Jim Schottenham wrote:A few thoughts on the subject:
In most all cases, the man (or woman) that came up with the idea, I.E. the inventor, submitted a patent idea to the patent office to protect said idea/invention.
I would beg to differ with you on this point. I'll bet that most idea men had no technical experience and did not know exactly how, what they wanted in a reel, could be accomplished without the help of a machinist. This is why the idea man sought out a competent machinist who could make his ideas a reality.
I'm sure I could sight just as many examples of reels that were thought up by a non-mechanical person who took their ideas to a machinist who then, made these ideas come to life. The man with the idea didn't have to have ultra-technical mechanical plans all drawn up, just a sound idea of what he wanted from the reel and perhaps some rough drawings of how he thought it might appear. The idea man would then leave the project in the hands of the capable machinist and who would work out the bugs, build the idea man's reel, and then, as builder, the reel would be patented only under the builder's name. To name only a few -
The Fin-Nor reel - Idea Capt. Tommy Gifford, reel built by Fred Grieten.
The Julius vom B-Ocean reel. Idea by Boschen, reel by Julius vom Hofe
The Hardy "Zane Grey" reel. Idea by Zane Grey, reel by Hardy Bros.
The Hardy White-Wickham Reel. Idea by White-Wickham, reel by Hardy Bros.
The Hardy "Alma" reel. Idea by Alma Baker, reel by Hardy Bros.
I could go on and on with Hardy reels alone.
The Errol Bullen Atalanta Reel - Idea by Errol Bullen, reel by Fred Smith.
The patent is held by the builder and idea man perhaps gets his name on the reel, or the paperwork, but, most importantly for the idea man, he gets his reel!
I would imagine there is an amazingly long list of people who took their ideas to a machinist and said, "This is my idea for a reel, can you help me make it happen?" Unfortunately, all we have on the majority of patented reels is the patent information and not the back story on where, or who the idea came from. The idea man does not get credit for the patent, however,
the reel would never have been made if the idea man had not taken his idea to the machinist. Back in the day the builder would get the patent and then perhaps a deal is struck and the two go into business together. I think this was perhaps the case with Billinghurst
& Green.
Idea by Green, Reel by Billinghurst.
Why else would they be called the Billinghurst & Green reel? If he was not idea man then why was his name associated with the reel? His name might not have been on the box, however, it was on the paperwork that came with the reel, is that not good enough?