QUOTE (Shangas @ Aug 5 2008, 05:29 AM)

Sorry to interrupt, but what WAS the Ingersoll company?
I read that they manufactured dollar pocket watches. But that they also manufactured dollar fountain pens. Is it the same company? What was their field/business? To produce affordable tools and items that anybody could buy, or what?
There was no single Ingersoll company. The watch company was not formally connected to either of the Ingersoll pen companies in the US, though the Ingersoll family connected them
Robert Ingersoll and Bro., Inc. was a watch company from the late 1800s to 1922. They made and popularized a railroad-accurate pocket watch that sold for 1$, thus the Dollar Watch moniker. The owners were Robert and his brother Charles Ingersoll. Their nephew William Ingersoll, was VP of Advertising.
In 1922 the companies creditors forced the sale of the company to the Waterbury Company, which reorganized it as the Ingersoll Watch Co. The new owners built on the previous companies success and continued to succeed well into the 1950s - among other things they partnered with Disney to make the famous Mickey-mouse watches.
After the Ingersoll family lost the Ingersoll watch co.:
Charles Ingersoll started the Charles Ingersoll Dollar Pen Co. in 1924
William Ingersoll joined with the Redipoint Co. of St. Paul MN, which became Ingersoll-Redipoint.
Niether pen company was formally connected to the Watch company, as both Charles and William were no longer part of the Ingersoll watch company. However, they both capitalized on the name recognition of the watch company, particularly Charles Ingersoll, who heavily used his role in the watch company in advertising, including phrases like "The man who made the dollar famous. . ." and ". . . who sold 16 million dollar watches. . ." He was clearly following the same basic business plan - make a well made product that costs only $1 so anyone (nearly) could buy.
There is also Ingersoll-Rand, which is and was a machinary manufacturer unrelated to either the watch or pen companies.
QUOTE
So that would suggest that the Wyvern Pen Co. made the pens for the English branch of the Ingersoll Watch Co. (later Waterburys) ?
Well, one could speculate on that, and it seems to make sens. I would like to know a little more about the English Ingersoll pens. Incidentally, they came well after the sale of Robert Ingersoll and Co. to Waterbury, so if it was the Ingersoll Watch co it was the later incarnation (Waterbury kept the Ingersoll name and most post-sale Ingersoll watches are simply marked "Ingersoll" , though there seems to have been a time when they went by "Ingersoll-Waterbury").
It is also possible that they were produced by some branch of Ingersoll-Rand, though I would expect them to have the Ingersoll-Rand imprint if that were the case.
John