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Vintage USA Shakespeare / SOUTH BEND Flamed Split Bamboo Fishing Fly Rod

$ 87.11

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Fishing Type: Fly Fishing
  • Condition: Excellent Condition, READY TO COLLECT OR FISH.
  • Shaft/Blank Material: Bamboo
  • Brand: Cross Rod Co. Massachusetts, South Bend, Indiana
  • Vintage: Yes
  • Modified Item: No
  • Type: Fly Fishing
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

    Description

    Rod is solid. Guides are all tight and so are the ferrules. Nothing loose or broken.
    They say, there's nothing like fishing bamboo! These vintage USA & English bamboo fly rods are a living fiber. A lot of the newer fiberglass, graphite and carbon rods are to stiff and just don't have the same feel as bamboo which is a living fiber.
    VINTAGE HIGH QUALITY SPLIT BAMBOO FLY ROD MADE IN THE USA READY TO GO OUT AND FISH, COLLECT OR BOTH.
    Flamed, Shakespeare 9ft MARVEL 6 or 7 weight line. Factory flamed. All original and straight. Looks like it hasnt been fished. All original wrappings and varnish. No defects or anything else wrong with the rod. Has full decal and stencil(both have been varnished over to protect them). Has original rod sock and will be shipped in cardboard tube.
    Fly rod is all factory Original with rod sock & tube. Looks like it was made yesterday. 1940s Shakespeare MARVEL fly rod. Made by south bend / cross rod company.
    Flamed dark cane with Military Green windings.
    This rod is around 75 years old and in Excellent Condition. There is absolutely nothing wrong with this rod. I cant find anything wrong with it. even has the original label and model number in tact. This was stored properly and everything is like good on the rod. Looks better then the pictures even.
    Nice vintage fly rod to go out and fish with. Rod is straight and all pieces are same length and everything is all original to each other.
    READY TO COLLECT OR FISH. GUARANTEED NO CRACKS IN THE FERRULES OR ANY WERE ELSE ON THE ROD. NOTHING LOOSE AND NO DEFECTS. ABSOLUTELY NOTHING WRONG WITH THIS ROD GUARANTEED.
    Here's some history on the cross / south bend fly rod company,
    Wesley D. Jordan deserves an honored place in history as one of the truly innovative bamboo rodmakers who had a major impact on the bamboo fly rod as we know
    it today. Jordan was involved with producing bamboo rods for more than 50 years, first with the Cross Rod Co. of Lynn, Massachusetts, then with South Bend in
    Indiana and finally with Orvis in Manchester, Vermont. His innovative genius and natural talent for craftsmanship turned all three companies into recognized
    leaders in the bamboo rod business.
    Jordan began his rod making career quite by accident shortly after serving two years in World War I. While on a fishing trip to Maine with William Forsyth, Mr.
    Forsyth broke his fly rod and talked Wes into making him a new one. Jordan was an accomplished fisherman and was familiar with good bamboo rods, so he spent
    nearly a year studying the construction of bamboo rods and reading all the literature he could find. Through trial and error he finally produced several
    acceptable hand-planed rods of Calcutta cane. Mr. Forsyth was so enthusiastic about the results of Jordan's efforts that he proposed a rod making venture.
    In 1920 they formed the Cross Rod Co., named for Bill Cross, a friend of Forsyth's who bought stock in the new company and also joined in learning the rod
    making trade.
    Within a year Jordan had designed a milling machine and built it with the help of his brother Bill, so rods could be produced faster and more economically to
    compete with companies such as F. E. Thomas and H. L. Leonard. The Cross Rod Co. built fly rods, tournament rods and saltwater rods for trolling and surf
    casting. Most of the larger rods were double-built models for power and strength. The company established a reputation for producing quality rods at reasonable
    prices. Cross also produced rods under other brand names, such as Abbey & Imbrie in New York.
    Mr. Forsyth died suddenly in 1925 and his heirs sold the Cross Rod Co. to the South Bend Tackle Co. in South Bend, Indiana. As part of the agreement, Jordan
    moved to South Bend to set up the machinery, organize a rod production facility and train the employees. This temporary arrangement lasted almost 15 years.
    During this period Wes designed methods and equipment to facilitate making rods with very low production costs, to compete with Montague, Union Hardware,
    Horrocks-Ibbotson and Wright & McGill. One such device was a power-driven ram for splitting bamboo culms destined for mass-market rods. South Bend also
    made rods for other companies, such as Sears Roebuck for as little as 83 cents wholesale. Cane for the higher quality rods built by South Bend and all the
    South Bend-Cross rods were split by hand or sawed. Rods and blanks of this higher quality were also marketed to other companies, most notably to the Paul Young
    Co., for several years prior to 1930.
    In 1939 Wes Jordan went to work for Charles F. Orvis Co. in Manchester, Vermont, shortly after the nearly defunct company was rescued from receivership by Bart
    Arkell and D. C. Corcoran. He worked for Orvis until his retirement in 1970, during which time he helped resurrect the company and take it to the forefront in
    rod production. During his tenure at Orvis he developed the process for making impregnated rods, and designed and patented the famous Orvis screw lock reel
    seat.
    Rod can't be any straighter and all pieces are same length and everything is all original to each other.