|
Mepps is a French acronym
for Manufacturier D'Engins De Precision Pour Peches Sportives.
In English... Precision Equipment for Sport Fishing.
Andre Meulnart
When French engineer Andre Meulnart invented the Mepps spinner in 1938, it
wasn't long before he realized it was an extremely effective
fishing lure. He didn't realize, however, he had invented a lure that would
revolutionize the fishing tackle industry. It would take a World War and an
unusual series of events to do that. It would also take the vision of a man
who could see the lure's full potential.
Todd Sheldon
Todd Sheldon discovered the Mepps spinner in 1951. Owner of a successful
tackle store in downtown Antigo, Wisconsin, he was having a bad day on
Wisconsin's Wolf River. Determined to try something different, he tied on a
small Mepps spinner that had been given to him by Frank Velek, a WWII GI who
had returned from Europe two years earlier. Within two hours, he had creeled
four trout weighing more than twelve pounds total.
Todd Sheldon was hooked on and began
selling Mepps spinners, but soon discovered he couldn't get enough. Velek
knew a French woman who sent spinners to the sport shop in exchange for
nylon stockings. However, the lures were selling faster
than she was wearing out her stockings, so Todd began buying his lures
directly from Meulnart's factory.
Soon, other fishermen were experiencing catches like the one Todd took from the Wolf. But, they were catching all kinds of
fish, not just trout. As the Mepps reputation grew, so did sales. In 1956,
Todd sold his store and formed Sheldons', Inc. to focus his
attention on his growing import trade.
Sheldons', Inc.
By 1960, sales of Mepps spinners in the United States had topped half-a-million, and sales continued to grow rapidly. Todd set an annual sales goal of 3-million lures.
"My Dad set
that mark," Sheldons' President Mike Sheldon remembers, "because that was
more than any lure had ever sold on this continent. Our sales went sailing
right past that goal."
The company that started in a
ten-foot-square room in the back of a small sports shop in Antigo, Wisconsin
has, under the leadership of Todd and his sons Bill and Mike, become one of the most
important players in the fishing tackle industry. Todd passed away in 1995.
He was 81 years old.
Mike
Sheldon
Mike has picked up the reins at Sheldons', Inc. which now occupies a
corporate headquarters encompassing almost 50,000 square feet. When all lure
sizes, colors and hook configurations are taken into account, Mepps
currently manufacturers more than four-thousand different
Mepps spinners and spoons. In addition, Sheldons', Inc. now owns Mepps S.A.
(Mepps France) and Mister Twister, a premium soft plastics lure company located in Minden, Louisiana.
Mepps® Aglia®
The classic Mepps spinner is the Mepps Aglia. It not only is the original
French spinner, it is the original in-line spinner and it still accounts
for the bulk of Sheldons' sales. The Aglia's "backbone" is its heavy duty
stainless steel shaft. Attached to this shaft is a concave oval blade, spinner
body and, of course, a hook. The blade can be silver or gold plated,
polished brass, copper, or painted with computer age Epoxy.
When drawn through the water, the blade
rotates around the shaft creating both flash and vibration. Either will
attract fish, but together they become a deadly combination game fish can't
resist. The Aglia is also flashy, decorated with plastic and/or solid
brass beads in a wide variety of bright fish-attracting colors. Even the
hooks can be a work of art, dressed with hand-tied squirrel or buck tail in
a wide variety of colors.
Squirrel Tails
Just
how the hooks on Mepps spinners have come to be dressed with squirrel tails
is another Todd Sheldon-Wolf River story. Back in the early 1960's, Todd had
experienced a particularly good day trout fishing the Wolf with Mepps
spinners. In fact, he had limited out! On the way back to his car, he met a
young boy who also had limited out fishing with Mepps lures. But, all of the
boy's trout were larger than Todd's. This is not something easily accepted
by any fisherman. Todd noticed the Mepps spinner attached to the boy's line
had a small tuft of squirrel tail attached to the hook.
When he returned to the plant, Todd began
experimenting with dressed hooks. Bear hair was tried as well as fox, coyote, badger,
skunk, deer, even Angus cow. But no other tail provided the pulsating action
in the water created by squirrel tail or buck tail.

Sheldons', Inc. was soon recycling both squirrel and buck tails. "Squirrel
Tails Wanted" reads the large carved wooden sign near the Mepps plant on
Wisconsin's Highway 45. It's amusing to most travelers, but it intrigues
others enough to stop. "This is fine with us," Mike Sheldon smiles. "We
welcome visitors and offer them tours of the plant. Hunters will also stop
because they have tails to sell."
Processing the tails is a lot of work.
After trimming, they are washed, not once but several times to remove every
last bit of oil and grime. Between each washing they must be dried. Some
are left their natural color, others are dyed brilliant hues before becoming
Mepps dressed hooks.
Fishing Success
The Sheldon family has successfully fished some of the world's most
productive water all the way up to the Arctic Circle. One entire wall of
Mike Sheldon's office showcases the finest selection of trophy game fish
found in North America. All of the fish were taken on Mepps lures.
The requirements of staying on top of his import business has resulted in
some European travel. On his visits to the factory in France, Mike will
combine business with pleasure by whetting a line whenever possible. As a
result, he has fished all across Europe. . . and with enviable results.
Every
fisherman has a Mepps story to tell, and anglers from all across the
nation send photos of their Mepps catches to Sheldons'. Some of these
unsolicited testimonials are published each year in the full-color Mepps
Fishing Guide. In addition to the photos and testimonials, the Guide
features the entire line-up of Mepps products and offers valuable fishing
tips. The Mepps Fishing Guide is one of a very few catalogs
that's genuinely fun to read. Best of all, it's free.
|