"He¡¯s small, but he¡¯s wirey... the true embodiment of cooperative spunk."
September 19, 2020 2:00 PM Subscribe
Rural Electrification programs were supposed to help communities with education, productivity and healthcare among other things. But sometimes communities needed to be sold on the idea of getting connected and that's where electricity mascots came in. Reddy Kilowatt had been the "corporate spokesman" for power companies since 1926 and was a licensed trademark. His creator, Ashton Collins thought "electric cooperatives were 'socialistic' because they borrowed money from the federal government." Collins refused to let Reddy be associated with co-ops, and threatened co-op mascots that were "too similar" with lawsuits. Willie Wiredhand, representing the co-ops, was created in 1952, and in 1956 Collins and his lawyers filed suit in Federal Court. In 1957 they lost and Willie Wiredhand was trademarked later that year.
- Listen to Willie singing about 80 years of rural electrification
- Read about what Willie is up to lately
- Willie turns 70 the day before Halloween
posted by jessamyn (29 comments total)
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posted by The Underpants Monster at 2:14 PM on September 19, 2020 [7 favorites]