Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Pen maker aims to write a new future

Cross seeks revival with flagship store

- By Matt O’Brien

The company that makes Cross pens is on a push to reinvigora­te its 170-yearold brand, starting with a flagship store in the same city where it was founded and once crafted its fountain pens in a steampower­ed factory.

A.T. Cross Co. CEO Robert Baird said Wednesday his company’s recent move from suburban Lincoln, Rhode Island, to the Foundry complex near downtown Providence is part of a broader strategy to recruit skilled workers who can market and design its high-end writing instrument­s.

“I wanted to be downtown because it’s a great, vibrant city,” said Baird, citing “access to talent, lifestyle for talent, and affordabil­ity” as the reasons.

The brand known for its gold-plated business pens has also launched its first major advertisin­g effort in years, with glossy ads running in magazines such as Vogue and Vanity Fair. And it’s planning next year to relaunch the luxury Sheaffer pens brand, which it acquired it 2014, to tailor it to younger generation­s.

Rhode Island offered the company $1.9 million in tax credits and other incentives to help with the headquarte­rs move, based in part on plans to add 35 new jobs in coming years. Baird said he previously considered relocating to Connecticu­t or elsewhere but preferred staying in Rhode Island, where the company’s roots run deep.

The firm’s immigrant founder Richard Cross moved to Providence from Birmingham, England, in the 19th century. His original business was making gold and silver casings for pencils. The family business later moved into mechanical pencils, Stylograph­ic pens and fountain pens and the firm was passed on to son Alonzo Cross, for whom

it is named. It left the city for a suburban office park in the 1960s, but that spot “wasn’t right for us anymore,” Baird said.

Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo and Providence Mayor Jorge Elorza, both Democrats, joined Baird for a ribbon-cutting at the new store Wednesday. The brand is a source of pride for the tiny state, even though it’s now owned by New York private equity firm Clarion Capital Partners and most of the pens are manufactur­ed in China.

“I think every Rhode Islander has a story of a friend or a neighbor or an aunt or an uncle who worked at A.T. Cross or knew someone who worked at A.T. Cross,” Raimondo said.

Baird said his longerterm plans include moving more manufactur­ing work back to the United States.

Raimondo said she signs bills into law with Cross pens. Elorza recalled a treasured pen gifted from an uncle who used to work at the company.

The company has also supplied pens to President Barack Obama and many of his White House predecesso­rs, and has presented some for considerat­ion to the transition team of President-elect Donald Trump.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A pen that the A.T. Cross Co. says is made partly from melted-down assault rifles is on display as employees watch an opening ceremony for a new flagship A.T. Cross Co. store Wednesday in Providence, R.I. The 170-year-old pen maker says sales of the...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A pen that the A.T. Cross Co. says is made partly from melted-down assault rifles is on display as employees watch an opening ceremony for a new flagship A.T. Cross Co. store Wednesday in Providence, R.I. The 170-year-old pen maker says sales of the...
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo, left, signs a formal business citation at A.T. Cross Co.’s new flagship retail store on Wednesday in Providence, R.I. The 170-year-old maker of high-end pens recently moved its headquarte­rs to Providence from suburban...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo, left, signs a formal business citation at A.T. Cross Co.’s new flagship retail store on Wednesday in Providence, R.I. The 170-year-old maker of high-end pens recently moved its headquarte­rs to Providence from suburban...

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