Erik Hesse: Difference between revisions

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File:Shell.1928 9.png|"SHELL" 9 PAT. NOS 119708/17 116989/17 8 (1928)
File:Shell.1928 9.png|"SHELL" 9 PAT. NOS 119708/17 116989/17 8 (1928)
File:1928 128.jpg|"SHELL" 128 CANADIAN PATENT 209845/21 8 (1928)***
File:1928 128.jpg|"SHELL" 128 CANADIAN PATENT 209845/21 8 (1928)***
File:1928 AND 1929 (top) LO9'S 2.png|2 BRUYERE LO9’s “INNER TUBE” PAT. NO 5861/12 8 and PAT. NO 11689/17 9 (1928 and 1929)****
File:1928 LO9.jpg|2 BRUYERE LO9’s “INNER TUBE” PAT. NO 5861/12 8 and PAT. NO 11689/17 9 (1928 and 1929)****
File:LC-1929.png|"SHELL" LC CANADIAN PATENT 209845/21 9 (1929)
File:LC-1929.png|"SHELL" LC CANADIAN PATENT 209845/21 9 (1929)
File:A196.jpg|BRUYERE 196 MADE IN ENGLAND “INNER TUBE” PAT. NO. 1169989/17 9 (1929)
File:A196.jpg|BRUYERE 196 MADE IN ENGLAND “INNER TUBE” PAT. NO. 1169989/17 9 (1929)
File:1929 LBx .jpg|"SHELL" LBx US PATENTS 1341418/20 & 1343253/20 9 (1929)
File:1929 LBx.jpg|"SHELL" LBx US PATENTS 1341418/20 & 1343253/20 9 (1929)
</gallery></center>
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File:LC-2.png|SHELL LC9 MADE IN ENGLAND 19 U.S. PATENT  1341418/20 9 (1939)
File:LC-2.png|SHELL LC9 MADE IN ENGLAND 19 U.S. PATENT  1341418/20 9 (1939)
File:521949.jpg|BRUYERE 52 F/T MADE IN ENGLAND 9 PAT. NO. 417074/34 9 (1949)
File:521949.jpg|BRUYERE 52 F/T MADE IN ENGLAND 9 PAT. NO. 417074/34 9 (1949)
File:1949 832.jpg|SHELL ODA 832 MADE IN ENGLAND 9 PAT. NO. 417574/34 (1949)
File:1949 832.jpg|SHELL ODA 832 MADE IN ENGLAND 9 PAT. NO. 417574/34 (1949)**
</gallery></center>
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|<center><font size="2">'''From the 50s'''</font></center>  
|<center><font size="2">'''From the 50s'''</font></center>  
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<center><gallery mode="packed" widths=180 heights=140>
<center><gallery mode="packed" widths=220 heights=170>
File:1950 LBS Shell.jpg|SHELL LBs MADE IN ENGLAND 0 PAT. NO 417574/34 (1950)
File:1950 cased LB’s Shell and Bruyere.jpg|Cased LB’s SHELL & BRUYERE; Made In ENGLAND 0 PAT. NO 417574/34; Shell PAT. NO. 417574/34 0 (1950)
File:1950 cased LB’s Shell and Bruyere.jpg|Cased LB’s SHELL & BRUYERE; Made In ENGLAND 0 PAT. NO 417574/34; Shell PAT. NO. 417574/34 0 (1950)
File:1950 120 AD gold.jpg|ROOT 120 MADE IN ENGLAND 0 41754/34 14K AD GOLD (1950)
File:1950 120 AD gold.jpg|ROOT 120 MADE IN ENGLAND 0 41754/34 14K AD GOLD (1950)
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{| class="wikitable" style="margin: left;"
{| class="wikitable" style="margin: left;"
|<center><font size="2">'''From the 70s & 80s'''</font></center>  
|<center><font size="2">'''From the 70s, 80s & 00'''</font></center>  
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<center><gallery mode="packed" widths=187 heights=147>
<center><gallery mode="packed" widths=210 heights=160>
File:1970 845 Bruyere.jpg|BRUYERE ODA 845 F/T MADE IN ENGLAND O (1970)
File:1970 845 Bruyere.jpg|BRUYERE ODA 845 F/T MADE IN ENGLAND O (1970)
File:ODA835A2.jpg|BRUYERE ODA 835 FT MADE IN ENGLAND O (1970)*
File:ODA835A2.jpg|BRUYERE ODA 835 FT MADE IN ENGLAND O (1970)*
File:1979 Bruyere Quaint.jpg|BRUYERE QUAINT MADE IN ENGLAND 19 (1979)
File:861-5.jpg|BRUYERE 861/5 MADE IN ENGLAND 23 A (1983)
File:861-5.jpg|BRUYERE 861/5 MADE IN ENGLAND 23 A (1983)
File:HTDUNHILLCOLLECTOR.jpg|COLLECTOR MADE IN ENGLAND 27 HT (1987)
File:HTDUNHILLCOLLECTOR.jpg|COLLECTOR MADE IN ENGLAND 27 HT (1987)
File:EHRusset.jpg|RUSSET 5301 (AD special order band) MADE IN ENGLAND 28 (1988)
File:EHRusset.jpg|RUSSET 5301 (AD special order band) MADE IN ENGLAND 28 (1988)
File:2003 XXL TS.jpg|TANSHELL XXL MADE IN ENGLAND 03 (2003)
</gallery></center>
</gallery></center>


