Beautiful finish for a factory made pair of boots a quick estimate places them around 1913 /1920 nicely detailed branding on the sole....
Straight from the archives, the first trace i was able to find , of this unusual shoe called: ELKSKIN. as advertised in a 1913 mail order catalog from Chicago.....
Another unusual find today ,a little more "of the wall" than your average work boots from the same era....I must admit that at first ,i was a little reluctant to get them,as i thought they were more sports, than work related....silly me right !?perhaps because they were unlined and less rugged than expected for a work shoe. Then while talking to the vendor i suddenly remembered seing something similar ,in one of my earliest mail order catalog and decided to take the risk ,if any.....Well!!! lucky me,i was right .So here they're for you guys to enjoy too, a nice dead stock pair of BLUE RIBBON BROWN'S ELKSIN WORK SHOES from the early 1900's....
here's a little blab about the company's history......
In 1878 George Warren Brown, Alvin L. Bryan, and Jerome Desnoyers founded a women's shoes manufacturing company called Bryan, Brown and Company. Desnoyers retired in 1893, and the company's name was changed to Brown Shoe Company.
By 1900, the St Louis based company, had sales reaching $4 million. At that time John Bush, a Brown Shoe executive, acquired the rights to the "Buster Brown" cartoon character. This character would remain the company's signature logo for decades. The company's early marketing gimmick involved a traveling show of performers dressed as Buster Brown, the company's mascot, who put on shows in theaters, shoe stores, and department stores. Brown Shoe pioneered the idea of marketing specific shoe brands to retailers, rather than the traditional method of traveling store-to-store with samples of every shoe manufactured by the company.
Brown Shoe Company's run-ins with unions began in 1907 when the company opened its first plant outside of St. Louis in response to increased union activity in its existing urban plants. For twenty years following this, the company pursued a policy of opening factories in rural areas, where there was little to no union activity but mostly to cut the production costs . Brown Shoe began hiring women and children in 1911, as labor costs were increasing and it was legal to pay women and children less than men. More than half of the shoe workers in St. Louis were between the ages of fourteen and nineteen .Ironically, most of them,could not afford a pair of the shoes they were making .During the Depression in the 1930s, the company lowered its costs again by lowering the wages it paid to its workers.Same old story right !??......
The company was incorporated in New York in 1913, and went public on the New York Stock Exchange that same year. World War I brought a business boom to the company, as it won contracts to supply shoes to the U.S. troops. The company's second brand of shoes, Naturalizer, was introduced in 1927. Other Brown Shoe brands included Buster Brown, Brownbilt, Tread Straight, and the brand featured on today's post.....Blue Ribbon
Beautiful pair of shoes!
ReplyDeletevery lucky man that day ......
ReplyDeleteOURGH !!!!!!!!!!!! THOSE BOOTS DRIVE ME MAD !!!!!
ReplyDeleteçA C'EST DE LA POMPE !!!!!!!! AND THIS COLOR… I CAN'T BELIEVE IT… ENCORE !!!!!!!! (SI TU TROUVES LEURS JUMELLES EN 10…) OURGH AGAIN !!!!!!! I'M LOOKING FOR 30'S WHITE CRICKET GAME SHOES…AND YOU FOUND BETTER… OURGH AGAIN AND AGAIN !!!!!! BRAVO !
criket shoes use to be so common at the Candem flea market back in the 80...nowadays even in England they are hard to get.how many times i've tried my luck on ebay UK....good luck hunting .where is my corduroy hunting jacket by the way!??
ReplyDeleteThese shoes are in great condtion. I couldn't imagine the Hamlet tragedy : Wear or not wear it ???
ReplyDeleteyou've said it my dear !! maybe for the great Gatsby picnic in September .
ReplyDeleteHey man, just a little question about your illustration for riveted title… Is it your creation or part of Diego Riviera's painting. I really like the 2 artists…
ReplyDeletein fact it's part of a fresco done during the depression era on the walls of the "coit" tower here in SF .i'll do a post about it and about another one i like soon .like Diego but my favorite is Benton ......cheers
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot for the info… Yes Benton c'est BATH !
ReplyDelete