the mystery continues
I have been fortunate enough to get more insight from some collectors/cuemakers. First reply I will quote is from Mike Walsh, who then pointed me to Barry Szamboti, who's reply I pasted in after Mike's.
Mike Walsh:
“matt,.. i live near philadelphia and am aware of a local cuemaker who sold his cues at alangers in center city. i'm from bucks county, near where doc frye and gus zamboti lived. i'm an expert on doc's cues and there is no way your cue is his work. i would suggest you send your pictures to barry z to review. gus made a few plain jane cues, you never know.
as far as yours is concerned, sorry but i cant give you a positive id. its like 8 or 10 cues in my collection. beautifully made but i'm just not sure on their origin. the early cuemakers use many similar techniques which doesn't help. in addition, they frequently evolved to different style joints, butts, screws etc. .
my sense is you'll never know for sure. i suggest you just be glad you own such a nice cue and enjoy it. best wishes,...mike”
matt,..i frequented pool halls daily until i went in service in 1970, the only place i recall with upstairs tables was call boulevard billiards. it's still there, on roosevelt boulevard near adams ave. was always a seedy place and now is even worse. the best players in the city were there, and it has a great atmosphere, just like in the movies.
based on your recollection, it's possible the cue you have is from victor billiards. they made tables and sold lots of cues. most were good quality foreign made. as far as i know, they never made cues but sold cues to philly pool rooms made by others. the price you paid is consistent with what they sold.
by 1974 gus was doing custom orders only. his base price was much higher and there was a two year wait. none the less, i suggest you give barry a try. he's very engaging. his emal is;
blscues@verizon.net .
never heard of a fedunka.
i'd rule out doc, viking, rich and meyer.....
frank coster is a penna maker who used a similar joint and always signed under the wrap. up to you if that's worth investigating??
last possibility i'd raise is a philadelphia cue maker named john oakie (unsure of spelling). he was a table mechanic who made cues in his spare time. i have a titlist conversion he did. barry is familiar with him and would be in a better position than i to offer an opinion.
let me know if you every are satisfied your mystery is solved. i'll send you a ciuple of mine to work on next.
one last thing, i'm sure by now you have figured out there are hundreds of cue experts out there. remember most aren't including book authors. best wishes,...mike
From Barry Z:
Hi Matt,
I've looked at the pictures from AZB. I don't have a definate answer for
you as to who made it.
It is not a Paradise cue, his cues have a flat tipped joint screw.
It could be a Palmer or even a cue made offsite by someone who worked at Palmer. I've been told and even shown a cue that was done by a guy who worked at Palmer, but did some of his own cue work too. I don't know his name though. Or even if this is 100% fact.
Your cue is not something that I would be an expert at identifying. I'm better at Szamboti's and Balabushka cues.
Good luck to you,
Barry