This is information I
use to determine what Heddon lure should be in which Heddon box. I've
found I need to coordinate hardware, lure shape, box type, and the
nomenclature to match up the correct lure with the correct Heddon box. If you
are in the field or at a show and need this information, it can save your
butt, not to mention your wallet.
Note: Some
Heddon box information was drawn from discussions with various collectors, an
article by Bruce Dyer, NFLCC Magazine, 1993, and Clyde Harbin's Historical
Foot Prints book. All boxes shown here are currently a part of this
collection.
I'm interested
in buying any of the Heddon boxes shown on this page. Please contact me
for discussion and pricing.
Identification
of early Heddon lures by
hardware and prop type.
Heddon
Boxes:1906-1930

Click here
for an extensive discussion of Heddon wood
boxes
-
1911: Pinetree
cardboard box: marked on side with "Stamped on Spinners" Expect fat
body 100's and 150's with long gill marks, cup rig, single belly weights, no
name on the props.
Heddon
Dowagiac: Down leaping Bass boxes
-
1912 only: blue
or white border; down leaping Bass box. Contains fat body lures
with cup rig. Click here to see the
correct brochure paper for this
box. Note the blue border around the box on the lower left and the white
border around the lower box on the right. The whole box is blue on the
blue border and the whole box is white on the white border. It's just
a down leaping Bass label pasted on a blue or white box whereas after this
year, all the boxes are red and white.

 |
|
 |
| Blue border box |
|
White border box |

Heddon Lures:
1905 to 1909
-
1905 High forehead 100
with brass hardware, two belly weights, long sweeping gill marks to eyes
-
1906 same as above,
only it has nickel hardware instead of brass
-
1907 first version
with blunt nose, except it's a little narrower and longer
-
1908-9 blunt nose
baits found in wood boxes
Heddon
100: 1904 to 1912
Body
anatomy and boxes used from 1904 to
1912
Heddon Paper
Sequences of paper brochures by Joe
Stagnitti
Heddon
Hardware
Identifying Heddon lures can be made much easier if you know the types of
hardware and the time period they were used.
Cup rig:
hardware typical of Heddon
baits made prior to 1915-1916. The earliest cups were made of
brass and the later were nickel plated. There were variations in the
early years with rim anatomy and variations (flat rim cup dates
prior to 1907, raised rim cup dates to 1908 and later)
detailed in the NFLCC article "Eight Years of Heddon Hardware" by Bill
Sonnett.
- Props:
Cup rig
underwater minnows can have two types of props: unmarked (No Name On Prop)
which dates them prior to 1915-1916; and Name On Prop, which dates them
after 1911 when the name Heddon Dowagiac was stamped on the front and rear
prop. Heddon made a gradual change to L-rig during the 1914-1915 time range,
so it is possible to find NOP lures with cup rig (lures fitting
this criteria date from 1912 through 1915-ish)
. Apparently they wanted to use up the last cup rig lures and placed
the new marked props on the older cup rig lures.
- See additional
photos to identify Heddon lures by the
props.

Personal notes from Bill Sonnett's 1991 article on '8 Years of Heddon
Hardware' published in the Premier Issue of the NFLCC Magazine:
- Forward raised
cups were used on 100's and 150's until the conversion to L-rig
sometime in 1915.
- "Killer" props
refers to No Name On Prop spinners used on 100,150, 175,300's during
1904 to 1912.
- Only the 400
and 450 used 'Killer' props for the whole life time of their
production.
- In 1912, all
lures featured "Dowagiac" on the spinners.
- The shift to
'fat body' 100's occurred in 1910.
- Long sweeping
gill marks on 100's were gone by 1905.
- 1907 100's can
have one large or two belly weights, slim body, low-rimmed hardware,
tiny nose washer, and nickel-plated hardware.
- The 1911 #100
is a fat body style.
- 1912 is the
year NOP (name on prop) became standard.
|
L-rig:
first cataloged in 1914 on
the Dummy Double. . The hook screw has an arm for an attachment screw which
comes out of the cup and onto the body. Earliest L-rig is single
hump, later two hump L-rig seen after 1915.

- Props:
Generally only Name On Prop.

Toilet
seat:
made in two pieces and the
toilet seat shape gives it the name. This hardware was in use during 1927 to
1936.
Two piece:
known as "Flap"
hardware was used starting in about 1934 and continued through the war until
replaced by the current cheap looking surface type hardware in the 1948/49
range.