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<br>
<br>
'''Addendum:'''[[File:Edsel.jpg|thumb|left|140px|P&T 1998]]<br>Edsel James was in the first generation of serious (pre-Loring) Dunhill collectors.
'''Addendum:'''<br>
 
Edsel James was my first real “pipe mentor” and over the years, although we never actually met in person, he also became a good friend.
[[File:Edsel.jpg|thumb|left|160px|P&T 1998]]
In early 1999, I came across an article in Pipes and Tobaccos magazine (Winter, 1998) entitled “Mr. Dunhill” (see above) which was penned by Chuck Stanion.  Among other things, the article included a photograph of three old deeply blasted Dunhill “Shell” pipes: They were just what I had been looking for without success. Since at that time I was not yet “connected” to many people in the pipe world it seemed like Edsel James might hold the key to my accessing one or two of these beautiful old pipes. (This was in the “old days” when rare pipes usually changed hands via personal connections. Although the modern auctioning approach to trading has created access to a much wider range of pipes, I lament the days where trading was undertaken mostly in the way it did between Edsel and me. I have a strong distaste for the “modern” auction format) (...) '''See the full story''' [https://pipedia.org/images/2/2b/Edsel_James_-_Erik.pdf here].<br>
Edsel’s oldest son, Craig, wrote a brief sketch of his father’s life at my request when I told him about the project I was working on for Pipedia. With his permission I close with an attachment of Craig’s letter. '''See it''' [https://pipedia.org/images/e/e3/Craig_james_LETTER.PDF here].
<br>
* I certainly do not consider all of the pipes in my collection extraordinary. Many, for whatever reason, simply have something about them that I just “take to”.
* For more on Edsel James '''see it''' [https://pipedia.org/wiki/Dunhill#History here].
<br>
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<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"></div>
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[[User:Yang|Yang]] ([[User talk:Yang|talk]]) 23:31, 22 June 2021 (UTC)
[[User:Yang|Yang]] ([[User talk:Yang|talk]]) 21:54, 6 October 2021 (UTC)
[[Category:Pipe makers by nationality]][[Category:Great Britain]]
[[Category:Pipe makers by nationality]][[Category:Great Britain]]
[[Category:Dunhill]]
[[Category:Dunhill]]

Latest revision as of 23:13, 6 October 2021

Erik Hesse, PhD.
Accessories.

Perhaps the greatest Dunhill's collection after Loring's.

The Evolution of My Pipe Collecting: Emphasizing the Dunhill Pipe

I was born in Berkeley, California in 1954, and for the first 30 or so years of my life, it was still “normal” to see men smoking their pipes publically. My next-door neighbor in the North Berkeley hills was a professor at U. C. Berkeley and a Chaucer scholar. I remember as a boy seeing this dapper man descend his stairs in the morning to go to work. Almost always he sported an elegant Harris tweed and puffed happily away on one of what l later learned was his regular rotation of Charatan pipes.

