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ADVERTISEMENTS

F. A.

5eav^y

&* Co,,

Manufacturers of

and Chil-

Ladies', Misses'

dren's

FINE SHOES,

in

Button, Lace and Oxfords*

F. A.

'BEVERLY,
Boston

&

Co.,

MASS.

Seavey
-

Lincoln

Drug Store Goods

Office,

Street.

>

If

You Want
anything

>

Cret

it

in

AT GREEN'S

HE CUTS THE
~

PRICE.

save from 25 to 33 per

<

and you

>

Prompt and Courteous Attention by


men, whether your wants are small

<

will

c<

reliable

or large.

>
>
>

(Brcen tbe Druggiet,.

f\

ADVERTISEMENTS

Tfp on Tips.
Every one
kind,

the

is

looking for

some one

tips,

and some another.

We

PATENT LEATHER kind.

are in need of

any

If

you

us.

(flemff,

83 Rantoul

Try

deal in

Beverly, Mass.

St.,

Don't Read This


Unless you wish to learn something of value to you.

The

Ideal Benefit Association

is

"Ideal" because

has in its plan eliminated the weak points in other organizations, included their strong points, and added others.

ist.

It

2nd

It

pays

for sickness, injuries,

and death.

includes both sexes.


4th. It pays for sixteen weeks' sickness in any year.
5th. It permits $25 a week with only $100 on life.
6th. It allows you to take 5, 10, 15, 20 or $25 a week.
yth. It allows you to take $100 to $3000 at death.
3rd.

It

The membership

fee is from $2 to $12, according to the

amount

desired.

Drop the Association a card with your address, and an agent


will call upon you.

122

CABOT

ST.,

BEVERLY, MASS.

ADVERTISEMENTS

Joseph W. Obear,

All Orders

Cor. Park and

F.

promptly attended

West Dane

St.,

W. BERNARD,

Artistic

Memorials

to.

Beverly, Hass

Beverly, Mass.

in Granite,

Marble

&

Bronze.

C/)

c
<u

"3

o
8-

ADVERTISEMENTS

E.

F.

SULLIVAN,
Agent

for the

Hanover Bicycle
For Cash or on Time,
Also agent for the

CELEBRA TED ^-*^

Jacob

Doll
Cash

Piano

or on Time.

Washington
BEVERLY.

St.,

ADVERTISEMENTS
People
to

pay

now

realize the fact that

it is

cheaper

to

own

house than

rent.

Many are moving to the northern section of the city to get a way
from the east winds which are injurious to the throat and lungs.
If you are thinking of making a purchase or moving, now is the
terms in
t ime to secure a cosy home at a very low cost and very easy
one of the prettiest spots in the City on the western slope of Prospect
Hill, nice level lots from 4500 to 7000 feet each.
New seven room cottages, all modern conveniences, substantially
built, open for inspection to anyone. Equal to any custom build
house. Three already sold, will build on any of the remaining fortyfive lots to suit.

Also some fine house lots for sale very reasonable.


These being the only available lots in City proper

reasonable

at a

price it will be for your interest to investigate before purchasing.


Prices are sure to please. Fifty or more references. Inquire of

PRINCE
OBER,
Ga,Toot
St.,

CLAFLIN
Jobbing

BROS.,
of

Kinds.

nil

Steam, Gas and Water Piping.


All

Orders Promptly Attended To.

60 RfllliHOflO flVE,
J.

H.

CLAFLIN,

(DflSS.

BEVE^liY,

Practical Plumber.

Edward

John H, CUflia.
4

Clafliu.

ADVERTISEMENTS

SMITH & McLARREN,7P

Park st
Beverly, Mass.

Stair

Builders
Brackets, Rails, Newels,

Posts and Balusters.


Planing and Sawing of

all

kinds.

Estimates given on All Kinds of Stair Work.

DR.

E.

B.

DUDLEY,

DENTIST,
107 Cabot Street,

BEVERLY,

MASS.

ADVERTISEMENTS

mason &

Stone

Estimates Given on

Elliot Street,

all

of

kinds of Stone Work.

Beverly, mass.

Electric

Woodbury
Wiring

Contractor.

Co.,

at Short Notice.

Every Description

Isolated Electric Plants Installed.

Chandeliers,

Gas

Cluster Lights, Globes.

Lighting a Specialty.

General Electric
Bell

of

all

Kinds.

Work, Speaking Tubes,

J.
Cor,

Work

Etc.

W. LEE, Manager,

Dane and Lothrop

Sts.
6

Beverly, Mass.

ADVERTISEMENTS

FOR INSURANCE.
GO TO

ROOM

8,

Beverly.
Any

one wish-

ing to purchase a

HEATER
do well to

would
call

and

KELSEY
HEATER, also a

see the

fine line of

Ranges

Oil and Gasoline


Stoves.

C,

I WOODBURY,
277

CAB01

ST.

ADVERTISEMENTS

News Company,

Beverly

Agents

for all

Boston 2>ail,

Meekly anb
unday
Also for

all

the Leading Magazines and Local News-

papers.

Choice Line of

^>

Confectionery and Cigars.

What Does
Rather,

I.

L WEBBER

what does he not have

tucky Jean

Cloth from a Ken-

at 35 cents, to the Finest Broadcloth.

All Wool Pants that will fit boys from 3 to 12 yrs.


At the present time, a big drive in Men's and
Youths' Pants, all wool, at $2.00.
Size 29 to 50 waist.
A full line of Braids, Buttons, and Trimmings for

repairing.

A good

cutter,

good journeymen

tailors,

and low

prices for first-class custom tailoring.

ISRAEL
Atlantic Block.

T.

WEBBER.

ADVERTISEMENTS

TAKING

CHANCES
is all

very well

Not

in

some

in

buying
articles for your table.
If there's a place where

cases-

you know
reliable

you'll

get

goods at

fair

prices, that's the place

Risk is too great


to chance going to another place. Save time
to go.

by coming

Bell's

Market and Grocery.

Beverly Repair Shop


F. A. E.

HAMILTON,

To Everybody
To Farmers
is

if

We

To Shoemakers
all

& Supply

Store,

Prop, and Manager.

carry a full line of Hardware.

you want Agricultural Tools or Seeds

the place to

and

at once to

this

buy them.
Just remember that you can procure any

shoe tools and instruments at

HAMILTON'S
Cor.

Pond and Rantoul


Bicycle and

Sts.,

Lawn Mowers
9

Beverly, Mass.
a Specialty.

ADVERTISEMENTS

I
156

CABOT STREET.

Photographs finished

in

Carbon, Carbonette or Ivory.

Crayons, Pastels and Water Colors

a Specialty.
Have you seen

They

our

$5.00

16x20 Water

Colors?

are fine, call and judge for yourself.

E GIVE SATISFACTION.

Carbonettes and Ivory Finish Photographs


a specialty.
First-class

Work

Guaranteed.

Children's Photographs taken


stantaneous Process.

by the

In=

Pictures are warranted not to fade.

F.

L.

Hildreth, Photographer,
CABOT STREET, CITY.

140

10

ADVERTISEMENTS

Ladies
To Learn

Dressmaking
Position

When

Learned,

$15 Weekly.

to

First-class Dressmaking.

Satisfaction

OPENED

9 A. H.

TO

Guaranteed.

9 P.

fl.

168 Cabot Street,

BEVERLY,

ii

MASS.

ADVERTISEMENTS
Busiest House in the City.

the

5
-

Dealer

in

Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Silverware, Silver Nov


elties,

Repairing

Optical Goods,

etc.

a Specialty.

Satisfaction Guaranteed

Masonic Building, Beverly, Mass.

O. B.
Dealer

in

Meal,

Shorts, Etc.

Burnham,
Corn,

Oats,

Fine

Feed,

Loose and Baled Hay and

Straw.

187

and 189 Rantoul Street,

BEVERLY,

CONNECTED BY TELEPHONE.
12

MASS,

ADVERTISEMENTS

Rubber Tires For Carriages.


You must have them for Comfort.
You must have them for Pleasure.
You want them for General Use.

We

are putting

them on

at

Wholesale Prices.

cBow

126 Rantoul St., Cor.

We
vice,

have

quick

Please send

We

trade

your orders

Remember,
pound, and 8

We

qts. to

is

increasing.

early.

give

16

oz.

to

the peck.

have two Stores.


231

good ser-

first-class goods,

delivery,
in

Beverly

St.,

^-\

and 233 Cabot Street,

208 Rantoul Street.

H.

ff.

place.

the

ADVERTISEMENTS

To the Ladies of Beverly.


We
we have
Glove

wish to call your attention to the fact that


taken the agency for the celebrated Bazaar

Fitting Patterns, of

which we have a large stock

constantly on hand, at the very low price of 15 cents


a Pattern, irrespective of marked prices. Call and

examine counter book.


Dealers

in

Monthly Fashion Guides Fr ee.


and
Dry
Fancy Goods, Hosiery, Ging-

hams, Dress Linings, etc.


Wrappers a Specialty.
Prices always the Lowest.

The Bazaar Pattern Store,


265 Cabot Street, Beverly.

7
is

l^ool
f(ooir\$,
RAILROAD AVENUE,

the place to

play

Pool,

and buy your

Cigars.

Catering for Parties.

Fish Dinners a spec-

ialty.

H. P.

JOHNSON &
PROPRIETORS.

CO.

ADVERTISEMENTS

For

<

Bicycle,

Tennis

and Sporting Shoes.

Putnam,

\'J.

Odd

Sbe Sboeman,

Fellows' Block, Beverly.

CATERING.
Tastes satisfied, from the epicurean

All

down

to the

humblest workman.

After years of experience, Gordon the


Caterer, is still prepared to furnish Banquets,
Suppers, Private Dinners, Wedding Breakfasts, etc.

Ice

Cream,

all

flavors.
Service Unexcelled.

Prompt Attention.

Emerson

G.

Gordon,

Selby House Block,

94 Cabot

Beverly, Mass.

St.,
15

ADVERTISEMENTS

Neal & Newhallj


Beverly's

LEADING OUTFITTERS.
Sole Agents For

LAMSOM & HUBBARD'S HAT.


F. D.

FRASER, Manager.

Prices as

low as any
in

the city

for first-

class

S. F.
plans and Estimates

OBER & SON,


and
Contractors

Cheerfully Furnished.

32 and 34

work.

Builders.

Jobbing promptly attended

CENTRAL STREET.

Also, Dealers la Real Estate.

16

to.

SHOES

flND

SHOEMAKING

ILLUSTRATED.

BRIEF SKETCH OF THE HISTORY AND

MANUFACTURE OF SHOES FROM THE


EARLIEST TIME

-BY

W,

C.

MORGAN.
H

BEVERLY, MASS,:

PRESS OF KEHEW & ODELL.


1897.

o
A? 6

INTRODUCTION.
In the history of Beverly, shoes and shoemaking
have always been identified with her success, and
many of her most prominent men have been connect-

ed with the

craft.

The people

of this

generation

have watched with ever increasing interest, the development of the shoe factory right here in our midst,
from the little shop in the door yard of almost every
inhabitant to the large and well equipped modern
With the growth of the
factory of the present time.
shoe industry there has also been a corresponding
growth of city and property, and today we point with
pride to the large and well regulated shoe factories in
the manufacturing district.
Incident to and connected
with the shoe industry are other industries such as
the manufacture of boxes and cartons, and the manufacture of shoe machinery.
These- factories we
have here today. Beverly shoes are known throughout the country, and several Beverly boys are sellIt seems to the compiler of this
ing her product.
work that a book of this kind treating of the history
of

shoemaking

in general,

and

in

Beverly

in particular

a desirable one and one that will meet the approval


and recognition of every Beverlyite no matter wherever he may be.
The author is indebted to the late
Hon. John I. Baker for much valuable information, to
Albert Vittum and the Boot and Shoe Recorder for
the use of cuts and to any and all who have furnished
data or statistics.
is

WILLIAM C. MORGAN.
19

o
111

LU

Z
a.

