To see our currently available Barling and Barling’s Make pipes, click here.
As MBSD sells many restored estate pipes, we often get questions as to when they were made. Many pipes, such as Castellos, Charatans or Custom-Bilts, have communities of collectors who prefer pipes made during one period or under one owner over others, though preferences vary. Pipes that are usually stamped with a date of manufacture, such as Dunhills, attract both collectors who prefer certain periods, as well as buyers who want a pipe made the same year that they were born – commonly called a ‘birth year pipe’ – or from the same year as a special event in their life, such as their marriage.
With some pipes, however, identifying the date or period of manufacture can be tricky, even with the internet at your fingertips. Here at MBSD, we understand how important a pipe’s provenance can be, which is why we have a team of dedicated researchers to make sure that our products are accompanied by accurate information that will help buyers make informed choices.
Because we want to be as transparent as possible, there are some occasions where it helps to have a more extensive explanation of how we date a certain pipe or make, which is something that wouldn’t fit into a single product description. That’s what write-ups like these are for. And in this write-up, we’re going to cover a make that causes quite a bit of confusion when it comes to dating their pipes: Barling, otherwise known as Barling’s Make.
Dating Barlings can be quite complicated, and the finer details of this process are subject to debate between renowned Barling historians, such as Richard Carleton Hacker, Tad Gage, Jesse Silver, and Jonathan Guss. This article is not an intervention in those debates; instead, it is an explanation of how MBSD uses the contributions of these pipe scholars to date the Barling pipes that come to us, and to present what we’ve learned from these scholars in a way that is as easy to follow as possible.
To keep things simple, we’ll run through three key questions to ask when trying to discern when a Barling was made. Then we’ll explain the four most significant ‘periods’ or ‘eras’ of Barling pipes manufacture that smokers and collectors look out for. In this article, we’ll only talk about main-brand briar Barling pipes. In a follow-up article, we’ll talk about Barling sub-brands, such as Londoner and B.B. & S., as well as Barlings made from Turkish and African meerschaum.
To use this guide to date a Barling pipe, please answer the following three questions in order. You can skip the questions altogether if you simply want to learn about the different periods and places in which the pipes were made, but the questions will only give an accurate indication of any given Barling if they are answered in the order they are stated. Answering the third question without answering the second, for example, will not give an accurate indication of when a particular Barling was made.
Questions
First Question: Silver Hallmarks
A Family Era Barling’s Make army mount billiard, dated 1907. UK silver hallmarks such as these will be present on any sterling silver on a Family Era Barling pipe. Image credit: Black Lobster Gallery, UK.
Usually, the most precise way to date a pipe is through silver hallmarks. Not all pipes have sterling silver decorations on them, and neither do all Barling pipes. But those that do (such as caps, spigots, mounts, or bands) will have hallmarks on them if the silver is sterling and if the silver was used in the UK. This is because sterling silver in the UK has been regulated since the 17th century in order to guarantee its purity. You will need to read the hallmarks to work out the date they signify. If you’re not sure how to read UK hallmarks, guides can be found online. The first question to ask is whether your Barling has any sterling silver on it and whether this silver has hallmarks. In other words, if your Barling has any sterling silver on it, and if that silver has hallmarks on it, what date do those hallmarks signify? The following answers will tell you what to do next:
The ‘Barling’s Make’ nomenclature first used by B. Barling and Sons is one of the most iconic stamps in English pipe history.
Not all Barling pipes feature silverwork. For these pipes, the exact year of manufacture cannot be identified. But that doesn’t mean those pipes can’t be dated to specific periods in time. To do this, we need to look at how the name ‘Barling’ is stamped on the pipe, usually on the sides or the underside of the shank (the long wooden part). How the ‘Barling’ name was stamped on Barling pipes changed several times throughout the many decades of their manufacture, meaning it can help us narrow down when a Barling was made. The question, then, is: what does the ‘Barling’ name look like on the stamping on your pipe? The following answers will tell you what to do next:
1. If it has ‘BARLING’S’ in an arch over the word ‘MAKE’, go to Question 3.
3. If ‘Barling’ in a straight line, above any of the following: a shape number (e.g., ‘4109’), a finish or grade (e.g., ‘Garnet Grain’), or a UK region of manufacture (e.g., ‘LONDON ENGLAND’, ‘ENGLAND’); go straight to the Post-transition Era, English-made section.
This Barling has the familiar ‘Barling’s Make’ nomenclature, but also a four-digit shape number, 1687. Because this number begins with ‘1,’ however, it is a Family Era pipe.
If you’ve made it this far, your Barling pipe was made between 1909 and 1962. To narrow this down further, there’s one more question to answer. Between these years, Barling used different systems for identifying the shapes of their pipes. Knowing what the system for your pipe is will help to identify particular periods in its manufacture. The question, then, is: if your pipe has a shape number on it, which of the following describes that number?
Now that you’ve got a sense of when your Barling was made, we will provide a short history of Barling pipes, presented in the divisions of manufacturing periods that are commonly used by pipe historians and collectors.
Family Era, AKA Pre-transition, Pipes (~1906-9 to late-1960)
The US-export Guinea-Grain is the sole example of Family Era Barling pipes that do not feature the iconic, arched BARLING’S MAKE nomenclature.
While the earliest Barling pipes date back to 1812, with the founding of B. Barling and Sons by Benjamin Barling, it was not until some time around 1906-9 that B. Barling and Sons started to make their own briar pipes. It is the briar pipes made by B. Barling and Sons that are commonly known as ‘Family Era,’ or ‘Pre-transition’ pipes, as it was during, this time that the Barling family both owned the Barling name and made the Barling pipes. All but one line of these pipes was accordingly stamped ‘BARLING’S MAKE.’ The one exception to this rule were the Guinea Grain pipes exported to the United States; These pipes were instead stamped ‘Barling’s’ in cursive script, above ‘GUINEA GRAIN REGD’ in block letters (this practice was carried on through to the Transition Era, however those pipes can be distinguished by their shape codes).
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