Here is a little info on the Andy Reekers,The Company
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Andy Reekers submitted a patent for his first trolling spoon in 1922. As early as 1930 his occupation was listed as "fish trolling spoon manufacturer". In 1936 he submitted a second trolling spoon patent.His lures were manufactured in a shop he owned that was located at 33 SE Hawthorne Street in Portland Oregon.This address is no longer in existence.The shop would have been next to the waterfront on the East Bank of the Willamette River, possibly under the Hawthorne Bridge.Andy’s family provided the labor for his company. His wife Harriet, my grandmother, was a packer for his business. When they were older, his children Margine and Jack also worked in the business. My mother June may have as well.My cousin Lee remembers the family working in the shop buffing brass and copper lures with round layers of felt.Lee also informs me that Andy also designed a flat bottom boat that was quite popular. I had never heard about this boat before. If anyone knows anything about the boat please let me know.
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At some point after 1948, Andy stopped manufacturing trolling spoons. He sold his patent and tradmark rights to the Maxwell Manufacturing Company in Vancouver Washington. They sold his lures under the Grizzly trademark.My avid-fisherman father (Bob Olson), Andy's son-in-law, always said the lures were not as good after Andy no longer made them. Do you agree with that?The Maxwell Manufacturing Company ultimately went out of business as well. By the early 1970's both the Grizzly and Andy Reekers trademarks were considered "dead" by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.By 1981 the remaining unsold supplies of original Andy Reekers were nearly extinct. The Luhr-Jensen company had come out with a nearly identical imitation, the "Salmon Seeker", in a wide variety of sizes and colors.While original Andy Reekers are no longer manufactured, they remain in circulation. They are routinely bought and sold on eBay.To this day, the lures are very popular with serious fishermen and are also sought after by collectors of fishing lures.
When Salmon fishing took off here there was no spoons or baits produced locally around the great lakes. All the early stuff came from the Pacific Northwest Coast area. As fishing got better many companies started to add Salmon colored baits. Companies like Grizzly and Bill Norman were buying other companies out and moving more and more into Great Lakes Salmon colors.
Reekers came with the single hook and some feel that they hook deeper into the mouth with less twist offs. Also, made to be tied direct. No swivel needed.