O
X
CO
UJ

O
CO
i

CO

_u

CHAPTER

I,

*,

The word shoe

derived

is

from the Anglo Saxon scoh,

the general meaning


which
the

any

is,

foot, excepting, of course, hosiery.

and shoemaking should be

of shoes
to our

townspeople,

for

due

This subject

of great interest

what Beverly

time, her success and her position

of

covering for

is

at the present

among her

sister

no small measure to her shoe industry,


that industry which has increased her population,
cities is

added

in

to her wealth,

and made her the thriving city

of today.

The subject
all

is

a broad one embracing, as

countries and nations, as shoes of

it

does,

some kind

are

almost invariably worn except by some savage tribes.

One

word shoe occurs

of the first times the

Bible,

if

not the

first

time

it

God meets Moses on Mount

is

mentioned,

Sinai

is

and speaks

in

the

where
to

him

"Take thy shoes from off thy feet for the


''
These
wheron thou standest is holy ground.

as follows:
place

shoes were probably sandals which were the only


kind then worn.

We find

gather from the reports


__

in

profane history, and

of ^scholars
21

we

and travelers who

SHOES AND SHOEMAK1NG ILLUSTRATED.


have made ancient Jands_a__stiidy,- that ^hese sandals

were worn even before


reprodQced and handed

down

for f rgrrjL pictures

to us

by these

and which once decorated the walls

ers,

of

this time,

ancient

E gypt>_vyejfind

explor-

of the cities

that the shoemaker, or

rather the sandal maker, as he

must have been

called

occupied a prominent place among the Egyptians.


One picture in particular which is supposed from the
characters portrayed, as well as the articles of wearing apparel, to have decorated the walls of

Thebes

during the reign of Thotmes Third or about the time


of the

exodus

of the Children of Israel

from Egypt

represents the shoemaker at his work.

The men,

there are two of

for

them, are seated on low


of

them making

of

the sandal through which the

'strap passed

dal

to

the feet,

which bound the

way

this

seems

to

us,JLn

McKay, the Goodyear and Eppler

The

tools bear

san.-

the oth^r sewing the -thong and

tightening the work with his teeth.


itive

one

stools,

holes in the thong

Rather a prim-

these days of the

& Adams

some resemblance

machines.

to those

used

to-

day" in hand work, particuTarry-*ke ~awi -which has

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


changed but little. These sandals which as we have
were the first kind of shoe of which we

'said before
find

any

record,

were made low and fastened across


Those worn by the

the instep with leathern thongs.

common

people of Egypt were

while

er,

were made
in
x

made wholly

of leath-

those worn by the priests and nobility

palm leaves and papyrus. Wilkinson


treatise on the manners and customs of the

his

ancient

of

'

Egyptians says,

'Ladies and

rank

paid great attention to the

dals,

but those of the middle class

beauty

men

of

high

of their san-

who were

able to

sandals, for they were considered a luxury,


sometimes and on some occasions, preferred going

wear

barefoot and in religious ceremonies the priests some-

times took them off."

These sandals were


as material,

some

up at the toes

of

like

of great variety in

form as well

them being pointed and turning


our old fashioned skates.
The

Persians during the reign of Darius and Xerxes wore

many

kinds of shoes.

Hall tells us that there

were

three prominent varieties, the half sandal, the shoe,

and the boot

or

high shoe.

Among

the ancient

Greeks and Romans there were few who wore shoes,


these few being members of the royal family, senators,

and nobles.

The

senators in particular were


23

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


very dressy

which were

the matter of their shoes, some of

in

black, with

a crescent of gold or silver

on the instep, while others were decorated with ornamental work in painting or embroidery, and some

were even studded with jewels.


There were two kinds of shoes
the Solea, which

we have

Calceus, which

were made

in

vogue

at this time,

described above, and the

wooden shoes and

like

which were designed

more particularly

door wear.

us that the

Hope

tells

wore shoes laced

in front

animals of the

cat

and

for out of

Grecian ladies

lined with the furs of

whose heads and claws

tribe,

adorned the top, and dangled down over the instep,


quite a fancy ankle decoration certainly.

The Egyptian shoe was woven


and other

made
that

of

of strong river grass

vegetable material, but was very rarely


leather,

the

the person was

of

Egypt believing
by contact with anything

priests

defiled

that had been killed.

According to
in

the time of

Homer the Greeks wore

boots to battle

Plato strongly opposed

Agamemnon.

the wearing of shoes.

On

shoes were removed as

is

entering the house the

the

custom

in

the east

today.

Among

the peasants of France,


24

Holland,

Belgium

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED,


and Germany, heavy wooden shoes called "sabots"
are worn as has been the custom for centuries.

These sabots are mostly made

An

ern part of France.

plane are

in

Brittany in the north-

ax, saw,

gouge, and

drill,

the tools required in the manufacture of

all

wooden

these heavy

The work

shoes.

is

done

and whole families are engaged in it.


Sherwood in an article

forests

Leslie's

in

in the

Frank

some years ago since says,

"Shoes have played an important


part in the romances of all ages.
In our earliest childhood

of

tures

Cinderella;

This story

is

delighted in the adven-

the

little

glass

slipper."

older than the very language in

our nurses told

panied by

we

or

it,

and

comes down

it

to us

which
accom-

a sort ot moldering and exquisite perfume

from amidst the papyrus archives which modern science has learned to translate from Egyptian Hieroglyphics.

captive

with

by

Pti a beautiful Persian princess

Egyptian general,

the rest of his spoils, to his

of the Nile.
in the

One day

brought her

home on

the banks

after bathing her lovely self

waters of the great

finished her toilet, Pti

who

was taken

river,

was

youth as beautiful as the

and before she had

startled

by the

vision of a

Sun God, who ran toward

her from a neighboring thicket.


25

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


'The youth would have caught her in his arms, but
the lovely Pti was a true daughter of Dian, and being
swift of foot, escaped his

embrace leaving

a tiny

This the

glass

and through

slipper.

its

woman was

the lovely

The

general had brought a train


captives with him from the land of flowers and

therefore a Persian!

glass

clue

slippers.

when Cupid

crystal

slipper in

was none
II,

to discover its

The Persians alone manufactured

glass shoes in those days;

of

her flight
treasured

youth

medium was enabled

lovely owner.

in

How

easy the following of such a

placed the

first link of

evidence, the

And

the youth's hand.

the youth

other than a prince of blood royal, Ramesis

the original of the great statue of

singing statute, which stands on the


Nile today.

When

Pti

was

Memnon, the

bank

of the river

at last found she fled

no

more from her princely lover; but as his wife lived


long and happy, and her cartouche is placed beside
his in the greatest of

all

Writers and poets of


of a

the pyramids."
all

ages have used the theme

woman's shoe from the time

scribes

a coquettish

of

Horace

Roman beauty

who

straps of her sandals around her pretty ankles,


to that of T. B. Aldrich in

whose "Queen

26

de-

tightening the

of

down

Sheba"

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED,


the

little

slipper of the heroine plays so important a

part in the life

that of
feet.
'

all

and character of the hero.

to

is

said

races Americans have the most beautiful

Several

familiar

proverbs

'Waiting for dead men's shoes.

in his

It

"
shoes.

'Too

"

relate

"I

to

shoes.

would not stand

big for his shoes."

"I prefer

be trodden on by the velvet slipper rather than

the wooden shoe" are some of the expressions.

High shoes reaching

nearly

to

the

middle of the leg

were worq by men


of high

rank

in

the

Tenth century.
The Normans wore shoes very
The early kings
simple in form and made of leather.
England are represented as wearing shoes decorated with bands of silver and gold representing
leather.
During the Fourteenth century, shoes were
of

made

of a peculiar style

feet long

and tapering

up and

tied at the

knee.

young men wore them of


one boot of

From

red,

some

of

them nearly two


were brought

to a point; these

Some very

fashionable

different colors, for instance;

the other of a yellow colored leather.

suddenly changed, for fashion


from one extreme to the other,

this style fashion

like fortune is fickle,

27

GROUP OF OLD STYLE

SHOES.

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


and shoes were worn which were nearly as broad as
In fact the fashion was carried to
they were long.
such an extent that Queen Mary was obliged to prohibit the

wearing of shoes which were more than six

inches broad.

High heels are

no recent

of

origin,

but on the con-

trary are very old for as early as the beginning of the

Seventeenth century

costumes

we

find,

from representations of

of that time, that the heels of shoes

worn very

high,

some

of

them being three

were

or four

inches high, so that the French heel of recent years,


instead of being a

new

is

invention,

but an old and

injurious fashion restored, and enough cannot be said

against them, for they are not only injurious but also

unhealthy.

The present form

of the

Seventeenth century, and

shoe was adopted


in

in

the

the latter part of the

same century shoe buckles were used and these continued to be used until the beginning of the present
century.

The most

curious of

all

shoes are those

worn by the Chinese women in high stations. They


some of them being not over three

are very small

or four inches in

Chinese

girls

When

length.

have

bandages that growth

their feet
is

very young the


bound so tight with

stopped which of course


29

is

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


very

painful, but

able,

and there

sort of a

is

bunch

what

of that as long as

really no foot at
or ball of flesh,

all,

fashion-

it is

only a

little

bearing no resem-

blance to a foot except that the shape of the toes are


visible.

In

Japan sandals

America sandals made

of

of plaited thongs of

used to cover the foot and


familiar

Indian.

with

straw are worn.

we

are

all

In

South

hemp

more

are

or less

the moccasin of the North American

SHOP

IN

WHICH WOODBURY BROS. COMMENCED

BUSINESS.

CHAPTER
Adam

II.

_^

work pubsome time since said "The

lished

in a

Smith,

excessive consumption of leather


indicates

America today

civilization.

sumers of leather
and

it is

in its

are

degree

of

one of the greatest con-

varied forms of manufacture,

universally acknowledged that the civiliza-

tion of the United States

We

is

a superior

all

of us

more

is

of the highest

grade."

or less familiar with the

little

shoemaker's shop which formerly occupied a corner


in the yard of every farmer, and which during the
winter was
family

made

by the manufacture

noise of

machinery,

hand and the

outfit

shops were busy

The

a source of profit to himself and

for

was a

all

done by

small one but these

little

places.

well to do people of those times as well as

others perhaps not so well to do, but

much

There was no

of shoes.

the work was

of

who

did'nt

have

an inclination to work, and their descendants

are with us today, would gather there and with the

shoemaker discuss the questions


these

little

12 x 16 shops

of

the

day.

many theological and


32

In

politi-

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED,


cal

questions were settled, tor the shoemakers of the

olden time as well as the the followers of the craft to-

day were as well read and


our

We
the

instructed as

any

class of

citizens.

of us who are still young,


low bench with the seat on one end and

remember even those

little

the place for the

Two

also.

"kit" on the other, and that kit

or three knives, lapstone^

hammer,

strap,

shave, long stick, shoulder stick, awls, bristles and

thread

in

the small drawer^ in the lower part of the

the tub of water

also

bench,

in

the middle of the

floor containing the sticks or balls of wax.

are

all

familiar to

many

of us

These

and now today as we


most delicate

look at our large factories filled with the

machinery, capable of performing the

yet simple

work

of

many men, we

this industry

can see what immense strides

has made during the century.

The manufacture

of

boots

and shoes

is

now

ac-

knowledged as one of the principal and most important industries in the United States.

1858 Richardson says

'The Americans
superiority over

dustry and

in a

in

As long ago as

work published

in

London,

are rapidly securing to themselves a


all

other nations in this important in-

few years

all

shoes of American man-

ufacture will be regarded as the


33

Ne

Plus Ultra of the

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED,

We

art"

were made

find that shoes

home

vate families for

in

many

pri-

the early settlers

among

use,

while those for Sunday wear and dress up occasions

were imported from the mother country.


Although shoes were made in many Masachusetts
towns, yet the centre of the business aeems to have

been from the early history of the trade, in Lynn.


