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The Heddon & Sons tackle company ,Dowagiac, Michigan offered the spear
fisherman the greatest variety of fish decoys. Their first ice spearing fish decoys were
offered in sporting catalogs as early as 1913 under the heading “Heddon’s ‘Dowagiac’
Decoy Ice Minnow”. This early decoy was ballasted with lead belly weights in a one piece
cedar body complete with wooden tail and was constructed with the same high quality
craftsmanship as the entire line of Heddon products. Glass eyes, single nickel/brass side
fins, anal and dorsal fins were added to the decoy which was then air brushed with
several layers of enamel. By 1916 Heddon was selling their ‘bat wing’ decoy which now
sported a metal tail and only large single side fins stamped “Heddon’s Dowagiac” in at
least three color finishes; red & white, perch and green crackle back. The bat wing design
was replaced by a double side fin decoy by 1923. This new fin design enabled Heddon to
use the same fin hardware for several different models of plugs, most notably the “Deep
Diving Wiggler #1600 series” where the side fin was folded over the nose of the plug. On
the Decoy Ice Minnow, the hardware created two double side fins. This style Heddon
fish decoy, offered in several addition color finishes; green
scale, yellow perch, rainbow and shiner scale,is the most common and is worth $2000 in mint condition. |
| In 1930 Heddon replace their wooden fish decoy with an interestingly designed
plastic silhouette decoy called the ‘Ice Spook’. The transparent plastic called ‘Heddylin’
had various color finishes baked into the plastic; transparent body with red and green
spots, transparent rainbow, transparent body with gold specks and red head, white head
with red decorations , transparent perch and transparent shiner scale. The Spook’s plastic
body had one piece nickel hardware that formed side fins and a tail and was mounted
onto a large lead belly weight stamped ‘Heddon Ice Spook’. All examples of Heddon’s
fish decoy are rare because of their limited production and range in value from $1000 for
the Ice Spook to $4000 for early wooden tail decoy. |
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Probably the earliest example of factory fish decoys were produced by the
Pflueger Bait Company ( Enterprise Manufacturing Company, Akron, Ohio). Using their
patented rubber minnow which was the company’s staple form for fishing plugs, Pflueger
first simply added a tie-line holder to the 7 inch model minnow and marketed it as a fish
decoy circa 1895. At a later date they improve their rubber decoy’s stability by pushing a
single metal hardware through the body to form two side fins. Pflueger also offered a
wooden ice decoy in its pre 1900 catalog which was not illustrated. Here again Pflueger
adapted it fishing plug to create a fish decoy. A metal tail, glass eyes and single eyescrew
for tie-line holder were added to a wood plug body measuring 5 and 3 1/2 inches. Both
styles of Pflueger fish decoys were offered in decorated (perch) and silver finish.
Pflueger’s decoys are extremely rare. The rubber used hardened with age and became
very brittle and few examples of their wood fish decoy have surfaced. The Rubber decoys
are valued at $500-1000 and the wooden decoys can easily fetch
$1500-2000. |  |
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The PawPaw Company which was closely tied to the Moonlight Bait Company
started by Horace Ball and Charles Varney of PawPaw Michigan in 1906 closely rivaled
Heddon & Sons’ fish decoy line. Although the company’s fish decoys only came in two
styles; a 2 3/4 and a 5 inch wooden tailed decoy with carved eyes, four side fins and
dorsal fin, the decoys came in a wide variety of colors with and without a finishing coat
of silver glitter. In 1935 Moonlight Bait Company was incorporated as the PawPaw Bait
Company the design of the wooden tailed Moonlight fish decoy remained the same and
production continued. The PawPaw decoys can only be differentiated from the earlier
Moonlight decoys by their tack eyes which were inserted prior to applying the multiple
coats of enamel found on both versions of the decoys. Any Moonlight or PawPaw fish
decoy in excellent condition can be appraised a $500 -1000. |
One of the rarest factory fish decoys to find is the wooden spearing decoy
made by the Creek Chub Bait Company, Garret, Indiana which was started by Carl
Heinzerling, Henry Dills and George Schulthess in 1906. Measuring 3 3/4” this fish
decoy was fashioned with a #1500 Injured Minnow lure with added metal tail, side and
dorsal fins, glass eyes and a single eyescrew position so the decoy would hang
horizontally in the water. Produced circa 1920-1930, there are only a few of these decoys
known in collections today and can easily fetch $3000. |  |
Although not nearly as appealing as the aforementioned ice decoys, the
South Bend Bait Company’s fish decoy is also highly prized ($1000) by tackle and
decoy collectors. South Bend Bait Company (South Bend, Indiana) introduced their
South Bend Ice Fishing Decoy #258 in their 1923 trade catalog. It is basically the same
body as their Muskie Casting Minnow with added glass eyes and a single
eyescrew/washer with a swivel attached to the top. This simple decoy measures 5 inches
and is often mistaken for a casting plug by inexperienced collectors. It was offered in two
color finishes, silver with red head and green scale. | td> |
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Spearing certain species of fish is still allow on a very limited basis in some of
the northern states and there are still commercial companies which supply fish decoys for
these hearty sportsmen. The K & E Company, Hasting Michigan manufactures the
hollow plastic Ice King decoy. The Ice King tradename was first used by the Bear Creek
Bait Company, Keleva, Michigan started by brothers, Walter And Elmer Witala and
friend Leo Manilla in 1946. These early wooden Ice King decoys are considered
collectible. They have distinctive realistic body shape with painted eyes and double side
fins. Species like the northern pike also have anal and dorsal metal fins. The painted
finishes are not the quality of the early commercial decoys though thus their values
average only a few hundred dollars. |
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Prior to 1960, William Randall produced a line of wooden spearing decoys
which included several species native to the Minnesota lakes. The sunfish, bluegill and
crappie had curved bodies with wood tails but other species had metal tails added.
Randall molded a one piece lead hardware which was fastened to the bottom of his
decoys forming double side fins. Randall’s circa 1940 flyer advertised his ‘Deluxe
Decoys’ in four different sizes and ten color finishes. Also illustrated were his “Sunfish
“(5 inch), “Come-on” Northern in natural pickerel and red head pickerel colorations also
the “Golden Sucker” in four sizes; 6, 8, 10, 12 inches. These wooden decoy which were
replace when Randall switched his production to a line of solid cast metal decoys are
usually valued from $150 for Delux Decoy to $500 for specialty Sunfish, Golden
Suckers and “Come On” Northern. |