Barclay Rex: Difference between revisions

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(It is impossible that "HGP" are the initials of a pipe maker formerly employed by Dunhill, as "HGP" was in use the year that Dunhill began making its pipes (1920).)
 
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Barclay-Rex, a downtown Manhattan tobacconist, was founded in 1910 by Vincent Nastri, a pipemaker from Salerno, Italy.  The store was originally located at Barclay and Church Street, and the name was taken from that location and Nastri's beloved Great Dane, Rex.  The business is still run by Vincent Nastri, III and owned by Vincent Nastri, Jr..  They have several locations in New York City.  The store has carried pipes from all fine makers, and the Barclay-Rex line of pipes is also much sought after, in that pipes were made in a range from the very inexpensive into the several hundreds of dollars.  The pipes were, at least into the 1960's, made of Algerian briar.   
Barclay-Rex, a downtown Manhattan tobacconist, was founded in 1910 by Vincent Nastri, a pipemaker from Salerno, Italy.  The store was originally located at Barclay and Church Street, and the name was taken from that location and Nastri's beloved Great Dane, Rex.  The business is still run by Vincent Nastri, III and owned by Vincent Nastri, Jr..  They have several locations in New York City.  The store has carried pipes from all fine makers, and the Barclay-Rex line of pipes is also much sought after, in that pipes were made in a range from the very inexpensive into the several hundreds of dollars.  The pipes were, at least into the 1960's, made of Algerian briar.   
   
   
In addition to pipes made by Mr. Nastri over the years, Mr. Nastri, III, has been quoted as stating that a pipemaker just leaving Dunhill made pipes with a small off-white dot on the stem for a time for the shop.  As was discovered by [http://rebornpipes.com/2014/08/26/a-true-restoration-of-a-barclay-rex-hgp-briar-root-labelled-the-duke/  Steve Laug of Reborn Pipes], they were evidently made by a pipemaker whose initials were HGP, and stamped on the pipe as such.  These pipes were made for a single run only, and then never made again.   
In addition to pipes made by Mr. Nastri over the years, Mr. Nastri, III, has been quoted as stating that a pipemaker just leaving Dunhill made pipes with a small off-white dot on the stem for a time for the shop.  As was discovered by [http://rebornpipes.com/2014/08/26/a-true-restoration-of-a-barclay-rex-hgp-briar-root-labelled-the-duke/  Steve Laug of Reborn Pipes], they were evidently made by a pipemaker whose initials were HGP, and stamped on the pipe as such.  These pipes were made for a single run only, and then never made again.
 
While purportedly the initials of a pipe maker under the employ of Barclay-Rex, the initials "HGP" also appear in advertising for the Barclay Pipe Shop as ''early as 1920''; the "HGP" initials evidently formed part of a trademark (see advertising below; The Pauw Wow, St. Peter's College NJ 1935-left, and The Nation 1921-right) that was featured on pipes and (perhaps later) tobaccoIf one accepts that Dunhill began manufacturing its pipes in earnest "from start to finish" in 1920, a year by which the "HGP" trademark was already in use by the Barclay Pipe shop, the likelihood of "HGP" signifying the initials of a pipemaker formerly in the employ of Dunhill diminishes considerably.


In addition, Sasieni at least for a time made private label pipes stamped with the Barclay-Rex name, but with their own shapes and shape numbers.   
In addition, Sasieni at least for a time made private label pipes stamped with the Barclay-Rex name, but with their own shapes and shape numbers.   
<center><gallery widths=350 heights=250 caption="Example and detail, courtesy Doug Valitchka">
File:BarclayRex1.jpg
File:BarclayRex5.jpg
</gallery></center>
<center><gallery widths=450 heights=350 caption="Barclay Pipe Shop Advertising from the 1920s">
File:HGP Barclay-Rex Pipe Tobacco.jpg
File:Barclay Pipe Shop HGP Trade Mark The Nation 1921.jpg
</gallery></center>


   
   

Latest revision as of 00:39, 15 August 2023

Barclay-Rex, a downtown Manhattan tobacconist, was founded in 1910 by Vincent Nastri, a pipemaker from Salerno, Italy. The store was originally located at Barclay and Church Street, and the name was taken from that location and Nastri's beloved Great Dane, Rex. The business is still run by Vincent Nastri, III and owned by Vincent Nastri, Jr.. They have several locations in New York City. The store has carried pipes from all fine makers, and the Barclay-Rex line of pipes is also much sought after, in that pipes were made in a range from the very inexpensive into the several hundreds of dollars. The pipes were, at least into the 1960's, made of Algerian briar.

In addition to pipes made by Mr. Nastri over the years, Mr. Nastri, III, has been quoted as stating that a pipemaker just leaving Dunhill made pipes with a small off-white dot on the stem for a time for the shop. As was discovered by Steve Laug of Reborn Pipes, they were evidently made by a pipemaker whose initials were HGP, and stamped on the pipe as such. These pipes were made for a single run only, and then never made again.

While purportedly the initials of a pipe maker under the employ of Barclay-Rex, the initials "HGP" also appear in advertising for the Barclay Pipe Shop as early as 1920; the "HGP" initials evidently formed part of a trademark (see advertising below; The Pauw Wow, St. Peter's College NJ 1935-left, and The Nation 1921-right) that was featured on pipes and (perhaps later) tobacco. If one accepts that Dunhill began manufacturing its pipes in earnest "from start to finish" in 1920, a year by which the "HGP" trademark was already in use by the Barclay Pipe shop, the likelihood of "HGP" signifying the initials of a pipemaker formerly in the employ of Dunhill diminishes considerably.

In addition, Sasieni at least for a time made private label pipes stamped with the Barclay-Rex name, but with their own shapes and shape numbers.


Locations: (Flagship Store) 75 Broad Street, New York, New York 10004 Telephone: (212) 962-3355

70 East 42nd Street, New York, New York 10165 Telephone: (212) 692-9680

570 Lexington Avenue, New York, New York 10022 Telephone: (212) 888-1015

Email: info@barclayrex.com Website: http://www.barclayrex.com Toll Free: (888) 278-6222 Fax: (212) 962-3372