For we read in an old work describing this business,
that the

town

was noted

of

Lynn from

its

earliest

settlement

shoemakirig which was one of its


and it was with such facilities that

for its

chief industries,

shoes were

made

there, that

shoes grew spontaneously


could be said

in

it

led to the saying that

Lynn.

If

these things

many years ago what can we say today

filled
with machinery and every
modern labor saving device which are so plentiful in
The work was
every well regulated shoe factory.

with our shops

done

in

the families of the manufacturers in the early

history of the business, there being no factories the

business
In

was

necessarily conducted on a small scale.

1750 however, a new

business

by one John

maker who
This
ty to

at that time

man by

start

was given to the


a Welsh shoe-

Adam Dagyr,
had just

settled

in

Lynn.

workmanship and his fidelibusiness, achieved for himself no mean reputahis superior

34

WOODBURY

BROS. 2nd SHOP.


1

SHOES AND SHOEMAK1NG ILLUSTRATED.


and greatly improved the then existing styles of
The Continental army during the Revolution
work.

tion

was

supplied with shoes

made

Massachusetts.

in

After the close of the war, and our ports had been

opened

to foreign vessels, shoes

as our people

were

in

no condition

at that time to

pete with European manufacturers.

however, that shoe business was


is

today, for in 1788, the city of

ooo

pairs of shoes;

and

in 1795,

to be imported

began

It

dull,

was

com-

not long,

as the saying

Lynn exported

100,

300,000 pairs were

manufactured and there were employed in that city,


200 master workmen and nearly 600 apprentices and

journeymen. The first vessel to carry a full cargo of


boots and shoes sailed for New York during May, 1818,

Shipments had been made


this

was the

first

sometime previous, but


vessel that had ever carried boots

and shoes exclusively.

for

At that time the manufacture

was confined almost wholly

to

soon spread and increased until

New
in

England, but

it

1829 there were

four jobbing boot and shoe houses in

New

York and

same year the wholesale dealers


handled about 1,000,000 pairs.
The trade kept gradBoston; during the

ually increasing in the United States until in

1858,

there were 218 wholesale and jobbing boot and shoe


houses, and through these houses passed the
36

number

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED,


manufactured during the year,

of pairs

One

ooo.
try

was

of the greatest strides

when

in 1851,

viz:

made

proved

of Boston.

was

in-

much

im-

the pegging machine

vented by A. C. Gallagher and which was


later

Townsend and

B.

52,000,

in this indus-

F.

Sturtevant

by

E.

It is

estimated that at the present time

there are more than 2,000 of these machines in use,

As two

more rows

or

of

pegs can be driven at the

same time with these machines, it


glance what a vast saving of labor
old

method

of

later

former,
tion of

is

be seen

at a

made over the

working with pegging awl and hammer.

Another invention

came

will

may

of equal

importance which, although

be mentioned

in

connection with the

was the McKay sewing machine, the invenone Blake and

perfected

still

called in

England the Blake

by Gordon McKay and which proved

to be

a great bonanza to the patentee and owners.

From the following

statistics,

we

increase of the business from 1845

aware that

statistics

are dry

often shunned and slighted

but

we

can see the steady


to 1880.

We

are

reading and are very

by the average

reader,

think this subject of great importance to the

people of Beverly, for from this business a large portion of our


port.

We

community derive

their

income and sup-

shall confine ourselves in these figures


37

to

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


our

own

in this

to us

Massachusetts

state, for

industry and

it

will

than would general

be of

the banner state

is

much more

interest

1845 the va '~

In

statistics.

ue of boots and shoes manufactured was $14,799, 140;

number

of pairs

engaged

in

made, 20,896,372; number

the work, 45,877.

501,725; number

engaged

in

of pairs

In

of persons

value, $37,

1845

made, 45,066,828; persons

the work, 77,827,

In

Lynn, there were about 5,000

in

1857

the city of

workmen and

4,000,000 pairs manufactured.

town

In the

nearly
of

Mil-

same year there were manufactured


In 1865
value $56, 113,987; num2, 000,000 pairs.

ford during the

ber of pairs, 31,070,581; persons employed,

We

see

This

is

52,821.

by comparing the figures of 1855 and 1865,


that less shoes were made and the value much increased.
of course

easily

explained by the fact that

during the war, less work

were fewer men

at

home

was
to

do

done,
it,

because there

but what shoes

were made commanded the highest

prices.

the value of the goods manufactured

was

number
of

of persons

$89, 375, 792;

The number

working hours through the state averages ten

hours per day.


ing

employed, 49,708.

In 1875,

May

$300

for

ist,

The wages

paid during the year end-

1875, averaged $525 for each male, and

each female employed.


33

The

total

amount

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


paid out in the state during the

same

period

was

$18,

which $3,687,077 was paid in Lynn or


nearly 20 per cent, of the amount of capital invested,
From the
One more comparison.
$18,692,864.

727,124; of

between the number employed in 1845


and 1875, an d the difference in the value and amount
of production, we see what an immense saving of
differences

the

labor

than

in

gaged

machinery has been, for


many shoes were made in 1875

introduction of

nearly three times as

184$, and only 3,000 more persons were en-

in

the work.

tion of our state

is

The

entire boot

and shoe produc-

now over $100,000,000

annually-

From the Massachusetts

statistics

we

Number of persons employed

glean the following:

of

labor for 1895,

35,741; wages paid $12,302,058; value of stock $47,

888,675; value

of

product $76,882,713.

CHAPTER

III.

This chapter
history of

is

a short

the manufac-

ture of shoes in Beverly

from

ment up

to the present time,

prominent citizens

its

earliest

with the names of

who have been

settle-

many

from time to time

The subject treated fully


engaged in the work.
would occupy more space than we have at the present
at our disposal, in fact would fill a volume; so we
have gone over the field carefully, gleaning such
and items of information as may be most in-

statistics

structive and interesting to us today.


It

was the custom

in

the early history of our country

journeymen shoemakers or "tramping jours" as


they were called to travel from house to house repair-

for

ing shoes, and not unfrequently

shoes to measure.

they took orders for


These shoemakers or cordwinders

and cordwainers as they were called in those days,


boarded with the men for whom they were working,
staying at a house until all necessary repairs in their
line

had been made, then going on


40

to

the next place

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


and so on.

The

they travelled on snowshoe?.


cordwainer of whom we have any know-

In the winter

earliest

ledge in our city,

was Andrew

who

Elliott,

the present residence of the late Israel


scendent, on Cabot Street,

a de-

Elliott,

above Beckford

just

This part of the town was called

"The City" and was

lived near

'

'Hay market"

St.

also

a very important place and a

center of trade.
Mr. Elliott

was the

from him descended

town

first

many

clerk of Beverly

prominent men,

President Elliot of Harvard College.

shoemaker

to

of note,

Also that

in 1629.

Thomas

in

including

find that a

Beard, resided in Salem

Thomas Edwards, a name

Beverly people today,

This was

We

1649 and

and

resided in the

familiar

same town.

1652 Jonas Fairbanks was

in

brought before an Essex County court and charged

with wearing great boots.


Just before the revolutionary war,

moved

to

Beverly from Ipswich.

Joseph Foster

He was deacon

He settled on Cabot St. near


clerk.
known
as
Chestnut St. He was one
now
way
those who supplied the Continental Army with

and also town

the
of

shoes during the war.

pied by
H.,

Thomas

now

living,

His shop

Herrick,

who

was afterward

with his sons, Joseph

Sidney, Emerson,
42

occu-

Thomas

F.

and

SHOES AND SHOEMAK1NG ILLUSTRATED.


Oliver carried on the business.

Dane and Hale

siding on the corner of


of

Oliver,

still

to

and forms,

now

the old house

F.

Herrick re-

Streets, the son

This shop

continues in the craft.

was afterward moved


Myrtle streets

Geo.

the corner of Cabot and


if

we

mistake not,

part of

standing there.

Joseph Foster's son Daniel had a shop on the vacant

lot just

below the Samuel

he manufactured

thick,

and petticoat trousers

heavy
for

P, Lovett estate

where

boots, calf skin jackets

The

fishermen.

was done by the

retail

trade in shoes

time,

and Mr. Foster supplied these stores

principal

grocers at that
in

our

own

and adjoining towns with men's shoes of various designs.

He shipped

also as

was customary

in

those days,

shoes to the West Indies and to the southern states,


receiving in return
grain, etc. In

all

kinds of produce,

beans,

corn,

connection with shoes, hats, furniture and

New England rum formed part of the shipments.


These men would occasionally accompany the shipment, both for the sake of the
the sale of the cargo.
illustrate

The

trip

and

to superintend

following anecdote will

the fearlessness and pluck of these men:

During the war of 1812 several of these shoemakers


chartered a schooner, loaded her at Essex during the
43

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


night, ran the blockade successfully, disposed of their

cargo at an

immense

good round sum

of

profit securing for

money

themselves a

as the result of their ven-

ture and the reward of their daring.

Daniel Foster's three sons, James, Seth and Joseph,


all

worked with him, and

name

uf Daniel Foster

&

later they,

Son,

manufacturing pegged shoes


Foster manufactured

house on Bartlett
the shop

now

in

shoes

where the

owned the patent for


Essex county.
James
the

in

street, also

in

Gorham Howard

the original part of

Wm. W.

late

under the firm

Hinkley's house

is.

His sun the late Daniel, for

him

assessor, succeeded
tired in 1841, to

many years

the business

in

in the

engage

fishing

our worthy

until

he

re-

business.

Seth Foster worked

in

the

town until 1874,


when he removed to Marblehead
business

in

and continued the trade there.


Many of the older manufacturers
of that
In

town learned

their trade of him.

1829 he removed

his time to the

to

Utica, N. Y.,

manufacture

nection with his store there,

Newark, N.

J.,

and

in

of

and devoted

custom shoes
In

in

con-

1830 he removed to

the year following to Elizabeth,


44

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


the same state, where he remained until his death
It

1833.

was

He was

the father of

Railroad avenue,

Wm.

New

A. Foster

whom we

all

inactive business on Park

was the

that he

said of Mr. Foster,

introduce pegged shoes into

first to

now

York

and

State.

living at

remember was

St.,

in

who

37

so long

was,

we

steam machinery in connection with the manufacture of shoes in Beverly.

think, the first to introduce

who

Also of Daniel Foster, 2nd,

for

many

years did

a large business on the corner of Railroad avenue and

Rantoul
left

St.

Joseph Foster,

no children.

if

we

are not mistaken,

He worked with

his father

some-

what, but paid more attention to out of door matters,

and experimented largely in the culture of the mulberry with a view to raising silk worms and to the
manufacture of silk.

For this purpose he set out the

orchard of trees near the corner of

Cabot
rives

West Dane and

and from which Mulberry Street dename.


His experiments were both interest-

Streets,

its

ing and curious, and he


cultural

was commended by the

department at Washington

attention to the subject.


capital to successfully

he was able

to

But,

as

for his
it

agri-

intelligent

required

more

develop his experiments than

command, he was never able

his expectations in this particular.


45

to

meet

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


Among

those

who

learned the trade of the elder

Daniel were Capt. Daniel Cross, Olphert Tittle and

Osman Gage,
of Mrs.

all

seafaring men, the Jatter the father

Charles T. Lovett.

where

Mr. Tittle carried on an extensive business

Green's Drug Store

now

is.

Deacon Nehemiah Roundy had a shop near the


northerly corner of the Kittredge estate on Cabot St.
At

this time

was customary

it

seven years and

to

for apprentices to

serve

Some

board with their masters.

were bound out

at a very early age and served until


21.
were
One little orphan boy was bound to
they
a shoemaker at the age of 7.
When he was 14 he

remarked

companion that he was the happiest


he had only 7 years more to serve.

to a

boy alive, for


The deacon introduced the system
ving 14 months.

At the end

of apprentices ser-

of that time

they con-

sidered their trade learned and received journeymen's

He had many apprentices under this system,


wages.
and some of them have been and are today among
our most noted and influential citizens.

many we

will

Beverly people the


Mr.

