This bow came to me years ago and I’ve never seen or heard of one like it. It’s “obviously” a Bear, very finely crafted of osage, with delicate nocks, a wafer-thin maple lamb on the back, and 1954 red/orange glass on the back. It’s a solid handle, not laminated. It’s set back at the handle by about 1-1/8”. No markings, but it is 66” long and the friend I got it from shot it and said it was probably at least 55#(“floor tiller” testing supports at least that much draw weight!)
I’ve shown it to several experienced collectors and we’ve all heard how Nels G. would never have used glass on a bow……supposedly that’s why he left Bear, though I know they remained friends after the split. I’ve had a number of Grumleys and seen lots more, and this bow might have come from the time he was there. The 1954 glass points to a later date though. My guess would be that a Bear employee may have had the bow from earlier years and reworked it around 1954, using their “new” glass. That thin maple lam is not something I’ve seen an osage self bow, though all my 49-57 statics, Kodiaks, Grizzlies, and polars have it. There’s also a resorcinol glue line visible underneath the maple lam and it’s just a tiny bit thicker and more uneven than I see on the later laminated bows – supports the idea that someone at Bear may have made it for themselves.
While it’s really well made, the overall impression(disregarding the fact it is glass laminated!) is that it’s not up to the work of Grumley himself. The bow came to my friend from Utah, so my belief that’s it’s somehow connected with the Bear factory is not supported by anything other than the glass color, the handle wrap, and it’s similarity to some late 40s Bear bows.
I’m fighting the urge to string the thing and shoot it. And, the urge is winning!