by softball66 » October 20th, 2006, 9:00 am
I know you guys would be interested to know what happened but many of these Mexican made gloves showed up in this country during WWII when the U.S. Makers were making gloves or whatever (bomber jackets) for the military and were forbidden by contract to make gloves for retail sales.
This forced distributors (and companies) to turn south of the border, down Mexico way, for glove making. H. B. "Doc" Hughes, the distributor for the southwest for Nocona and other companies, travelled into Mexico to see if he could find someone to make some gloves for his regional sales. I think he took the Nokona G12 pattern to use. He wrote a chapter about all this (yes, somewhere I have it) in his autobiographical book.
But his gloves show up on occasion today. I bought several way back and put one in the Nocona museum. He mentioned that Wilson rep was also in Mexico at that time and you can bet that Rawlings had someone in the Pinedo plant there.
I think I've got the spelling right but Rolin is a Mexican glove making company that's been around for years and has made some Rawlings knockoffs. At one time, it had a distribution point in North Texas. There are some others too. The Mexican craftsmen turn out some beautiful gloves.
I've got a nicely made modern Soto 1b mitt and will try to get a pic of it posted for us.
Meanwhile let's not forget the Goldsmith Valdez Modelo of the mid-1930s. Or the Martin Dihigo glove that turned up made in Mexico.
Johnny Mize once said that Dihigo was the greatest ballplayer he'd ever seen.