Wright & McGill Granger Registered #1950316

Serial Number: 1950316
Grade: Registered
Model: RX7633
Length: 7′ 6″
Weight: 3.75oz (4.1oz with Reel Seat)
Sections: 3/2
Ferrule Size: 15/10
Grip: Western
Reel Seat: Nickel Silver Up-Locking (with No Patent Date)
Tube: Original Black Aluminum with Nickel Medallion
Bag: Original Silk 
Condition: Very Good+
Numbered Granger Registered Book: Yes, #316
Location: Longmont, CO
Status: Private Collection, Not For Sale

SKU: RX1950316 Categories: , , Tag:

Description

This all original Wright & McGill Granger Registered RX7633 is inscribed with serial number 1950316.  The serial number signifies that this particular rod—crafted in 1950—was the 316th Registered sequentially made between 1939 and 1952. Total Registered production during that period was less than 400 rods.

A 7½’ Granger Registered is one of the rarest of all Granger rods. There are only 2 that have been discovered thus far. This 3/2 7633 from 1950 is still in FULL LENGTH – ALL ORIGINAL condition. It appears lightly fished, and untouched for possibly decades. A rod is only original once, and this one has been intentionally left untouched to preserve this important piece of history.

This 7’ 6” Granger Registered (#RX1950316) possesses stunning white/black/white silk wraps over dark, amonianated cane. The Registered grade was the only grade to include a hook keeper as part of the signature wrap. Each rod was crafted from a single culm of cane and assembled with perfect with 3×3 node spacing.  They truly represented the very finest of the craft in that era. The rod is stamped “Wright & McGill” and “Granger Registered” on 2 flats and with the serial number “1950316” hand-inked on a 3rd. The reel seat is German nickel silver (not chrome) and stamped “MADE BY / WRIGHT & McGILL ROD CO / DENVER, COLO. USA” on 3 lines. Interestingly, there is NO patent date stamped on this reel seat. Original W&M German nickel silver ferrules in sizes 15 & 10. Mildrum stripper guide on the butt section. The mid section has 5 steel line guides while each tip has 6 (yes, 6) line guides plus the chromium tip top guide. This Registered is put up in its original black silk bag (stitching added along the bottom). The original black rod tube with engraved silver medallion reads: “Granger Registered / RX 7633, Length 7½ Ft. / Weight 3¾ ozs. / Wright & McGill Rod Co. / Denver, Colo.”

The 1950 Catalog (pictured below) shows the Wright & McGill Granger Registered 7633 as one of six models offered that year.  Also available were models 8040, 8642, 9050, 9053 and 9660. — Take note that the 2pc – 7′ Registered 7030 is no longer cataloged in 1950, but a few were made at the very beginning of that year.

1950 Wright & McGill Catalog pg23
1950 Wright & McGill Catalog pg23

ABOUT THE GRANGER REGISTERED

The Granger Registered was first offered for sale by Goodwin Granger Company in the 1939 Catalog. Each rod was “registered” to the original owner by a card that was stored at the Granger factory. The card contained the owner’s name, address, purchase date and rod serial number. The 1939 Catalog describes the Registered this way:

“Think of the finest automobile you can name; the finest grand piano; the greatest violin ever made by the hand of man. Think of the imperishable work of master craftsmen—and then look at this Granger Registered Fly Rod. Examine the lucent golden color of its cane. Note the rich beauty of its black and silver windings, and the clean hard efficiency of chromium on guides, ferrules, tip-top and reel seat. Then put the rod together and take it in your casting hand. Feel the brave, sturdy heart of it—the delicate balance, sensitiveness and action. Take it to a fishing stream and match it against whatever fish you will; watch it come through with its black and silver colors flying—the greatest fly rod of them all!”

Serial numbers for all Registered rods begin with the year they were produced (first 4 digits) followed by the consecutive build number (1 to less than 400). The first Registered would therefore be numbered 19391 and the last (known) would be 1952393.

From 1939 to the start of WWII, there were less than 70 Registered rods produced by Goodwin Granger. They were available in 7′ to 10′ lengths (3 oz. to 6.5oz.) and priced at $75. Because of the war, production of all Granger rods ceased so there are no serial numbers associated with those war years.

In 1946, Wright & McGill Rod Company purchased Granger Rods and later resumed production of the Registered grade. The Registered was listed in the 1947 Catalog at a cost of $100 and offered in 7′ to 9.5′ lengths (3 oz. to 6.0oz.). It last appeared in the 1952 Catalog. In 6 short years, Wright & McGill produced approximately 325 Registered grade rods.

In all, the Registered grade was only produced for a total of about 8 or 9 years with fewer than 400 produced—making it one of the rarest of fine cane fly rods.

 

Excerpts from Colorado Classic Cane by Dick Spurr and Michael Sinclair

“The Granger Registered rod was the epitome of the rod makers craft in Colorado, and the one model that represents all three major Colorado companies. The Registered rod was designed by Bill Phillipson, produced first by Goodwin Granger Company and later by Wright & McGill Rod Company.

The special features that set the Registered rods apart from all others include a serial number on each rod, white trim wraps at both ends of the black wraps, a chrome plated internal uplocking reel seat rather than the normal nickel silver type, and a hook keeper. They were the only Granger rods fitted by the factory with a hook keeper.

Each rod came in a black bag and a black tube with an inscribed medallion attached to the tube. The tubes for the Registered rods were aluminum for all years except 1942, when World War II forced a switch to plastic tubes.”

WRIGHT & MCGILL ADVERTISING IN THE EARLY 1950’S

In the early 50’s, Wright & McGill changed the style of their advertising to reflect the more diversified product portfolio. They also began to tell a story of the Granger heritage with the slogan, “for 40 years the World’s Best!”

The first ad in 1950 follows the same format as the 1950 W&M Catalog where each grade was listed along with the available lengths and prices (although the Stream & Lake grade was left out.)

Later in 1950, Wright & McGill created a large number of skyscraper ads in the same format so they could occupy a consistent space in a wide variety of sporting publications.

Advertising for 1951 followed a similar skyscraper format with the addition of the 1951 Catalog pictured along the bottom.

Interestingly, there was a single ad from 1951 that saw the return of actor Dennis Morgan as a spokesperson for W&M Fishing Tackle. Mr. Morgan graced the cover of earlier Granger Rods catalogs from 1947, 1948 and 1949.

All 1950 & 1951 ads show the W&M address as Capitol Hill Station, Denver Colo.

All ads shown here were scanned directly from their original publications.
1950 W&M Ad
1950 W&M Ad
1951 W&M Ad
1951 W&M Ad
1950 March Field & Stream Ad
1950 March Field & Stream Ad
May 1950 Outdoor Life Ad
May 1950 Outdoor Life Ad
May 1951 Outdoor Life Ad
May 1951 Outdoor Life Ad