Page Text: Eagle Baton 39
Eagle/Berol Cavalier 181, 182 and 183
There is also an earlier Eagle version of this pencil. The round pencil is numbered 181 while the 182 is hexagonal. The pencil numbered 183 is hexagonal with an eraser.
Eagle Confetti 90
This pencil is in pretty rough shape but it has such a great name and color I wanted to display it.
Eagle Express 117 and 118
The 117 is a round pencil while the 118 is hexagonal. They were made in at least four different colours.
Mirado (and Mikado) 174
The Mirado is the flagship yellow business pencil of the Eagle Pencil Company. These pencils were originally named "Mikado" until World War II when the name was changed to "Mirado". The 172 version has no ferule.
This 1950s or 60s vintage pencil has most of the black ink worn off.
Eagle Neon 86
Berol Newfoundland HB
This pencil has only the name Newfoundland (in italicized capitals) and the grade HB printed on it. This pencil appears to be an inexpensive pencil from the 1990s (perhaps sold in Newfoundland?).
Eagle Rocket 84
A vintage pencil from the era of Sputnik (1957), Kennedy's pledge to land a man on the moon (1961) and the Apollo 11 mission to the moon (1969). The Rocket 84 pencil was very similar to the Neon 86 pencil, the Roy Rogers 88 pencil, and the Confetti 90 pencil. All came in a variety of colors and are from a similar time period (probably made in the 1950s and 1960s). These pencils were probably popular in Drummondville, Quebec, where they were manufactured, as the local hockey team was named the Drummondville Rockets (after the hockey player, not the pencils) during the 1950's and early 1960's.
Eagle Rocket 180
Eagle Valor 130 F
Eagle Valor pencils are a standard yellow writing pencil. It can in both untipped (130) and eraser tipped (131). I've only ever seen Canadian made versions of these pencils. These appear to date from around the mid-1970s when the Letter E logo was used but the company was officially Berol Corp. of Canada.
Eagle/Berol Valor 131
Eagle 224
Berol Grand Prix 228
The Berol Grand Prix pencils were first made in the early 1980s. I don't believe they were ever sold under the Eagle brand. Initially the packages featured pictures of a Formula One race car. This may have been in celebration of the Canadian Grand Prix first held in Montreal in 1978. The pencils came in both yellow and a variety of other colors.
The two sets below are from the early 1990s. These packages no longer featured the Formula One car image.