I'll get working on it.
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Tony,
Thanks for the great find and topic.
W.H. Utter is listed as a Box Maker in 1916, with Mr. WH and another Utter on the board of directors. Perhaps this was their first (main) business?
https://books.google.com/books?
id=Q_BYAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA118&lpg=PA118&dq=wH+Utter+%26 +Sons+history&source=bl&ots=rjeZItoRpD&sig=Uxrp5-7oWjXMxauCRz9NwGCLwjc&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwj4nKTY m9TJAhVIHh4KHfU6BEUQ6AEIHDAA#v=onepage&q=wH%20Utte r%20%26%20Sons%20history&f=false
They're listed as a Pipe Maker in the 1949 RTDA. They survived at least this long so you'd think that some would have ended up on eBay.
http://pipepages.com/49rtda18.htm
http://pipepages.com/pics/49rtda18.jpg
Inexpensive pipes and I've never seen their brand, ever. @AndyCAYP may be correct that they made pipes under labels for stores (private labels) but the 1949 RTDA registry indicates that they had pipes under their own labels too, even if only a few. They may have made better pipes in 1949 or before but certainly by this time they would have had more productive ways of making the bowls. New York was the pipe capital of the USA in 1949 :).
25,000 pipes a day means: 250 pipes a day per employee. 125,000 a week (aal employees andassuming a normal 40 hour work week) and ~6,000,000 a year. There were some companies making pipes in the millions but I think the weekly number was substituted for the daily number (at least).
At 25,000 pipes per week, that would be about 1.2 million a year for the company or 12,000 per employee and 4 pipes an hour (per person). That's plausible. Based on the 1949 prices that would mean a wholesale price about ~.28c / pipe, or $3,360 a year per employee and in that works for the industry, era and salary range. Utter could have made money paying their workers ~$1,000-$1,200 on average. No idea if Utter Pipe business had grown or shrunken between 1915 to 1949.
Savinelli, with more advanced frazing machines takes 20 or so minutes to make a finished pipe (based on their data). My example is 4 pipes an hour, (15 minutes) although I'd like to know how they made the bowls, since that would have been a bottleneck.
No prices on the 1915 pipes and given the machines available, I'd think that my revised estimate is the upper limit and in 1915 it may have been half as much but there's no data, just my conjecture on how they could have made so many bowls.
Pete
Pete,
First, your knowledge of this pursuit is always awesome and pretty awe-inspiring. Thanks for being around and being active, the world needs more people like you.
When I have a minute I'm going to figure out if there's some sort of system in place to receive notifications when a title is added to eBay. Given my current schedule and the limited amount of time I have to goof off online, and my propensity to forget things not directly work or family related, I think it's safe to say I'll forget to make a weekly search for the brand to catch any current auctions. Plus, too, I'm not finding any pics or mention of pipes from this company elsewhere online so it can't come up all that often. As you said though, some must have survived.
If you see one, please let me know and if you figure out how to get eBay to do an alert, please let me know that too, thanks!
Utter, based on the 1949 models, probably sold their better bowls or as finished private labels. That would have pushed up their margins a bit.
Bryan, I didn't know anything about Utter until Tony's post. I just looked it up and applied the economics from other companies.
From The Jamestown NY Post Journal, Friday evening, Feb 2, 1951
Attachment 4410
@WNYTONY ,
My Father is from Olean (allegheny, actually, but close enough).
I will be part of the search crew, but have not found anything so far (aside from the google books ref).
It would be awesome to find some.