Out

of the

mention but one, a name familiar

Roundy

late

Hon. John

built the

I.

shop now

to

all

Baker.
the

Dane house

on Cabot Street, having sold the old one to Jeremiah


46

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


who removed

Trask, Jr.,

it

He

across the street.

(Mr. Roundy) manufactured the celebrated Wellington Boot, a very popular and leading style at that

He shipped shoes

time.

to Africa

and other foreign

home

countries and also had a very successful


in Boston,

and

many years made

sold the second

into the

shop

his

now

trade

weekly

He

with his one-horse team.

over the road

ward

for

trip

after-

shop and moved nearer home

occupied as a dwelling house

Three

Benjamin Holden.

of his sons,

John

P.,

by

Aug-

ustus and George worked with him, the latter doing


quite

an extensive business even


in

engaged
worked in

the lumber trade.

dwelling house,
for

many

shop of Mr.

this old

he

had

those

who

after

Among

Roundy 's, near

was Joseph Woodbury,

2nd,

years manufactured shoes on the corner of

Avenue and Hardy street, and who


death was succeeded by his son Myron, who

Railroad

tinues

'in

his

who

George A.

the trade.

after his
still

Woodbury,

con-

2nd,

another son, was for years located near the corner of

Park and

Bow

streets,

business there.

worked

in this

Joseph Masury

cities,

He

same shop.

and successful business

Western

and did quite an extensive

and

is

in

is

another

who

afterward did a large

Cleveland, Ohio, and other

at present

47

we

believe, residing

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


James

at or near the former place.

long our

was

efficient

so

Deacon
carried

town

clerk,

in

town

prominent

affairs,

for

who was
many

so

years

was another

of

Goodrich
William
Roundy's employes.
on the business in the Luke Goodrich house

near the corner of


Charles,
latter

Hill

and who

Dane and Cabot

His sons

streets.

Luke and William, worked with him, the

being the father of Calvin and

Goodrich.

Charles

The house where Calvin now

was formerly

the

About the year

property

1819,

Capt

of

his

Thomas

W.

resides

grandfather.
.

B.

Smith

bought the Benjamin Roundy estate adjoining the


He enlarged and altered
William Goodrich house.
the house to

its

a large factory
in

present size and shape, and built here

where he

did an extensive business

the manufacture of heavy boots and shoes.

This

shop was for many years a sort of reform headquarters where anti-slavery, temperance, freemasonry and

were discussed, and


which found earnest support and many able advoHis brother, John G. Smith, worked with
cates.

many

other radical measures

him.

This shop was afterwards

moved down on

Railroad avenue near the depot, and forms a part of

the

Railroad

House

formerly
48

owned by the

late

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


Jeremiah Murphy, and recently moved to River street.
In 1830, David Lefavour began the manufacture of

women's morocco walking shoes


Capt. Issachar Foster estate,
S.

Woodbury

his goods,

took

short

when

in

Providence,

them an excellent

for

increased until he

cove, .and

now owned by Stephen


He found a market for

through a kinsman,

and gained
also

at the cove.

the shop on the

in

reputation.

1.,

He

'

term

was

R.

apprentices.

His

business

obliged to build larger at the

his son

Joseph W.,
49

became

of age

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


BRAY, STANLEY & WEBBER

is

one of the youngest

firms in the city having been organized but a few years.


The firm is composed of Clifford B. Bray, who at present
represents Ward one in the board of aldermen, Ralph D.

Stanley and Louis D, Webber.

men

They

are

all

young men but

Mr. Bray was for


years general superintendent of the J. A. Wallis factory.
He superintends the manufacture. Mr. Stanley has had long
experience as a salesman and upon him devolves the duty of
Mr. Webber is a designer of patterns
selling the product.
and a practical cutter, and looks after that end of the business. The specialties of the firm are Misses' and Children's
machine sewed, and old ladies' warm goods. They make
are

of experience in the

business.

only for the jobbing trade their goods being Dipped to


York, Philadelphia, Chicago, and the North West.

R. E.

LARCOM

is

one of the

known shoe manufacturers

in

the

New

best
city

having been connected with the industry

He was for
19 years.
the shoe finding business,
embarking in the manufacture of shoes
some eight years ago. He makes a specialty of Misses' and Children's spring
nee shoes, and his goods are conceded to
be second to none made in the city.
Mr.
Larcom occupies the large C. H. Cressy
since the age

many

years

of

in

street.
The output is
handled entirely by jobbers, and he has
attained an enviable reputation among
retailers and consumers.
The business is
under the entire supervision of Mr. Larcom, who is an able
and efficient business man and a thorough shoemaker.

factory on Park

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


and was associated with him, the business increased
still

more, and he was ultimately obliged to build the

large

and convenient factory on Rantoul

after the father's death, the

by the

where

carried on

John

son, until his death a sh^it time since.

DaviJ, commenced the man-

Lefavour, a brother of
ufacture of

shoes

early part of his


in

street,

was

business

in

life,

1847.

He was,

during the

a seafaring man, being engaged

For some

the merchant service and bank fishing.

two years he manufactured goods for the Cuba trade,


In 1864
his shop being on Ober street at the Cove.
he removed
and took
inued

in

his business to

Park street near the depot,

into partnership his son

He

John H.

con-

the business until his death in 1872.

Nearly opposite
the place where

David

Lefavour

started

in

busi-

ness stood the


tle

the

name Woodbury Brothers may be

originated.

In this

removed and which


premises

lit-

where

shop
said to

have

shop (which has since been


now used as a shed upon the

little
is

of the present

Woodbury

Bros.

),

Thomas

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.

Eight years ago


small

way

business

under his careful

increased
thirty
etc.,

SOLON LOVETT

until

find a

little

moved

top

ready

surrounding towns but


the

The

steadily

lifts,

to

soles, counters, taps,

and

sale not only in Beverly,

all

shop near the

over

he moved

New

&

Boston

into larger quarters in

factory, until

has

foresight

today he employs twenty-five

workmen making

which

started in a

manufacture sole leather cut stock.

to

to

the

From

England.

Maine depot he

Myron Woodbury

his present

building on

Federal street.

This building has been enlarged since

its

to

occupancy,

ability
in

meet

and

is

also a

the

constantly

increasing

man of natural executive


practical man whose experience

Mr. Lovett

business.

is

the details of the business enables him to produce

stock which

is in

demand with the

trade.

By

his

own

unaided exertion he built up his large trade.

Lovett

is

also

an extensive

real estate

has developed successfully several


land.

Mr.

promoter and

large

tracts

of

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


Woodbury, the father

of the present firm,

worked

brothers Elisha, Luther and Stephen,


trade.

The present

with his

firm also started in this

at their

little

shop

but were soon obliged to build larger there, and have

manufactured more goods and employed more helpthan

any other factory in town. Next to the shop of


John Lefavour at the Cove was the Boden shop

where Warren, an early apprentice


and his brother Porter D.,

worked

at the trade.

who

Opposite

of

Deacon Roundy

are
this

now

deceased

shop was the

Galloup shop, where some of the Galloup brothers


worked at the trade, of whom Jonas G., alone, sur53

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


WALLIS &

Thefirmof J. A.
CO. is one of theoldest established houses in the city. In one chapter of this book, we
find that the firm have succeeded in direct line to the business.
This firm was founded in 1867, by Cressy
Wallis. They
started in a small way, but were so successful that the present factory corner of Park and Bow streets was erected.
The
business continued under this name until 1877, when on the
death of Mr. Cressy the style of the firm was changed to
Messrs. J. C. Kilham and S. B.
Wallis, Kilham
Bray.

&

&

Bray having been taken into the concern a few years previous,
and in i8Q2, Messrs. Kilham & Bray retired, Mr. Wallis continuing alone, until a year or more ago, he took his two sons
Arthur C. and Percy into partnership with him, the firm now
being J. A. Wallis & Co. They make Dongola button and
polish in McKay sewed and Goodyear welts, together with
some heavy and warm goods and oxfords. These goods are
sent to all sections of the U. S. and to Australia. One specialty is their hand process, machine sewed shoe, which is in
great demand throughout the trade.

H.

J.

and

Machine

Oxford

SANBORN,

Manufacturer of Old Ladies'

Hand Sewed Boots and Shoes and

Ties, in the

Norwood

Building, Railroad

nue.

Mr. Sanborn

in the

manufacturer of Children's Shoes from

is

a practical shoe man,

Ave-

engaged
1887

which time he has been engaged in


making the specialties mentioned above. He has a
well equipped plant, and manufactures for both the

to 1893,

since

wholesale and
'

retail trade,

and

his

styled.

'Old Ladies' Comfort,"

have won

for

goods which are

"Always Easy,"
him an enviable reputation, as a Shoe

Manufacturer.
54

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


Samuel Galloup, and
many years was connected with David Lefa-

Samuel W., a son

vives.

who

for

vour

&

Son,

on South

still

continues

of

in

street,

one branch of the trade

John O.

Boston.

Standley

now

deceased and Thomas Banners, were among the older

workers at
of

hill,

K.

shop was that


Mr.
down at Ober's point.

Another

old

used to give out shoes to the boys to sew

at four cents

Daniel

shop.

Hammond

Phillip

Hammond

this

per

W. Hammond,

worked
Fielder,

Phillip

pair.

here.

both of

A.

whom

Hammond and
are at Haver-

Another was the shop

which stood

just

of

John

below the hose house,

Here worked
and adjoining Nathan Hull's estate.
Benjamin L. Foster, John W. Abbott and many
others

whose names

shop,

which has since been removed

are familiar ones to-day.

55

to

This

Lothrop

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


There
for a

is

as good a chance

young man

to

start

the shoe business now as


there was twenty-five years
ago, criers of "hard times"
to
the contrary notwithstanding, and Beverly is the
place to do it in.
A few hustling young
in

men have set an example,


now let others follow and

keep Beverly in its present


Geo. Millet!
Woodbury
p ace as a eader n the jj s t
of shoe cities.
Shall not the prosperity which has been given
to our city by the push and enterprise of the young men of
30, 40 and 50 years ago be continued through the efforts of
the hustling young men of today? Give the young men a
chance, capitalists. Don't be conservative. Conservatism
has been the ruin of some of our smartest manufacturing
Mell.

Enterprise and
business ability are deserving of appreciation
and demand encouragement.

cities.
,

M
H

The shoe industry is


the heart and source of
|

Beverly's

prosperity

and the foundation upon which it has reared


itself.
Let us keep the
life

current throbbing
to the structure

and add
Levi J.

Woodbury Millett,Woodbury&Co.

Perley

Eldredge

are examples of what can be done here. The members of this


firm are George Millett, who personally attends to the stock

department, Perley G. Eldredge who superintends the manufacture, Levi J. Woodbury who has charge of the packing
and shipping room, and Melville Woodbury who buys the
stock and sell-s the product. They are all energetic, progressive business men, each attending to his own department and
all

working

for their constantly increasing trade.

56

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


was a

street,

who

a rendezvous for the boys,

sort of

used to meet here evenmgs and learn to play the

and other instruments, and

violin

has been enjoyed


father

of

Capt.

Chapman's

in

Samuel

corner

many

Foster,

and

did

a good time

Israel Foster,

this place.

had a

the

shop at

considerable

busi-

There were other shoe shops in this


which worked Ezra S. Foster, Larneighborhood
kin West and many others.
The shop of Ezra
ness

there.

in

Cleaves,

on the corner of Dane and Essex streets

was another

their

of the older ones in that vicinity, as

was

Hezekiah and George Wallis, near


shop
homestead on the corner of Cabot and Pond

also the

George Lampson's shop, which stood on

streets.

Knowlton
Smith,

of

street,

who had

was

of a similar character.

a shop on the

Davis, afterward removed to

corner of Cabot and

Dane

street,

did a successful business until he, with

took the California fever.

Wells

where he

many

others,

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.

WOODBURY

This
BROS.
one of the best known in the
city, and the firm has a long and interesting history, and for this reason
has the author of this work taken it

name

is

to illustrate the

shoe industry
ago,

four

development
in

Beverly.

