by BretMan » February 10th, 2008, 1:08 am
The few Geo. A. Reach gloves I have seem to be well-made- at least as well as anything else that was selling back in those days. They don't seem to generate much collector interest, certainly not as much as the "big names" like Rawlings, Wilson, Spalding, etc.
I like the Ohio-Kentucky (OK) brand gloves (which, of course, were the forbearers of the Sonnett brand). Good quality leather and construction, and some innovative designs in regards to unusual webs and wrist straps.
One company that seems to fit the "underappreciated" category, but gets a tip of my cap, is Denkert. Sure, many of their gloves were cheaply made and child-sized, but they could- and did- produce some quality leather.
You got to hand it to these guys for plugging away for nearly 50 years in the glovemaking business. From the early days of the 20th century up until they were driven out of business by the imports in the 60's, they had to be one of the most prolific producers of baseball gloves in this country.
Not only did they sell gloves under their own brand, but they were also a huge "private label" maker, producing gloves for a host of other sellers including Em Jay, Olympic, Gambles, Hiawatha, JC Higgins and others.
Give them credit for making a go of it in the glovemaking trade, with a unique business model that probably saw them through some lean times before they went the way of so many other USA-based companies. Denkert always strikes me as the Chicago Cubs of the baseball glove world- lovable losers plugging away year-after-year, even in the face of their ultimate demise, always the bridesmaid, never the bride.