tools. It had a price tag of $13 and I was being cheap, not wanting to pay any more than $5 for a pair of used pliers. Needless to say, it was an antique and a very unique peice, so I ended up paying $10 for it.

My grandfather gave me a new pair of those pliers as a christmas gift in 1972, when I was about ten years old. I am not much of a fisherman but have cut at least 20 bicycle cables (both the housings and the stainless cables) with them. They are awesome, nothing else have I ever seen that cuts cables so cleanly or so powerfully as these pliers, because they have something like a 4:1 mechanical advantage and the cutter jaws close about 1/4 as fast as the main jaws (which close in parallel due to an ingenious internal mechanism).

Those are keepers, and I imagine that for $10, they are also a steal.

Don Gillies
[email protected]
 
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scaron

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Aug 6, 2013
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ypsilanti, michigan
i have a pair of "bernard's pattern" pliers as well; i think they used to belong to my grandfather. i am pretty sure they were manufactured by the schollhorn company. they seem to be basically indestructible but, that said, i don't use them that often because i'm worried i'm going to inadvertently cut something with them, LOL.
 

sreeb

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SoCal
So I just got these in a lot of pliers I bought off ebay.

They are obviously a version with a special purpose but I have no idea what they were used for.
 

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ganymede

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So I just got these in a lot of pliers I bought off ebay.

They are obviously a version with a special purpose but I have no idea what they were used for.

They sort of look like belting pliers. For cutting and joining machine belts.
 
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