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Victorian Waterman pen owned by playwright George Grossmith (A pen mystery...)


United_Common_1858

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Exec Summary for those just joining

  • I bought a pen from Peter Twydle, a 9ct gold Waterman with a 14ct medium nib with an autograph from George Grossmith (actor / playwright).  Which I am over the moon with.  This thread is not accuse Peter.  I think he did the best job possible and charged fairly.  I love the pen.  This is now just historical curiosity. 
  • I shared the pen here and on a sub-reddit which led to questioning of the date provenance
    • Grossmith died 1912
    • Waterman screw tops were not yet invented
    • Waterman numbering system (54) was introduced in 1917
    • The pen has two different gold hallmarks dating the barrel to 1923 and the cap to 1924 (London)
    • Grossmith had a son (Grossmith Jnr) who was also an actor / playwright and died in 1935
    • Higher resolution photos in the thread below
    • The mystery continues...

 

My original post in quotes below.

 

Quote

 

Hey all,
I am new here and found this forum via the Fountain Pen sub-reddit where I post under the same name.  I had a little story I thought the network might enjoy and then hopefully someone might help me learn about the pen in the photos. 

In May of this year a friend gifted me a 1950s Burnham fountain pen.  I had been using modern FP's for a little while and it was a nice gift.  Unfortunately the ink sac had crumbled and so I turned to the FP sub-reddit for a little help.  Despite some clues they could not identify the model so I sent the pen to the UK pen repairer Peter Twydle with this letter (attached).  
Whilst on his site I happened to notice he had a 9ct gold Watermans that was autographed / inscribed by George Grossmith, the Victorian playwright and actor who collaborated with Gilbert and Sullivan. 
This seemed like providence since I have my first published play on stage in London in a few weeks at the Etcetera Theatre in Camden.  So I bought it; I had to, being a sucker for chance events. 
However, I don't know anything about Watermans pens at all and have posted some photos.  I was hoping others might be able to tell me more about it.  

 



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Edited by United_Common_1858
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First, that's a great pen with an interesting story. 

Second, if you look at the end of the pen, you should see some numbers.  For example, 0552 1/2 V. Each of those numbers give you a clue to the pen. 

Third, the Canada nibs can run the gamut from rigid to flexible.  From the pictures,  it looks to me like the nib might be a cursive italic, but the picture is a bit blurry. 

Also, sacs are easy for a pen repairer to fix. They need to be replaced every few years. 

 

 

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To help others along

 

George Grossmith lived 1847-1912, his son was 

 

George Grossmith Junior 1874-1935, an actor, producer, songwriter and other talents.

 

 

My first thought is that the pen was owned by the son as opposed to the father because Waterman only started production of a lever filled pen in 1913 but then Peter is unlikely to make an unsubstantiated claim.

 

 

 

 

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The more I look at the nib, it might actually be an Oblique. You'd need to look at the nib with a loupe to verify.  

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4 hours ago, Format said:

My first thought is that the pen was owned by the son as opposed to the father because Waterman only started production of a lever filled pen in 1913 but then Peter is unlikely to make an unsubstantiated claim.


This was the original description.  I  figured that Peter would be well-known on the forum and that his description would likely be accurate. 
 

Quote

This is a 9ct gold overlay Waterman lever-fill fountain pen with a Waterman Canadian 14ct gold medium nib. What makes this pen unique is that it has an autographed barrel engraving of its previous owner George Grossmith

 

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5 hours ago, davisgt said:

First, that's a great pen with an interesting story. 

Second, if you look at the end of the pen, you should see some numbers.  For example, 0552 1/2 V. Each of those numbers give you a clue to the pen. 

 

The markings I can see on the pen are
 

Next to the lever 

  • FDW
  • 6 [In a diamond]
  • 375
  • A castle arch or a small gothic h
  • A mask / wolf, cat or dog's head

On the lever

  • IDEAL

 

On the pen cap

  • An arrow point to the top of the cap

On the cap side

  • FDW
  • 6
  • 375
  • A gothic i
  • Unintelligible other engraving

On the cap top

  • Keyhole or an arrow with minute writing inside

 

On the tail end

  • 54

 

High resolution photos taken with a Samsung Ultra smartphone belong. 

 

 

 

Edited by United_Common_1858
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https://vintagepens.com/FAQhistory/waterman_numbering.shtml

 

David Nishimura has an extensive summary of the Waterman numbering system on Vintage Pens. I included the link above.  

 

The 5 tells you that the pen is a lever-filler and the 4 tells you the nib size. There should be a corresponding 4 on the nib, although it might be hiding under the sleeve. 

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Fine pen, I have one a few later than yours from a live auction. A Gothic.(1918-30's)

I wanted the ink well also. The silver dip pen polished up nicely also.

The ink cleaned off the nib with no trouble. It too needed a new sac.KlgjvAy.jpg

In reference to P. T. Barnum; to advise for free is foolish, ........busybodies are ill liked by both factions.

Ransom Bucket cost me many of my pictures taken by a poor camera that was finally tossed. Luckily, the Chicken Scratch pictures also vanished.

The cheapest lessons are from those who learned expensive lessons. Ignorance is best for learning expensive lessons.

 

 

 

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The FDW stands for Frank D Waterman.  He's the nephew of the founder. 

 

That's actually a 9 rather than a 6. It stands for 9 carat. The 375 is the percentage of gold out of 24 carat. 9/24. 

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Thank you, Davisgt for the link...would have simplified my search.

 

I was totally ignorant, outside knowing it was an old Waterman, like my two 52's...it was later I got help for Wateman fans. I wanted that inkwell. So I was getting a two for one...

In reference to P. T. Barnum; to advise for free is foolish, ........busybodies are ill liked by both factions.

Ransom Bucket cost me many of my pictures taken by a poor camera that was finally tossed. Luckily, the Chicken Scratch pictures also vanished.

The cheapest lessons are from those who learned expensive lessons. Ignorance is best for learning expensive lessons.

 

 

 

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I have got a little further...the gothic H looks like the hallmark for 1923 but...the cap has a different hallmark; it looks like an ' i ' which doesn't appear in the register.  

 

 

 

 

Gold Hallmark Identification Wizard.png

Edited by United_Common_1858
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  • Most likely date for the pen barrel is 1923 based on the symbols.
  • The cap has hallmark dates for 1924.
  •  

Unless the pen was manufactured 20 years prior which is not possible with the pen clip, screw cap and Waterman numbering.

 

 

 

Hallmark Dates.png

 

Hallmark Dates 2.png

Edited by United_Common_1858
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