Early in the A. F. & H. Co.'s. existence they also offered other brands without any reference or combination with the name True Temper. It is generally known that the American Fork & Hoe Co. acquired the Kelly Axe & Tool Co. in 1930, extensively to add axes to their product line. Interestingly, Batcheller & Sons had at one time also manufactured axes but they abandoned that in preference to pitch forks and the like.
In addition, it may be that A. F. & H. Co. already had axe making capability but preferred to become involved in that line of the business on a much larger scale. One of the companies associated with the formation of the American Axe & Tool Co. was the Geneva Tool Co. of Geneva, Ohio. That company is known to have made axes and other agricultural tools between 1845 and 1902 and the name actually continued on axes until the early 1930s. Eventually many axe and hatchet brands were used in combination with the TRUE TEMPER name including some brands originally belonging to the Kelly Axe Mfg. Co. of Charleston, W. VA. and the Welland Vale Mfg. Co. of Canada.
As noted, the American Fork & Hoe Company purchased the Kelly Axe & Tool Co. in 1930. That company had previously been named the Kelly Axe Mfg. Co. The name was formally changed to the Kelly Axe & Tool Co. in 1904. The name “Kelly Axe & Tool” continued to be used by the A. F. & H. Co. with a slight change to the Kelly Axe & Tool “Works” and was used until the axe division was sold in 1987.
Some time before the acquisition of the Kelly Axe & Tool Co., possibly in the “teens”, the term TRUE TEMPER had been introduced by the A. F. & H. Co. and combined with many of the parent company’s products. That combination of names continued after the A. F. & H. Co. became a major axe supplier.
The A. F. & H. Co. continued to grow not only in productivity but in scope. They acquired the Turner, Day & Woolworth Handle Co. in 1951, the Jackson Mfg. Co. in 1981 and a number of other companies which resulted in considerable product diversification.
The Turner, Day & Woolworth Handle Co. insured a more reliable supply of handles. The Jackson Mfg. Co. made wheelbarrows and broadened the contractor and agricultural line. At some time, possibly around the beginning of WW II, the A. F. & Ho. Co. acquired the rights or ownership to axe brands previously registered to the Union Fork & Hoe Co. That increased the number of wholesalers they supplied with axes.
The axe division of the A. F. & H. Co. was located in Charleston, West Virginia, the same place of the Kelly Axe & Tool Co. The subtle change in name and continued use of the location benefited the American Fork & Hoe Co. in regard to being accepted by the public. It has been written that many customers didn’t even realize the change, accept for the notations used in conjunction with some markings and labels.
The A. F. & H. Co. used the TRUE TEMPER name in conjunction with the name Kelly for a number of years and in 1949 the company formally became known as the True Temper Corp. It was then that the company headquarters were moved to Cleveland, Ohio. By then the True Temper name had become much more widely known than the American Fork & Hoe Co. name, especially because they adopted the name True Temper Canada for their Canadian division, the Welland Vale Mfg. Co. The Canadian manufacturing facilities were closed in 1965.
Some axes with Kelly markings were also made in Australia and marked accordingly. One such marking included the imprint “Kelly, World's Finest, Dandenong.” Today a suburb by the name of Dandenong is located approximately 20 miles southeast of Melbourne. It is believed that the brand was actually associated with the Dandenong Range where a significant amount of the wood was obtained and used for construction in and around Melbourne. The actual fabrication of the Australian made Kelly axes was done by Cyclone Forgings Pty, Ltd. but at this time not much else is known about that Australian/True Temper arrangements.
Other axes have also been observed with the name Dandenong along with Kelly Worlds Finest, Made In Canada. Those axes were made primarily for export to Australia prior to True Temper entering into the contract with Cyclone Forgings Pty, Ltd. Arrangements to have goods made within certain countries either under contract with domestic companies or by subsidiaries of a parent company were advantageous as the cost on import duties was significant as a result of many International Trade Agreements.
Axes marked Kelly above the words Made in England are also known but at this time nothing much is known about that enterprise. Quite possibly it was relatively short lived in regard to axe making. Other TRUE Temper goods continued to be manufactured in England for a much longer period of time.
In 1960 the Ludlum Corporation acquired the True Temper Co. and reorganized the makeup of the product lines. Apparently specific product divisions were utilized with axe production being one of those divisions. In 1987, four years after the Charleston plant was closed, Ludlum Corp. sold the assets of the Kelly Axe Division to BARCO Industries of Reading, Pennsylvania. In doing so, BARCO acquired the patents, trademarks and patents along with the rights to continue to produce axes under a variety of brand names previously associated with the Kelly Axe & Tool Works and True Temper.