Welcome to the Wood News Archive Gallery
Between 1977 and 1991, 29 paper issues of Wood News and WOODMAN were produced and distributed to Atlanta customers of King Hardware and Highland Hardware customers nationwide.
This newsletter was the precursor to the electronic version of Wood News as it exists today. We've enjoyed looking back at some of the stories and woodworkers
we featured within its pages and we hope you will too!
Note: Prices and product offerings are obviously not current - this is a record for historical purposes only.
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Wood News
(published at King Hardware)
December 1977 - May 1978
The first 3 issues of Wood News were published before Highland Hardware
even came into existence. In 1974 Chris and Sharon Bagby, then recent Georgia Tech
graduates, became managers of King Hardware Company's branch store on Piedmont Avenue in
Atlanta. By coincidence this King Hardware store happened to be a dealer for the Shopsmith
combination woodworking machine.
As the Bagbys found ways to increase Shopsmith sales, and after introducing the sale of hardwood
lumber, the store began to attract a growing community of woodworkers.
In 1977 the Bagbys and their staff published a 4-page newsletter they called Wood News.
Response to it was enthusiastic. They published two more issues before deciding in 1978 to
resign from King Hardware and start their own hardware store.
Click any image to open up that issue
Woodman
(published at Highland)
December 1979 - November 1980
Shopsmith was beginning to open its own retail stores nationwide and told the Bagbys they
were not interested in making Highland Hardware a Shopsmith dealer. However they soon
connected with Garrett Wade Company of New York, the U.S. importer of Swiss-made Inca
Tools, and in 1978 began selling Inca tablesaws, bandsaws and planer-jointers. A
side-benefit of becoming an Inca dealer was the opportunity to purchase wholesale any of
the hand tools in Garrett Wade's vast and beautiful catalog. Highland Hardware quickly
became a local Atlanta source for Record and ECE hand planes, Marples chisels, Tyzack
handsaws and many other fine woodworking tools. They also continued to sell hardwood
lumber and established a small millwork shop in the basement of the store.
In 1979, becoming aware of a growing demand for woodworking classes, Chris published the
first issue of Woodman, "A Newsletter Devoted to the Woodworker and his Craft," in which
the first two Highland Hardware seminars were announced. Four more issues were published in 1980,
announcing new classes and advertising the store's growing line of woodworking hand and
power tools.
Click any image to open up that issue
Wood News
Paper version published at Highland
February 1981 - Winter 1991
In 1980 two women wrote letters saying "How about a better name than WOODMAN? THE
WOODWORKER perhaps. Many people are offended by the exclusion of women in the woodworking
world. The sexist title promotes this exclusion."
By this time King Hardware was in decline and had ceased publishing a newsletter using the name
Wood News. After first trying to rationalize keeping the name Woodman, Highland's owners jumped at
the opportunity to reclaim the old name. After publishing the first 5 issues under the name WOODMAN,
they renamed their publication Wood News.
Wood News continued to be printed about twice a year as a supplement to the annual Highland Hardware mail order catalog.
Highland Hardware evolved to become its own
importer of fine tools and began to develop a wide following nationwide with a reputation as a leader in woodworking education.
In 1992, the company decided to merge
the newsletter into the catalog and thereafter began publishing three catalogs a year.
Wood News as a separate entity was no more, until 2005 when it was resurrected on the web as
Wood News Online
, where it continues to be published monthly.
Click any image to open up that issue
Looking for a later issue of Wood News? Check out our
electronic archives
, starting from 2005!
Return to
Wood News
front page
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