Woodbury

Bros,

of the

Years

made

14x16 shop at BevHere


|erly Cove, shown on page 31.
Rufus H. Woodbury and H. O.
Woodbury the present firm and sons of one of the above
mentioned brothers, started, first as workmen afterwards as manufacturers. This was in 1869. The
shoes in the

little

first case of shoes was sold to a Beverly manufacturer, the next two to
a firm in Boston who have been
cus-j
tomers of the firm ever since.
In
1870, the factory shown on page 35, L
was taken by the firm, and t.wor
\

years later they moved into the third


factory shown on page 41, which
was destroyed by fire in 1891.
They moved to Dover, N. H. but
in June, 1893 came back to Beverly
and moved into the large and commodious factory
shown on page 59. They manufacture Women's,
Misse and Children's shoes which are sold all over
the country.
i

'

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.

JOHN

HINKLEY & CO.

H.

is

name

the

of a

wide awake young firm, who are engaged in


business in one of the association factories 61 Rantoul

live

The

Street.

E. L. Hall,
ers.

They

firm is composed of John H. Hinkley,


and C. W. Moses, all practical shoemak-

started in business in the Frank

berry building on Park


their first

moved

infant's

They make

quarters.

and children's shoes

and their market

the

ist,

1896, and

year has been a most successful one.

PERRY &
is

May

They

a short time since to their present and more

convenient

,only,

street,

Wood-

name

is

the well

specialty

of

for the jobbing trade

through the South and West.

WOOD successors to A.

of

known shoe

Perry

&

Co.,

firm occupying

the factory on the corner of Broadway and Park st.


Messrs. Perry & Wood have both had a large experi-

ence

the manufacturing of boots and shoes, they


been
associated with Mr. Albert Perry a well
having
known and successful shoe manufacturer from 1882
in

to 1896,

when

Mr.

Albert Perry retired

from

the

Their product is sold largely in the New


and
Middle States to the jobbing trade.
England
Women's McKay sewed and Goodyear turned medibusiness.

um

grade boots and shoes are their specialties, paying

particular attention to

wide goods.
60

CHAPTER

IV.

Jeremiah Trask,

had

Sr.,

shop on the Joshua; Trask estate,


near the Gloucester R. R. crossing,

where

he,

sons

with his

Jeremiah, Nathaniel and Manasseh, did quite a


Elbridge, a son of the

business.

Danvers

later,

business.

where he and

latter,

his sons

Manasseh made shoes

to

little

removed

to

engaged in the
measure near

where the Stephen's Baker house now stands.


Nathaniel had a shop in the rear of what is now the
American Express Go's
spoken

Jeremiah Jr's shop,

office.

of in a preceding chapter

was near where the

present Cabot street store of A. F. Place

Among

his apprentices

the late Seth Norwood,

were George

who

in

&

Co.

now

Millett

S.

is.

and

connection with his

son Francis, built up a large and well

known

estab-

lishment on the corner of Railroad avenue and Rantoul street,

and today the Seth Norwood Shoe Co.,

comprising as

it

does Francis, William

Clarence and Charles

is

one

the trade.
61

of

the

E., Elbridge,

best

known

in

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


'

CHARLES

S.

BATCHELDER,

1 ufacturer of ladies'

man"always easy" shoes

i for tender feet, Beverly, Mass. This is


I the way the card of the above firm reads.
Mr. Batchelder begun the shoe busi|j

ness

way

I ^6 em Pl

back

in

1869,

when he

ve d of D. Lefavour

entered

&

Son, BevHe
old time shoe manufacturers.
jf erly's
remained with this firm twenty years,
ij
i fifteen of which he was foreman of the
cutting department and did all the buying for the factory. When this concern
went out of business four years ago, Mr. Batchelder went into
business for himself. His specialties are old ladies' goods
in hand and Goodyear turns, and his product finds a ready
market with the leading retailers in New England, the Middle and Western states.
Mr. Batchelder is located in the
large brick factory on Pleasant street, and his plant is always

HHHHllBi

a busy place.

COLORS NOT NEW.


Colored
So do styles.
History repeats itself.
shoes tfyat we speak of to-day as "new" are old as
the

hills or

something near

it.

Seventy-two years

ago, in 1825, red and green were the popular shades


in shoes.
In 1850 again the same vagaries of fashion

were in force to the extent that footwear matched the


costume and reds, browns, and greens were "in it''
In olden times colored shoes were always strictly the
yet here are prating about new styles
and modern innovations! We are merely rehashing
proper thing

the fashions of our fathers and grandfathers.


sons in turn will encounter the same evil.
62

Our

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


from 1830, Mr. Ebenezer Moses who marMiss Ruth Pousland, came here from Maiden and

Not
ried

set

far

his business

up

on the corner of Cabot and Essex

Wm.

With him came

streets.

D.

Crossfield,

Wm.

married a sister of Mrs. Moses and Mr.


brother of Charles A. Larabee.

gentlemen.

He

the
fit

the

He
ic

first to

sole,

one

to

and successful business up

varied success.

after a

for several

Wm.

His sons,

worked

few

street.

sew the shoe and another

1837 and continued

Charles,

Chapman

ladies

and

accomodation

He was

introduce the division of labor with one to

did a large

of

for

built a large factory

on the Pousland estate on

Larabee,

Mr. Moses manufac-

rounds and pumps

tured mostly run

who

years,

at the

went

P.,

business.

to

work

to finish.

to the

pan-

years after with


John, James and
Mr.

at the

Crossfield,

Connecticut

state-prison at Wethersfield, but returned in a short

time to

Beverly and

worked
63

at the

trade here.

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


To produce handsome

stylish

and good

necessary to have patterns that

it is

goods.

mere

The

trade,

pattern making business

combines

it

mechanical talent and


cessful pattern

Mr. Cree
stitcher,

is

makers

skill

and

all

at short notice

art,

One

ability.

is

shoes

make

these

more than a

besides natural
of the

in this vicinity is

also a successful

and

will

fitting

most suc-

W. O. CREE.

Contract Boot and Shoe

work entrusted

to

him

will

be done

and satisfaction guaranteed.

GARDNER & SIMMONS

are a hustling young


In the fall of
firm doing business at 27 Park street.
1895 they bought out the old and established business of George V. Brown, and occupy the entire floor

Their specialty is tips.


their building.
They
use the best patent leather for the work, and their
business is constantly on t'he increase since the inception of the partnership.
They have an extensive
trade in Beverly and the adjoining cities as the reputation of their goods extends far and wide, the firm
receiving orders daily from distant shoe manufacturing
Wallace W. Gardner and John H. Simmons
centres.
comprise the firm, both active, hard working business men who deserve the success which has come
to them.
of

64

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


Mr. Larrabee, although he worked at the trade for
little

ters,

time,

was more

being

until a short

or less interested in

some

other mat-

time before his death large-

It is an interesting
engaged in real estate matters.
fact that Samuel Preston of Danvers, who invented

ly

65

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.

GEORGE
business,

BRADSTREET & CO.,

S.

manufacturing

Heels

in

started

in

October 1895,

the Norwood building basement, they were forced to

remove
street,

to

Nov.

Norwood

the

J.

i8c,6,

17,

by

building

Baker building, at 37 Park


on account of damage to the

H.

They manufacture Spring

fire.

Heels and High Heels from


stock, and have a

and the

both

and

pieced

whole

and completely equipped plant


carry on their large and constantly

fine

facilties to

They supply many of


and some of their product

increasing business.
tories in this city,

the
is

fac-

sold in

the surrounding towns.

THOMAS

LAWRENCE,

H.

manufacturer of cut

Top Lifts, Counters and Tops, is the successor to


Lawrence & Walker. The business was started January

i,

and been successful from the

1896,

Mr. Lawrence

is

a good judge of stock,

start.

and a prac-

man, having been employed in the sole leather


department of Wallis, Kilham & Bray for twelve years
tical

previous to his starting in businesss for himself.

product goes to
fifty

all

the shoe towns within a

miles from Beverly.

66

The

radious of

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


the

first

pegging machine, was a school teacher

old brick school

house on School

had removed

Danvers and engaged

there,

to

many Beverly

old pupils,

worked

in

street,

his

employ.

the

and after he

in

persons, including

in

the business

some

of

his

large part of

our people during the preceding century and the early part of the present,

were fishermen, who worked

shoemaking during the winter, their work being


Now,
brought mainly from Lynn and Danvers.

at

instead of our city


for
in

depending upon these two places

employment, many from these towns are employed


our factories.

Among]the?old custom shoe-stores fwere^those [of


Edward Pousland and Samuel Dike, both prominent
67

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


One

most progressive and successful of the


many houses engaged in the manufacture of boys'
youths' and liitle gent's shoes in this vicinity, is that
of

of the

FOWLE & DALEY,

in

a very small

way

whose factory and

Ward

located at 17 and 19

street,

on a capital

ing only turned shoes, they


of their product built

The

portions.

and
little

their
all

of their

is

consists

One

very large pro-

shoes

is

in a

sold

of boys',

dealer sold
year.

square

in

line

Boston

youths and

29,000 pairs

of

This concern cut

own soles and heels, make their taps and use


own scraps. Every appliance and sanitary

their

improvement has been added


safety of the
E.

Of

equipped with the best

The product

York, and

gents' shoes.

one kind

have by the excellence

up a trade

and

machinery.

New

Beginning
and mak-

factory occupies fully 12,000

feet of floor space,


of shoe

Salem.

of $300,

office are

employes.

for the

The

firm

convenience and
is

composed

of

Perley Fowle and Joseph E. Daley, both practical

men, who devote

their time to supervising the

facture of their output.

and business

stability

manu-

Gentlemen, whose integrity

have never been questioned.

68

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


talented and

citizens,
is

now

occupied by

influential;

Joseph A.

the former once stood where


Store of George H. Southwick

that of the latter

Wilson,

while that of

now

the Grocery

is

&

The Wallis

Son.

family has long and prominently been identified with


the leather craft in Beverly, Nathaniel the

name

at Falmouth,

til

first of

the

here came from Cornwall, England, and settled

driven

Indians.

off

now

Portland, Maine, and remained un-

with the rest of the population

He seems

first to

but immediately after to

have come

Beverly,

to

by the

Manchester,

settling

near the

house owned and occupied by the late Augustus


Stevens on Cabot Street
Several of his sons were

shoemakers
married

of

whom

in 1687,

Remember

Caleb, afterward Deacon Caleb,

Sarah a daughter of Nathaniel and

Stone,

the latter
69

being a daughter of

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.

SOMETHING
THE

NAMEAC

PNEUMATIC

NEW
CLEANING

MACHINE,

This cut shows a Pneumatic

Top Arm on

Naumkeag
base.

It is

ments work
top

Machine

only a few mothe

to put

arm on the

and the

a regular

Buffing

new

old machine,

air foot or

cushion

filled

with air

automatically

together with the


ed emery cover

new mouldis

the best

thing yet devised for clean-

and

ing the soles of boots


shoes.
fer

To prove

you

to

we

re-

over four hundred

manufacturers
adopted

this

the

who

have

pneumatic

machine during the past year


Naumkeag

Buffing Mach. Ass'n.

Beverly, Mass., U.

70

A.

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


Ensign Samuel Corning,

who owned

the land from

all

Milton street, nearly to Pond street,

Hill

by
Stephens
Coming's Cove near Lawrence's Pottery. Here did
Deacon Caleb settle and rear many sons and daught-

many

ers,

of these sons

were shoemakers and

descendants are represented

The

late

corner of

in the craft

their

to this

day.

Deacon Caleb occupied the shop at the


Cabot and Wallis streets built by his father

who carried on the business there, doing mostly


Of the brothers of this latter Caleb
custom work.
Caleb,

who worked

the

John

E.,

northerly to
of

father
of

the old

of Mrs.

one story shoe shop most


the above named shop were Josiah, the
in

old

whose house stands on the

homestead house.

Edward

Henry the father


John a bachelor, who be-

A. Perry,

came much

interested in horticulture and

and who

many years had charge

for

and grounds

of Col.

