I came across this Dr. Grabow pipe that looked much different than any I had seen before. While not looking exactly good, it had different wood and features that I'd not seen. I haven't restored it yet, and not sure I will if it has more historical worth as is. Why do I think it's a WWII era pipe? First, the wood doesn't look like briar to me. The grain is wrong, it has remnants of a colored finish on it rather than a stain, there is no metal anywhere, and rather than screw in stem it has a push stem. I don't know what the white band is made from, probably plastic. I've also seen an ad from 1942 featuring Ripley's Believe it or Not, and one of those pipes looks to have the same band.
So am I right in thinking this might be a Dr. Grabow made during WWII? I can't seem to find out much info on what type of wood they might have used, but I've heard that Mt. Laurel was one that was used, and maybe Mesquite wood. Anyone have something like this?
So am I right in thinking this might be a Dr. Grabow made during WWII? I can't seem to find out much info on what type of wood they might have used, but I've heard that Mt. Laurel was one that was used, and maybe Mesquite wood. Anyone have something like this?