My best friend’s father was also a pipe smoker and I suspect that my interest in the pipe began with my observations of these two men. (...) See more about Dr. Hesse here.


Ehforniture 4227.jpg

Aspas-copy.pngIn closing, I want to emphasize that to my taste the finest of the Dunhill pipes are as fine as any pipes ever made. This does not mean that I do not believe that there are other (e.g., English, Italian, Scandinavian and American) pipe makers who have produced equally outstanding products.Aspas.png Hesse.




The Collection

From the 20s
* From the personal collection of Yang Forcióri. It is rare to find a cased set with more than two pipes. Additionally, most of the sets with three or more pipes that I have seen consist of only smaller pipes. This set is remarkable not only in terms of its condition, but as well, the pipes are good sized, with the 60 being a true group 4. Note also, as per the inscription in the second photo, the three pipes are “made from one briar root”.
** This pipe is extraordinarily large -- 11 inches in length and 4 ¾ inches in height. It is un-smoked and remains in its almost flawless original case. I assume this pipe was made to be a display piece for a Dunhill shop, although the patent number is for American export, which makes it impossible to speculate as to what shop that might have been.  The pipe includes the original inner tube that also has correct patent stamping.
*** Bowl height is almost 2.5 inches.
**** These pipes are the only two LO9’s that I have ever seen. I have not been able to find any other individual who has ever seen one.  Finally, to my best knowledge, the L09 is not listed in any Dunhill catalogue. The pipe is essentially an outsized 120.
***** From the personal collection of John_C._Loring. 



From the 30s & 40s
* This pipe is LB size and sports 2 red bakelite factory mouthpieces.
** From the personal collection of John_C._Loring. 
*** From the personal collection of Edsel James. 



From the 50s
* The SP stands for a pipe that was not in stock but was ordered by the purchaser at a given shop. It does not stand for “Special Pipe” or “Special Order” as is often thought
** From the personal collection of Les Sechler.
*** From the personal collection of David Gabriel.
**** From the personal collection of Edsel James. This was Edsel James’ “go to” pipe for more than 40 years. It has a gold repair band and the nomenclature is too buffed to read the end of the patent number or the date stamp. See below where this pipe is pictured along with a picture from P&T of Edsel holding the pipe not long before he sold it to me.


From the 60s
* From the personal collection of Edsel James. 
** From the personal collection of John_C._Loring. 



From the 70s, 80s & 00
* Loring states on pp. 53 “in the ‘60’s and ‘70’s the 843 was sometimes stamped 835, the two pipes being identical except for the bit.” 





Addendum:
Edsel James was my first real “pipe mentor” and over the years, although we never actually met in person, he also became a good friend.

P&T 1998

In early 1999, I came across an article in Pipes and Tobaccos magazine (Winter, 1998) entitled “Mr. Dunhill” (see above) which was penned by Chuck Stanion. Among other things, the article included a photograph of three old deeply blasted Dunhill “Shell” pipes: They were just what I had been looking for without success. Since at that time I was not yet “connected” to many people in the pipe world it seemed like Edsel James might hold the key to my accessing one or two of these beautiful old pipes. (This was in the “old days” when rare pipes usually changed hands via personal connections. Although the modern auctioning approach to trading has created access to a much wider range of pipes, I lament the days where trading was undertaken mostly in the way it did between Edsel and me. I have a strong distaste for the “modern” auction format) (...) See the full story here.

Edsel’s oldest son, Craig, wrote a brief sketch of his father’s life at my request when I told him about the project I was working on for Pipedia. With his permission I close with an attachment of Craig’s letter. See it here.


  • I certainly do not consider all of the pipes in my collection extraordinary. Many, for whatever reason, simply have something about them that I just “take to”.
  • For more on Edsel James see it here.



Yang (talk) 21:54, 6 October 2021 (UTC)