- Tommy Van Scoy
Tommy Van Scoy was the owner of a chain of diamond
jewelry stores along inNew England and theMid-Atlantic States . He was also known for his oddradio commercials for hisjewelry stores . He was also a championship boxer and anamateur pilot .Van Scoy was born March 22, 1920, in
Bear Creek, Pennsylvania . Hismother died when he was 8 years old. In the 1930s hisfather a, formersteelworker , had a difficult time finding work during theGreat Depression . Young Van Scoy graduated fromCoughlin High School and made money as anewspaper boy and as ashoeshiner . Van Scoy was aGolden Gloves boxer. In 1942 he joined theArmy , where theflip of a coin ignited a new interest.“While I was in the
army , I went toSan Antonio . I with two other officers and we flipped a coin to see who would pay for themovie . I lost and the coin landed on the crystal of my watch and broke it. He took the watch to a repair shop, and when the jeweler learned he was interested in the inner workings of the timepiece, thejeweler taught Van Scoy how to fix awatch .After returning home from the military in 1945, he rented a second floor
retail space inWilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania and opened his firstjewelry store. Severalyears later he decided he could make moremoney sellingdiamonds exclusively .However, the diamonds he sold were of far lessor quality than advertised.In the early 1980s, Van Scoy became known in
New England and theMid-Atlantic States for hishalting testimonials inradio commercials for the "Van Scoy Diamond Mine." His commercials sometimes included this jingle: "I'm a lucky girl," "hoo-ray, oh boy!" "Look at my diamond," "it came from Van Scoy." "My boyfriend got it," "spent lots of money too." "Van Scoy's the diamond king," "yes, he's the man for you!"When Van Scoy
retired in 1993, he left sevenself-owned jewelry store s to his children. Throughfranchising , Van Scoy lent his name to forty additional stores in the northeasternUnited States including shops inScranton, Pennsylvania ;Binghamton, New York ;Hartford, Connecticut ; andWest Springfield, Massachusetts “When Iwalk into atown , I don’t have to depend onluck ,” Van Scoy once said. “I’ve arranged it and planned itlogically . I’ll go in and sell morediamonds in oneday than all the other jewelers in town have in aweek .”
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