


Thanks, Tom. Looks like ol' Harvey is rowing across the river Styx with a stogey in his mouth!....here are the rest of the photos from that post.



The answer is yes, but I’m not sure about regular tools. The pliers, and maybe the screwdrivers (possibly all the tools, though I think it doubtful) in the HappiTime tool kits marketed for boys are clearly Harrold slipjoints, and Harrold was credited (I think on Progress is fine) with supplying boys kits through other retail outlets.Sears…
I wonder if they ever used Harrold as a supplier?
-Don
I found one gentleman who is apparently very serious about his Harrold:
So maybe we can get Lugz to stop completely ignoring this mfr.
Which you've apparently been holding out on us until now!I've got a couple of Shok-pruf screwdrivers.
EBONITE SHOK-PRUF 9" Flat Head Plastic Handle?
I found this pair of slip joint pliers with the Forged Steel USA in a triangle. No other maker marks. Is this a Harrold's?^ I thought we had previously ascertained that the "Forged Steel USA" inside the triangle was Harrold?![]()
I found this pair with the triangle but no name.That declaration should probably have an asterisk. In this thread: Pliers with "FORGED STEEL U.S.A." in depressed triangle we found a Forged Steel USA inside a triangle that was likely Harrold AND we found one that was definitely Herbrand.
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^ I thought we had previously ascertained that the "Forged Steel USA" inside the triangle was Harrol
I found this with the triangle FORGED STEEL USA but no makers mark.That declaration should probably have an asterisk. In this thread: Pliers with "FORGED STEEL U.S.A." in depressed triangle we found a Forged Steel USA inside a triangle that was likely Harrold AND we found one that was definitely Herbrand.
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Got interested in Harrold tools for personal reasons. I have found three screwdrivers in 4 years of looking. Steel isn't bad, handles are decent. I know they also made pliers, but I've never come across one in the wild.
Here's some info on the company:http://wiki.vintagemachinery.org/CrescentHistory.ashx
Anybody else got Harrold tools they'd like to show us?![]()


I was prompted......it was the Harrold H we had talked about recently in another thread (Wood screwdrivers),
...to talk about it here, too, going on a research tear upthread if you missed it...Private Lugnutz made the connection between this screwdriver of mine and LesserSon's pliers with a similar logo.
Here's the original TM they apparently shortened later and a pretty good list of the tools they were making at that time.
But you didn't use the term "Arrow" for this thread, cuz lazy me searched for Harrold Arrow in the vintage forum, rather than do all the reading required to see your pic with the arrow. The downside of pasting images (talk about it here, too, going on a research tear upthread if you missed it...
If you mean the trademark, "trademark" or "TM", for short, are the terms I usually use when describing TM's. I didn't call it an arrow in the other thread, either. While it's obviously also a double pointed arrow, it's the crossbars of the two letter H's in the original TM....your pic with the arrow.




Reads like a line from the GJ Vintage Lament.. . . catalog with illustrations to KNOW.
Reads like a line from the GJ Vintage Lament.
Yeah, can be like the human equivalent to a hairball?Takes a lot of patience to unravel some of these mysteries.

I am partially persuaded away from thinking the mystery pliers are Harrold. I agree the forgings of the round-cornered stamp pliers are all the same. The Herbrand script pliers should date from the 1920s, if AA has it right, so at least some of the non-Herbrand marked round-cornered stamp pliers are contemporaneous. But the example of Herbrand script slipjoints on AA does not look exactly like Leviton’s example - AA’s is somewhat heavier, though it has the same number of course teeth.The forgings look identical to my eye.
Scrolling back up the page, I see that @What_dont_you_want shared the same Herbrand pliers link in this thread.
Leviton shared them in post #45 too.
I won’t be persuaded that <-H-> or even a plain H is other than Harrold. Herbrand has an H-in-a-diamond on some forgings, but I don’t think a plain H.Now, I am wondering if the <-H-> inside the sharp triangles might refer to Herbrand, instead of Harrold. Although, there are pointy-triangle Harrold marked pliers too (post #14), so the fact that they both start with H is probably coincidental.
True.I don't see a single pair of Herbrand pliers in this thread (or elsewhere) that are "deep forged" like the pair in question. Meaning, the round-corner-triangle pliers have thick jaws and all the Harrold pliers are thin, stamped-out, bent jaws.
Right! But where are the Herbrand script needle nose, either?I don't see any other rounded-edge Harrold pliers like the round-corner-triangle needle-nose pairs either.
More legwork. I’m heading to the Herbrand thread to look for matching pliers.It's unfortunate that this discussion is spread out in three threads, but here we are....
I won’t be persuaded that <-H-> or even a plain H is other than Harrold. Herbrand has an H-in-a-diamond on some forgings, but I don’t think a plain H.






Is "Harry" short for Harrold?This would have been Harry Will, between 1945 and 1990. On the other side it has Harrold.
There are multiple examples, and multiple types (slip joint, lineman's, etc), of pliers marked both "WILL / MADE IN GERMANY" and "HARROLD" on eBait.maybe they imported these pliers,
Agreed. But remember that...Based on the style, I'd be surprised if there is any connection to the old Harrold tools.
In that era, under those kinds of economic circumstances, anything could happen. According to Gerald over at 'Progress is fine, but...' blogspot, Harry P. Will Werkzeugfabrik was making pliers for Canadian Tire Corp, Benchcraft and others. Doesn't seem too much of a stretch to think they were also making them for the last vestiges of the Harrold brand in the hands of Budd's Woodings-Verona Toolworks subsidiary....Harrold got conglomoed by Budd in 1977.