Israel

Thorndike

of this family

think,

to

our

Cabot

street

Lovett Street and beyond.

went on

more than

floriculture

of the

Thorndike,

city hall estate, extending from


of

site

fishing

either.

voyages,

Henry the

last

these brothers, stuck to the old shop as

garden
present
corner

Several

Josiah,

survivor of
long

as

and strength permitted, travelling back and forth


71

we
life

to

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


The
best

firm of M.

known

shoe trade, located

M.

firm consists of

The concern was

BRESNAHAN,

V.

in the

Bresnahan and

V,

established in

one

is

in

of the

Lynn.
J.

1880.

J.

They

The

Hayes.
are the

manufacturers of the celebrated Bresnahan Automatic


Leveller which

work.

is

They have

unexcelled

New

Oil

Slide

rapid and stylish

the latest models of sole mould-

all

ing machinery, including the

and

for

New Duplex

Moulder

Leveller for press work.

The

reputation of this firm extends throughoutthe country.

The Boston

office is at

122

Summer

street.

TOWER, GIDDINGS 5

CO.

JSankers,
105 Devonshire

Street,

..^BOSTON.
riembers of Boston and

New York
72

Stock Exchanges.

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


"the city" home of his wife, near Beckford street, at

one of the

many Smith Homesteads,

in that vicinity,

who was

she being of the race of Hasediah Smith,


also

one

of the

many

driven from their

homes on the

Eastern shore, near Portland, by the Indians and

sought a

home

daughter of

daughter

farm

of

in

Beverly.

Mr.

who

Smith married the

Edmund Grover whose


Jacob Barney, who had

wife
a

was

very large

what is now Danversport. The Grover homewas near where Benjamin D. Grant now lives

in

stead

and more or
estate,

less of the

Smith land came from that

there were many

cord wainers, the earliest

son of

James, born

Smith race among the


have is John Smith, a

of the

we

in 1762,

who

in

his brother

1788 bought of
James, a portion of the land where was

the former

home

of the

city

Times, nearly opposite Colon


73

editor,
street.

of the

In

Evening

the estate

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.

Lusting Machine

Bostop,
1

08

Lincoln

Summer

St.

St.

10 j Bedford St.

McKay Copeland

Lasting Machine Co.

Chase Lasting Machine Co.


Continental Lasting Machine Co.
Consolidated Hand Method Lasting Machine Co.

Boston Lasting Machine Co.

74

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


of

"the

Deacon Caleb

first"

maker's seat and

settle, are

Wallis, in 1714, to shoe

valued at four

shillings.

Another long cordwainer was Bartholomew Wallis who


lived on the corner of Wallis and Cabot streets, in
the house purchased some years since

Smith and which was moved

Cabot

street,

just above

tholomew, Andrew,
father for a time;

tholomew,

Jr.,

by Thomas

B.

to its present location

on

Elliot street.

His sons Bar-

and Levi worked with

Israel

afterwards for themselves.

and Andrew W.

built the

made custom shoes


near the late John
the estate where

Ebenezer Wallis,

to

in

Pickett's
his

who

Eleazer.

the

site of

yard,

streets,

and the

latter

measure, just across the street,


house.

son Major
lived

names we see that Wallis

made shoes

the

Bar-

three story

house near the corner of Fayette and Cabot


the former had a shop

their

Israel

Israel

bought

now

lives.

on Wallis street (by these

street

was

rightly

named)

as did his sons Ebenezer, Jr., Joshua and

His cousin Ebenezer, whose house

was on

Bow and

the Lunt block on the corner of

Cabot streets, had a shop between his house and the


Lovett House adjoining, where he worked at his
business with his son Ebenezer, Jeremiah,

Fred A. Wallis, of the firm of


76

J.

V.

(father of

Porter

&

Co.)

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


William and Joseph, (father of Joseph A. Wallis, pf
the firm of

J.

A.

Wallis

&

Sons,

so

we

see that the

business has remained in this family up to the present

time and

is still in

good hands.

A bright and tonguey member of this craft was


Jonathan Herrick, whose wife was from the Wallis
He served

family.

during the

war

of

1812 under

"

which appellation he bore


His shop, formerly John Hales, was
ever afterward.
well known as 'Tar Bay," and stood on Water street,
Harrison at "Tippecanoe,

until

it

was

removed

Michael Harrington

site.

Mr. Herrick

built,

a
his

few

when

years since,

new house on

was the grandfather

of

old

its

Rev.

S.

Ingersoll Bryant, formerly of this town.

Another character was Harry Ellingwood,

Deacon Roundy, he was lame,


youth was a pretty reckless fellow,

learned his trade of

and during

his

who

77

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED,


was converted

and became quite a


zealous Christian.
He emigrated to Kentucky, and
was for many years a successful and influential local
but

in later years,

preacher there.

Lewis

who

who

Elliot,

married at North Beverly,

kept a shoe store

sively,

believing

in

Salem,

advertised

our wide-awake

as

Some

attractive

Many

of

for

them

their

are in

exten-

and energetic

dealers do to-day, that a liberal and judicious


printer's ink pays.

use

of his advertisements

originality

ryhme.

and

and

One

of

were

uniqueness.

of

his

verses

read thus:

"Cheap, cheap, cheap was the cry


From Buff urn's corner to the neck;
Shoes

to buckle shoes to tie,


Neatly will your feet bedeck."

Another loyal character

war

of

1812,

Foster,

known

on

Essex

Street,

Joshua Trask
Trask,

Jr.,

served

was Josiah

He

Sire."

who

and

lived

House.
in

during the
as

"Cape

near

the

He worked with Jeremiah

some conditions and on some occa-

sions while telling of scenes through

which he had

passed, would imagine himself on board a man-of-war,


and that those associated with him were all English-

men, and would often "clear the deck"


shops crew,
78

of the

whole

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


.

A very

tall

shoemaker known as Jack Ayers, who

on the estate now owned by Charles H. Patch,


near bald hill, had an entry built on to his shop, in

lived

order,

boys

it

was

to

said,

accomodate

his

took special delight in twitting

legs,

him

of

and the
it,

serv-

provoke him almost beyond endurance,


was one of their songs of annoyance:

ing to
this

and

"It was long tall Jack


Said his whip he would crack,
On the wicked boys back

Who

persisted in calling him "Lofty"


But "aloft what's the weather?
They all answered together,
And they would then change his name

to Softy.

Mr. Ayers,

was

a soldier in the militia, and of such

great length of limb that no one else

with his enormous

fall

strides,

out on the march.

could keep step


hence he was allowed to

Had he

modern days

he would no doubt been a champion


More than fifty years ago a boy by the

of pedestrianism,

walker.

lived these

79

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


name

Abner

of

tried to

the

learn

shoemaker's

Deacon Roundy's shop where then worked


Thomas L. Pickett, a bright and witty chartrade at

who one day examining

acter,
this

young

the

production of

"Well Abner, you have

struggler said,

made something which we can

worship, for

all

it

the likeness of nothing in the heavens above, or

earth

best of

it all

was

this,

credit of the joke to himself


its

the

and the waters under the earth."

beneath,

And the

is

brightness off-set

any

the Abner took

all

the

and really thought that


coming in the shoe

short

line.

One of
who lived
open

field,

the early Wallis shoemakers


in a

square one story house,

where

Wallis streets.

is

He

now
too

in

Daniel,

the

then

the junction of Rantoul and

was a cordwainer and reared

a large family, including several


trade.

was

In the later years of his


80

who worked
life

at

that

he came under

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


the delusion that he
tion

was dead and

in

constant associa-

who had gone before.


"Deadman Daniel," to

Hence he was

with those

known

as

distinguish

him

from another Daniel Wallis, a blacksmith, the grandfather of our present

well

known

builder.

thing akin to modern


influences

Daniel of Federal street, the


It

may

be that there

spiritualism

in

was some-

the controlling

which thus developed themselves

early days.

in

those

CHAPTER

It

may

be of interest to

factory in the United States

boring town

Danvers.

of

Zerubbabel Porter,

heavy brogans
made by hand

was
It

who waxed

for slaves in the


in

V.

know

that the

located in the neigh-

was

established

These were

south.

possible.

which

were other small shops,

sprang up about the beginning of the century.


uppers, soles

and

to

be finished, the

and the

rest

to

the

women

of the

The

were cut by hand and then

linings

they were given out

by

prosperous by making

the cheapest manner as

Following this there

shoe

first

people of the

vicinity

folks doing the stitching

work being done by the men


or fishermen and worked at

who were mostly farmers


the

trade

during

their

spare

Hundreds

time.

families added to their scanty income in this

At

this time

all

the shoes were sewed.

was fisherman's

of

way.

One specialty

heavy clumsy affairs, which


the local shoe makers would make up and take to
our wharves, and the neighboring seaport towns for
sale.

Some

boots,

time later pegging work

was

Just before the war the uppers began to


82

introduced.

be stitched

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


on machines, and now everything

is

done

in that

Perhaps a short description of the process of


the shoes from beginning to end
terest,
is

we

will

commence

the only room

in

may

way.

making

be of some

where there

the factory

machinery, and machinery

will

in-

This

at the cutting room.

no

is

never be introduced

here, for the cutting of the upper

demands something

more than mere mechanical

it

and that intelligence


and association with

A
too

skin

is

poor

is

skill,

only acquired by long practice

leather.

apt to contain some spot which


to

always seen

go

into

at once,

the

but

it

is

is

too soft or

That spot

shoe.

by the

practical touch of the experienced

found.

needs intelligence

not

is

and

careful

cutter

that

it

is

These things the successful cutter must know


also just what part of the skin is

and he must know

the best adapted for each part of the shoe upper.

The
of

patterns are hundreds in

number and are made

straw board, bound with brass.

There are

pieces for each shoe, for a button shoe,


large

and
All

and

the

many

quarters

vamps, the button fly and the tip,


shoe the eyelet stay and the tongue.

small, the

for the lace

these separate pieces must have their linings to

fit.

These uppers are assorted in "case" lots and are sent


to the stitching room.
Here are the rows of busy
83

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


each with a swift running machine before them.

girls

Each
the

has her special part

girl

-linings or

makes

perform, one

to

prepares them for the upper,

next

the

one takes and stitches them together at the top, another one puts in the eyelet stay, then it goes to the

vamper and then the buttons


ton shoe, and the shoe

heavy

is

mean time the

In the

are

ready

for

sole has

sewed on

if

but-

the lasting machine.

been cut from the

side of leather, the counter

is fitted in

place at

the heel, and they are then ready for the pairs of iron

hands and jaws that are ready to stretch the upper


While
over the last which has been put in position.
still

in

the grip of these almost

human machines they

are tacked securely to the insole.


is

Then the

tacked on and the shoe goes to be sewed,

and through,
if

shoulder,

shoe

is

if

it is

sole,

through

McKay sewed shoe and to a


a turned or a welt shoe.
Then the

it is

beat out or levelled, the edges trimmed

the heel put on.

which

outsole

This

fifteen holes are

by

fifteen

awls,

is

and

an interesting process by
the heel and

made through
then,

at a

revolution

of the

which have been put in the


machine
plate, are driven through and clinched on the iron last.
fifteen nails

Then the

top piece

is

pressed on to
84

the

nails

which

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED,


just stick through the top

lift

of the

heel

enough

to

hold the top on without showing through.

Then the

heel

shaped by the heel shaver, then


burnished with blacking or

is

the edges and heels are


stain with hot irons, the

finished

wheels and cleaned with

and the black enamel

revolving brushes,

Then the

put on.

bottoms are smoothed and

with sandpaper

or' stain

laces are put in, the sock lining in-

serted, the shoe carefnlly

brushed and cleaned and

placed in ah individual carton ready for shipment.

recent editorial in the London

" Boot and Shoe

Trades Journal" which was reproduced

and Shoe Recorder''

is

in

turerers of shoes in America.

We

"Boot

the

of vital interest to the

manufac-

quote from

the

editorial as follows.

