| With the Lucky Strike name given
to an extremely successful range of spoons, spinners
wobblers and various kinds of ingenious baits for fishermen,
Lucky Strike Bait Works Ltd. has successfully serviced
fishing enthusiasts' needs for more than seventy years.

Producing a wide range of fishing lures, landing nets and
the famous Lucky Strike wooden plugs ~ which launched the
company ~ Lucky Strike Bait Works has evolved as Canada's
oldest and largest tackle and landing net manufacturer. A
love of fishing, an ability to fashion wooden fishing lures,
and a consuming drive to succeed were the three factors that
launched a pre-depression hobby into a booming business.

Frank (Rusty) Edgar, the company's founder, had graduated
as a pattern-maker in the mid 1920's and had found work in
the automobile industry, but with the onslaught of the Great
Depression in 1929, he returned home to Peterborough,
Ontario. Edgar spent countless hours in his workshop garage,
where he began to improve some wooden plug baits that he had
previously fashioned out of broom handles.

Asking the neighbors to save their old wooden broom
handles, he later also began to obtain broom handles culled
from a local broom factory. Made of birch and maple, his
wooden plugs were quite heavy and ran deep in the water. His
success as a fisherman on the banks of the nearby Otonabee
River attracted the attention of other anglers, who asked
him to sell some of his lures, making his first sales at one
dollar a piece. With a limited market by selling only from
his tackle box, he obtained permission to place a wall
display of his lures in a local barbershop.

A representative from Direct Factory Sales of
Toronto, who was receiving a haircut, noticed the lures and
contacted Edgar, who provided him with a selection of his
best lures. In late 1931 Edgar was finally contacted once
again by the agent, who gave Edgar an order for 10,000 plugs
to be ready the following May at fifty cents each.
|
|
Obtaining
a seventy-five dollar loan, he purchased a shipment of
cedar, hired two boys to cut the lumber, and then he turned
it into plugs on his wood lathe and painted them.

Working long hours, he was able to finish the order on
time. With the money from that sale he was able to procure
more machinery and began adding a long list of other lures
to his selection. Needing a name for the company, Edgar held
a contest and the name Lucky Strike was chosen. As sales
continued to grow, the reputation for the wooden plugs soon
spread across Canada. After adding two extensions to his
garage workshop, in 1939 he was able to build a complete new
shop. Prospering and growing in the face of strong
competition from the larger United States companies, Lucky
Strike's line of products was enlarged to include fly
reels, split bamboo rods and landing nets, which sold at a
rat as high as 30,000 units a year. A second factory was
added in 1944 in Cobourg, Ontario to produce treble hooks,
split rings and swivels, with practically the entire output
designated for export. After World War II ~ during which
time the Peterborough plant was switched to the war
production of search light parts and machine work for
armored cars ~ an addition was added to the Peterborough
plant, and in 1952 all production was consolidated at the
Peterborough facility.

Plastic lures were soon added to Lucky Strike's growing
list of products, as was the submarine plug, which Lucky
Strike perfected. The company's continuing success began to
interest the competition, who offered to purchase Lucky
Strike, but the Edgar family steadfastly refused to sell the
family business. A further extension in 1970 added 15,000
square feet of manufacturing, storage and office space to
the company. Needing more space and with no further room to
grow, in 1987 the company relocated to a new site in
Peterborough, with integrated production facilities designed
and constructed for Lucky Strike's specific needs. Unable at
times to find manufacturing equipment exactly suited for the
company's requirements, Lucky Strike has designed and
adapted a number of machines over the years for its unique
production needs. One such machine is the company's
automatic buffing machine, capable of polishing thousands of
tiny parts a day and fulfilling a prime requirement for a
successful lure ~ that its shiny and colorful surface
catches a fish's attention. In addition, the company has
made all its own dies for the designs it has developed over
the years. Lucky Strike has also evolved into an extended family
business, now in its third generation of the Edgar family.
Founded by Frank Edgar and aided by his wife Elsie, their
son Bill assisted at the shop since boyhood. After
graduating as a tool and die maker, Bill Edgar became
|
|
General Manager and when his father passed away in 1979,
Bill and his wife Cora assumed the leadership of the
business. Today, Bill and Cora's daughter and son-in-law
Mary and Kim Rhodes, have taken the role of Lucky Strike's
General Managers. Bill and Cora's youngest daughter Diane
Suss, is also working for the family business.
Always
strongly interested in the viability of Lucky Strike lures,
the Edgar family has made many trips to lakes and rivers
across Canada, from the Maritimes to British Columbia and to
Great Bear Lake in the North West Territories. All Lucky
Strike lures are designed by the company for inland fishing,
and each year new lures are developed by the company
craftsmen to replace those lures that have lost their
popularity. Also, there are always the many Lucky Strike
lures that remain a favorite, year after year. Kim Rhodes
explains, "The wide array of lures reflects both the
company's own judgment on what will sell, and the feedback
we receive from fishermen. After all, the lures must also
appeal to the anglers, and not only to their quarry."
Assembly of the lures is an intricate task carried out by
skilled workers who produce perfectly finished lures almost
faster than the eye can see. In addition to the plugs,
spoons, spinners and landing nets that Lucky Strike
manufactures, the company also markets other fishing tackle
such as leaders, swivels and split rings.
On January 1, 1997 the Ontario government banned the use
of lead products in all national parks. As a result of this
Lucky Strike launched a new environmentally friendly product line under the brand name
"Dominion". In June of 1997 Walmart stores carried
this new lead free product line.

Dominion products include tin split shot, walleye ice
jigs, bismuth sinkers, jig heads, and weight forward
spinners. Bill Edgar, who is now retired, emphasizes that
the company has been consistently successful because Lucky
Strike has always focused itself on its field and doing what
it does best: designing and producing a range of quality
fishing tackle that has appealed to fishermen for more than
half a century. With this unique knowledge and relationship
with fishing enthusiasts, Lucky Strike Bait Works Ltd. has
earned itself a place of recognition and respect among
anglers across North America, and has assured itself
continual growth in the future. |