The records are not all in place. As we Parker experts know, there are missing books and records.
It stands to reason those missing records could be in a landfill, propping up a corner of the CEO of Remington's desk, tucked away in the garage of some disgruntled former Remington employee, or in the gun safe of the Parker collector who has to have something no one else has.
All of the above, except the former Remington employee was not disgruntled, and the one book I know of is not in the garage. Yes, some went to a landfill, and the remaining Stock and Order books are still and always have been at Remington, some on display in the museum, the rest safely stored away and not propping up any desks.
Babe Del Grego told me that when he and his dad picked up the left-over Parker inventory and special tools in order to take over the Parker parts and repair business in the mid-1950s, the records were theirs for the taking if they wanted them. But they didn't consider them valuable at the time.
I have photocopies of one "missing" order book from 1873.
Babe also told me that the Remington employees did not consider the big heavy books worth safekeeping, and they were stored in a basement furnace room that sometimes took on water, being near to the Erie Canal. Over the years, some, perhaps all of the missing books were dropped on the wet or submerged floor to serve as stepping stones and were thus destroyed and disposed of.
Given that the
Parker Story people had photocopied some of the records, I deferred to the "power" and wrote about other things. Yet as much as my ear has been to the ground for the past 15 years, no one has ever told me about any of the "missing" books being in collector's possession. As I said, I know of one.
As to the "flap" of 2003, there was no issue as to the original Stock and Order books as they reside at Remington. The PGCA has the Stock Book photocopies made by the
Parker Story people, and the photocopies of the Order Books made by Ron Kirby and other PGCA members who camped out for a week in Ilion. Any dispute had to do with Ron computerizing the records on his own time; any PGCA member then willing to travel to Wake Forest had access to the photocopies for research and copying and, if he had unlimited time, could have done the same.
Ron was not willing to give up his personal work product and there was no reason he should have. The PGCA directors picked up the PGCA property and records, but did not choose to compensate Ron for his computer-generated data and search program, so he kept his personal work product, and the new BOD started from scratch. End of story. EDM