The predominant
is

characteristic of

American boots

that they are stylish and attractive, and

lar to

note that the keenest competition has

ladies' goods,

made

it is

in

while no material

gents'

goods,

singu-

been

in

headway has been

because attractiveness

tells

more than anything with regard to women's footwear, whilst in men's goods other considerations
have weight.
to the feet.

They accommodate themselves


This

is

readily

the result of two things,

lightness and suppleness

of the
85

upper stock,

the

which

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


n no case has

with the

way

the stretch taken out in

all

because lasting

lasting,

slovenly done in America compared

is

it is,

done

or was,

without the appearance of extra


joint is

the

thrown over the

sole,

sole, a

and the bottom

is,

and

in this country,

again the lasts are designed to give plenty

lot of

of

The

size.

room
inner

spring put

into

speaking, as

figuratively

round as an apple.

American shoes are


result
is

they are

light,

flexible; lastly,

made shoes?

parison, for

It

they are

soft,

and as a

they are cheap, which

But are they cheaper than


is difficult to make the
com-

a vital consideration.

British

they are

so

widely

different.

All

our

goods contain more material, and if the "timber"


were taken out we do not doubt the possibility of a
successful competition.
assert and

In

have proved

goods at lower

rates.

There are

points,

fact

many

their ability to

however

in

manufacturers

make

similar

which American

behind the English, and this

is why they
and principally to
women's work. They do not conform to our ideas as
to substance, and when we have exhausted all the

shoes
will

fall

far

be confined

to

limited

sale,

praise in favor of the lightness

American goods

we

and

flexibility

of the

are forced to the conclusion


86

that

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


British climate

and

requirements need a stout-

British

and more substantial foot covering.

er

Cold and

rheumatism ever threaten the wearer of knife edge


shoes here, and the nature of the passing winter

is

the best answer to the problem of thin or thick boots.

You say wear


in their

and
is

rubbers! Yes, these articles are good

who

way, but there are people

wear them, and as the secret

will not

make what customers want, and

to

would

like

them

Now

object to

to

there

have,

the

them

of business

what one

not

question

must

many have noticed it, that the moment you begin to put weight and
substance into an American boot it instantly begins to
rest.

it is

a fact, and doubtless

Thus

lose its attractiveness.


will

goods
shoes.

are
ers

that the American

be confined to a lighter class of boots and

They

some time

it is

to

fill,

fill,

and

will

doubtless

continue for

a certain want, but as our factories

now equipped with fine machinery, and employand workman are aroused to a proper frame of

mind, and determined to cope


the trade,

we

repeat,

must

with any competition,

of necessity be

a limited

one.
If

want

Americans want to do a trade here,


to

keep the

bit

they have

got, there

is

if
they
one fact

that they have to bear in mind, and that constantly,


87

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED,


that

is,

the importance of

equal to sample.
not do, others
of

This, at

may; but

it is

American footwear, and

stand in the

way

bulk

delivering

some

least,

of

orders

them do

a sore point with buyers

which

a trouble

it is

of further progress until time

will

and ex-

If on the
perience prove that sample and bulk agree.
other hand, English manufacturers desire to keep the

American trade
they

too,

in

check, or

have some things

be

may

limit

cultivate a degree of lightness in their

They must
goods consist-

ent with solidity and durability, and the


that direction

yet further,

it

to observe.

first

giving more attention

lies in

do to the stock they use for uppers.

than they

They must

study the question of attractiveness.


prevailing patterns of

Most

Amercian goods are

or variations thereof.

step in

also

of the

old English

Somehow, within the

last

few

years English boots and shoes have been of the plainest

if

an attempt had

old-fashion

country bespoke

and handsomeless design, as

been made

to

work; but there

more

imitate
is

not only room, but a

demand

for

and a large unconquered


and artistic shoe designer.

art in British footwear,

field lies

before the skillful

Last, but not

least,

the

English manufacturer

limit his variety, for this is the

only

way

crease the cost of production; and decrease


88

must

he can deit

he must

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


and that contiually, or he will find the mechanical shoe
maker of America a far more painful thorn in his side,

Whether

than he

is

and

from stock instead of

sell

today.

it

will

to

be necessary to

make

order absolutely

matter which time will have to prove, but there


mistaking the fact that indications point

Machinery seems to demand it, the


encourages it, and competion may
this

that

is

is

no

way.

fitfulness of trade

at

length

render

of production inevitable.

system
have dwelt

We

briefly

on the history of footwear,

from very early times up to the present day,

touch-

ing the different kinds made, and various styles worn

from one century to another, and so on down to this


time.

of

We also

work done

have given

in this

brief outline of the

amount

country up to the present time,

with interesting and instructive

statistics.

We

also

touch briefly upon the early manufacturers and dealers in town, filling the whole in with anecdote and
89

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED,

We

have no doubt omitted many persons and


shops which we would have been pleased to notice,
did space permit.
Below is a complete list of the

story.

shoe manufacturing establishments

the city, to

in

the present time with their location.


Babb,

Williams,

Douglas

Frazier,

Co., 47 Park Street.

Baker, J.H.

&

Co., 39 Park

Co.,

55

&

J.

Co., 59

Rantoul Street.

Louis P.

Hinkley,

Park

41

J.

H.

&

Co., rear

61 Rantoul Street.

Street.

R.

Larcom, Edward R., 59 Park

State Boot and Shoe Co.

Lunt, Hervey, 68 R. R. Ave-

Batchelder,

Chas.

S,

58

Street.

R. Ave.

Bay

Hassett,

Street.

Baker,

&

T. E.

Pleasant Street.

Marsters

75 Park Street.

Bray, Stanley

Park

&

Webber,

Millett,

Murray,

Street.

Caldwell, Edw.

J.,

Perry

Park

Co., 53 Ran-

Seth

Shoe Co.,

&

52 R. R.

Wood,

59

Ave.

Broad-

way.

Street.

Dennis,

Cone&

Nugent Bros.,
Lefavour,

Co.,

85 Rantoul Street.

Street.
i

&

Woodbury

Norwood,

Chase, Lewis H., 104 Bridge

&

Ran-

toul Street.

594 Cab-

ot Street.

Curtis

55

61 Rantoul Street.

Balch

E.,

Walker,

Street.

Burnham, Louis

&

toul Street.

John

J.

2nd,

Porter, Jeremiah

77

R. Ave.,

Bisson Street.

90

L.,

58

R.

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.


Raymond

&

Mader,

Park

Rogers, S. M. Shoe Co., 37

Park

J.

&

H.

Co., 55

Pleasant Street.

Seavey, F. A.

&

Co.,

Bow

Warren, A.

W. &

Co., 64

Wilson,

John,

63

Federal

59

Woodberry, Frank, 81 Park


Street.

Thissell, Arthur P., 130

Park

Woodbury

Bros., 40 Rantoul

Street.

Street.

Tuck, Walter
Broadway.

E.,

&

Co., 55

Woodbury,

compilation

Myron

55

Bow

in

the

Street.

To any who have contributed


of this

work,

the

in

any way

extends

publisher

thanks, and also to the advertisers,

munity.

Co. 65

Street.

Rantoul Street.

reliable

&

R. R. Ave

Street.

Sanborn,

Wallis,J. A.
Street,

Street.

all

of

and can be heartily recommended

whom
to

are

the com-

SHOES AND SHOEMAKING ILLUSTRATED.

How much

man

is

like old shoes'

For instance, each a sole may lose.


Both have been tanned both are made tight
By Cobblers both get left and right.
Both need a mate to be complete,
And both are made to go on feet.

They both need

And

both

heeling; oft are sold,


turn all to mould.

in time,

With shoes the last is first; with men


The first shall be last, and when
The shoes wear out they're mended new.
When men wear out, they're men dead, too!
They both are trod upon and both
Will tread on others

nothing loath.
and both incline.
When polished in the world to shine;
And both peg out. And would you choose

Both have their

To be

man

ties

or be his shoes?

ADVERTISEMENTS

GLENWOOD
Ranges and

Are The

Furnaces
Best.

Economical in fuel.

and

We

are

Low

in Price.

Headquarters

for

the

Glenwood

Ranges, Alaska Refrigerators and Ice Chests.


Blue Flame Oil Stoves, Wall Papers, Crockery,
Straw and Oil Carpets, and Kitchen Furnishings.
Ice

and

Cream
all

Freezers,

Hammocks, Window Screens,

kinds of Piazza Chairs.

O. LTJlsTT,
214 Cabot

Beverly

St.,
93

ADVERTISEMENTS

No Manufacturer
or elsewhere,
in

who

is

in

posted in his business,

Beverly
it is

safe to assert,

purchasing the various items of materials and labor which

enter into the finished product of his factory,

could

be in-

duced to by any pretext or for any purpose to choose the INFERIOR quality of the several commodities, were the BEST to
be offered at the same price; the person making such a propo-

him would be treated as a drivelling idiot.


But when the same manufacturer comes to select the item of
INSURANCE which forms the basis of credit for all his operaDoes he make any comparison of the difftions, how then?
erent "GOODS" offered? We think not!
But nevertheless
there is just as wide a difference in the quality of insurance
offered as there is in the quality of stock and materials used,
but unlike the stock and materials the Best quality costs no
more than the poorest. Therefore, don't be induced to take
year after year policies the value of which is all a matter of
Be posted! You pride yourself that you
conjecture with you.
sition to

are in every other department of your business.

We

are

in

We

the business to prove the quality of the goods we sell.


ask no more for the ist class article than you pay for the poor
one.
Let us talk with you about it! It will be worth your
while!

Arthur A. Forness,
Room

3.

Endicott Bldg, Beverly.

Representing 14 of the Largest and Strongest

and Foreign Companies.


94

Home

ADVERTISEMENTS

oo
DC:
CT5

CD
oo
00~
CJD

5S.

J2

V) ~ti +2
^
oj
*rr

o o ^

CJ 4^

V > O

g^a

OJ

at the old

Corner Drug Store.


Established 100 years ago.

Horace Standley,
Prop.

95

CX

ADVERTISEMENTS

Old Stand.

RICHMOND

Every

is

war-

ranted.
In

NO respect

In

SOME

is it

respect

surpassed.

it

is

unriv-

alled.

The

RICHMOND
keeps

fire

GRATE

with least

at-

tention.
Its

SIMPLICITY commends

When in doubt buy


MOND.

F. A-

HTNKU5Y
91

CABOT

ST.

Up-to-date Kitchen Furnishers.


96

it.

a RICH-

CO.,

ADVERTISEMENTS

s. s.
Designer and

Maker

of

Pint
Butterick Patterns.

Agent for Lewando's Dye House.


Headquarters for Dolls.
IfcTo.

1O5 Cabot Street,

(Birbler's

Coal Mbaves,
15 Oaloot Street
TTsTsuter

Anthracite and

HflRD

COAL.

HHD SOFT WOOD


97

and

Street

ADVERTISEMENTS

Stop flying IRent!


wn ?our own
Ibome
Affords the

155 Cabot

St., X] opportunity.
BEVERLY, MASS.
Geo. F. Hinkley no 77
Cabot St. opposite Pleasant St., Beverly Mass.
Where you can find the
highest grade of Ranges,
Furnaces, and tinware
Twenty-seven years experincein the Furnace
and Stove work in BevIf you deal
with
erly.
me, that experience is
worth something to you.
Lowest cash prices on all
goods which are high in
standard, and fully war-

"

rante dPractical store


man, oldest stand in the
Orders
county.
by mail
^^jwFWUatpromptly attended.
the
carry
largest line of
Ranges[in the city also the best furnace for a low price. Call on us and be
convinced. No. 77 Cabot St., Agent for Hot Water Heaters Steam and
Hot Air and Hot Water combined.
Anthony goods
represent Smith
ire the leading manufacturers in this line of goods, sanitary plumbing

'^^^SSff
ig^l^Vw

-JW^^&!!$
%iji>
*
l

'

'

JP

S- F '^

We

We

77

CABOT STREET.
98

&

ADVERTISEMENTS

Massachusetts Cleansing Co.


