Hi Guys, Burker I apprecitate nice job with the glove reviews. I enjoy your commentary about the gloves and mitts. Thanks.
I am the one who bought the ugly duckling glove this week.

Softball 66 described my glove as a well preserved Australian land crab.

So, it is a bit of an odd duck or crab or whatever.
I was hoping this glove might become a part of my glove collection, whether it be a crab or a duck. LOL It is a unique glove that one might describe as a novelty glove. It is an early ambidextrous glove, I believe it might be from the 1920's. Hunt auction had one a long time ago that seemed to be very much the same glove style. It was described as an ambidextrous glove from the 1920's. While you see several MG snare gloves, and I like them too, one just does not see these old timers come up to surface hardly at all. The one from the Hunt Auction seems to be owned by Mike Ellis and his glove and this Ripon glove are now located on JD's website next to each other under the header of Novelty gloves.
IF you look at Mike's and this one they look to both be the same glove with the exception of leather color. There is an earlier version of an ambidextrous glove on JD's website that has a 1 inch strap between the fingers and the thumbs that likely ca. around the early 1900's. I am thinking the one I got must be the one circulated in the 1920's and I am now wondering if Ripon was the only producer of these gloves as these are the only 2 I can remember ever seeing. If anyone has more info. on this old timer I would love to hear more
. An interesting thing about this glove is a person can use the draw lace on each side of the thumb areas to turn the glove into a glove for a lefty or for a righty. Thus, the ambidextrous aspect of the glove becomes evident.
I have placed the old glove as a focal point on the top shelf of one of my glove lofts.
Best wishes to all the glovers this Christamas
Dave