R

54 MunroeSt-, Lynn.

We

Filne, Manager-

your Clothes once each week, sponge, clean,


and repair them (small repairs) and return them to your
residence for $1.25 per month, or $12 per year, payable in adwill call for

press,

vance.

IT

REALLY COSTS YOU NOTHING,

Because Clothes so well taken care of will average double


wear, and look like new all the time. References by permission:

E. A. Maloon, S. B. Bray, A. Whitcomb, C. A. I amson, J. C. Kilham, Rev. A. B. Coates, Rev. W. A. Bacon, I. W. Foster, J. R. Pope,
Dr. G. A.
Iv. I,. Woodbury, C. A. Kurd, E- Giles, Dr. W. H. Swan,
Stickney, Dr. W. E. Bongartz, Dr. C. W. Haddock, Dr. H. D. Lambert
and a hundred others.
P. S.
Kindly drop us a postal and our representative will
call and explain our system.
v

EX C.

CANN
Estimates furnished
at short notice.

attention
Personal
given to jobbing.
First-class

work

guaranteed.

Shop
124 Rantoul St.,
Beverly
99

ADVERTISEMENTS

EXPRESS COMPANY.
Freight and Express matter forwarded to
Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore

and

all

principal points.

Leave Beverly
o'clock.

Office, for Boston, 8.15, 10

Boston Office.
street,

and

Freight at 6. 30 o'clock.

76 Kingston

32 and 33 Court square, 105 Arch


street.

Main

office

Devonshire

street.

VICI KID

SHOES

for

SUMMER WEAR
is nothing so nice as a good light weight Shoe for
weather, and Vici Kid Shoes are light, easy and dura-

There

warm

We have them in colors of CHOCOLATE, GREEN,


BROWN, TAN, BLACK. Our prices are always the low-

ble.

'"

CENTRAL SHOE STORE.


Commercial Block, BEVERLY, MASS.
H.
100

I.

Wilson, Manager.

ADVERTISEMENTS

rnilPU Cannot be
I lUuilpRAYMONDS

Tflfl
I

UU

for colds.

They

tion of a cold

Thousands

demand

way

is

is

bles,

off

result

is

Pneumonia

have a

to

PELLETS
needed.

and the

of these Pellets

in

They

the

pocket,

first

indica-

invariably a cure.

have been used and the

arid

bottle of

of

praise

SIX PELLETS,

should be taken on the

constantly increasing.

ward

to

said in

The most

effective

Lung Trou-

serious

RAYMOND'S SIX
and use them

are sold everywhere at

when

25 cents

per

Bottle.

Centennial (Stove,
The

finest

PICNIC

GROVE

and

CAMPING GROUND

Massachusetts, magnificent scenery along the shores of


Chebacco Lake, an unlimited extent of old primeval pine and
in

spruce forest, interspersed with open glades

& smooth

drives.

Dance hall,
Shooting gallery, Swings, Dining rooms, etc. The safest
of Boats are maintained for the use of visitors.
The best of
facilities for transportation by the Boston & Maine railroad
*
a branch of which runs direct to the grove.

Among

For

its

many

particulars

attractions are a Bicycle track,

and terms

apply

to

101

DAVID LOW,

Essex,

Mass,

ADVERTISEMENTS

The best
The Largest variety
of Cake and Pastry
in

the

city.

Payson's
St.,

Office cor.

Pond and Rantoul

Streets.

CONTRACTOR.
AND
White-washing Ceilings a specialty.
102

ADVERTISEMENTS

LEE
Undertakers
AND FUNERAL DIRECTORS.
Carriages and Hearse Furnished.
All

work

pertaining to the dead attended to promptly and


carefully, day or night.

SI

Telephone No.

.,

757-2

BEVERLY

ICE

CO.,

OFFICE

89

PARK STREET,

Mass.

Beverly,

Monthly Rates.
12 Lbs. Daily, per.
"
" "
16

20
30

"
"

"
"

li

"

month $1.50
"
"
"

By

li-75
$2.2$
$3.25

weight.

100 Lbs. one Delivery, 25 cents.


50

25

"
"
103

"

"

"
"

15

10

"
"

ADVERTISEMENTS

GEORGE SWAN,
ARCHITKCT
MASS

BEVERLY,

Bonaventura's
Dealer

in

Foreign

French and American Confectionery,


Tobacco, Cigars,
life

carry none but M<?

etc.

Aest.

125 Cabot and Cor. Hale and Cabot Sts., Beverly.


104

ADVERTISEMENTS

GRADUATE OF
Mount

Allison Conservatory of Music-

LESSONS GIVEN ON
Piano,

28

Organ and Harmony.

Atlantic Ave-,

BEVERLY.
Good

Large experience.

The best
and cheapest

11

references.

yy QOCl

Fbr Fire-places and Air-tight Stoves.

KINDLINGS
J.

By

the Bushel.

HARRIGAN
3Poot of ^lea.sa.an.t St

Near Murphy's Stable.


105

ADVERTISEMENTS

Massachusetts Mutual

LIFE INSURANCE CO
Writes

forms

all

of policies.

Charles %.

GENERAL AGENT,
41 Washington Street,

WM.
Contract
5;^

Beverly,

L.

Stitcher

Mass.

WOOD,

of

Boots

and

Shoes,

Pleasant Street, Beverly.

BEVERLY LOAN COMPANY,


Money Loaned on
Horses,
to

remain

in

any good
the owners hands.

Mileage Books to

Boston Tickets
55;

WM.

L.

Furniture,

Carriages, or

Pianos,

security.

let.

for sale.

Pleasant Street, Beverly.

WOOD,

Manager.
106

Organs,
Property

ADVERTISEMENTS

West Dane

Street,
Beverly, Mass.
W. M. STEVENS, Prop.

Boarding and Livery Stable.


Fine Horses and Modern Equipages.

First-class

Do you
Estate.

If

contemplate building or purchasing Real


do not fail to investigate this very de-

so,

sirable property.

On Mason Street, North Beverly, finely built


cottages of 6, 7 and 8 rooms, with all modern conveniences, for sale for cash or

erty

is

easy payments.

located on the right of

Gloucester Crossing, having

all

Cabot

This prop-

Street, north of

the advantages of fine


of the

view and pure air. Electric cars pass the head


For terms apply to
street every 1 5 minutes.

L. K.

^
BARKER,

or S. H.

^-~

Wenham
-

STONE'S REAL ESTATE AGENCY.


107

Depot,
^f-^_f^
>

ADVERTISEMENTS

BEVERLY MACHINE WORKS,


Contractors,
General Machinists,
Millwrights.

Machine Jobbers and


Repairers,

Nickel Platers,
Brass Finishers and Polishers.
Rear

61

of Association Factory No.

Rantoul Street,
Boston

John

S. Baker,

Office: 13

Manager.

Doane

4,

Beverly, Mass.
St., Room 8.

William E. Bailey, Superintendent

o. OTJ:R,:R,I:E],
Carpenter,

Contractor

26 West Dane

and

Builder.

Beverly, Mass.

Street,

Plans,

Specifications

and Estimates
furnished free.

Jobbing and Repair,


ing promptly done.

108

ADVERTISEMENTS

W.

Ik,

*ww*Geacfeer

of piano,

6 H>ane St. Beverly,


t

Special attention to beginners

PlCkett

Dealer

in

Tobacco,
and

23

all

kinds of Smokers' Articles,

Galoot Street,

Opposite Car Station.

Agent for Beverly Custom Laundry.


109

ADVERTISEMENTS

177 Cabot Street cor. Thorndike St.

BEVERLY, MASS.
Open Daily from
Robert R. Endicott,

8.30

Pres.

a.

m. to 1.30 p. m.
Chas. H. Kilham, Treas.

Albert S. Hoogs, Teller.

Committee on investments.,
Robert R. Endicott, Augustus N. Clark, Samuel
George Butman.

J. Foster,

Deposits begin to draw interest on the fourth Wednesdays of January,


and October, and may ba withdrawn at any time without previous

April, July

notice.

Dividends payable on the fourth Wednesdays of April and October


if not withdrawn.

in

each

year, and placed on interest immediately

Amount

No. of Depositors
6.000

Beverly,
Ira.

March

of Deposits

$2,100,000
i,

1897.

A. Smith,

Walter L. Dixon.

flfoacbiniete,

tx>

Particular
Shoe Machinery built and repaired.
attention given Experimental Work.
Duplicate Parts
for Reece Button Hole, and other Standard Machines

Pulleys, Hangers, and Shafting,


furnished at short notice; also estimates for placing
the same.

always on hand.

COR. PARK & PLEASANT STREETS.


-BEVERLY, MASS..

no

ADVERTISEMENTS

Beverly National Bank,


CAPITAL, $200,000,00
ALBERT PERRY, President

ALLEN H. BENNETT, Cashier

Safe Deposit Boxes to rent,

in fire

and burglar proof

vaults.

Bank Hours: 8.30 A.M.

to

2 P.M.

BEVERLY BURIflL VAULT


<*^_T. P.

CO.,

DBER, MAIMAGER._^

Residence Odell Ave., near Cabot.


Manufacturers of

ny Orders received
G. C.

&

J.

will receive

L.

by telephone at the drug store of


Berry, 259 Cabot Street, Beverly

prompt attention.

in

ADVERTISEMENTS

Successor to Philip E. Ober,

PATENTEE AND MANUFACTURER OF

PA TENT

CEMENT

Sarcopnagus or Burial Vaults.


Also Cement Water Gates & Hydrant Boxes
flfeason TJOlorfe

promptly

attenfcefc to.

DRAIN PIPE Furnished and Layed.


17 Union St.,
Beverly, Mass.

THE
Livery,

Hack

and Boarding
Pleasant

St.,

near Depot Sq., Beverly, Mass.

Furnished for Funerals, Weddings and Receptions.


First-Class Horses
Carriages at Depot to meet all trains.
and Latest Style Carriages 79 Let at Reasonable Prices.
Calls attended to Day or Night. Barges and Large Carriages Furnished for Parties.

J.

R DESMOND,

Telephone 723-2.
112

Prop.

ADVERTISEMENTS
Fire, Life, Accident, Plate-Glass, Liability, in fact

kinds of

all

Written

in

and

Largest

Best

STOCK AND MUTUAL COMPANIES


At

Tariff Rates.

Dividends of 70 per cent, paid on

year policies.

Real Estate Brokers.

Issachar Lefavour

&

Son,

16 Washington St., Cor. Brown, Beverly, Mass.


Justice of the Peace.

Mortgages Negotiated.

^^

Dress Cutting
By

the

TAYLOR SYSTEM
Taught by
*

DRESS

<L

Ttfilton Street,
a

CLOAK

AND

Seamless

Hrnolb.

IE.

Work

MAKING.

a Specialty.

Corner Cabot Street,


*

113

Beverly,

Ttfass*

ADVERTISEMENTS

Beverly Bowling
Ccrner Rantoul and Bow Streets.

The

in the county.
There are seven
elegant style with a new and brilliant system of
Prizes
offered
week
for
lights.
every
highest scoresCome down and roll, when time hangs heavy on your
at
the
hands,
Myron Woodbury building.

finest

Bowling Alleys

in all, fitted in

34 Railroad Ave.
This book

is

Salem Office 228 Essex

a sample of our work.


Street.

114

ADVERTISEMENTS

Samuel H.

<3entlee,

FUNERAL DIRECTOR ^ EMBALMER


29J Cabot

Calls

Street,

answered day or
Night

Telephone,

Beverly.

night.

calls,

Butman

18

Street.

702-2.

df rank

E. Xubben,

MILK BEALER
Drop

me

36 Dodge

a postal

Street,

and

will call.

Beverly, Mass.

ADVERTISEMENTS

A BEVERLY MAN.

New

England's most Noted Healer, challenges the


world to exceed his cures.
Without the aid of medicine, he cures cases pronounced incurable by the
best physicians.
No matter if your case has been
given up as incurable, go and see him.
^Dr. Dennis possesses a power which can not be
explained, but its effect upon diseases can not be denied.

It is

Some

far superior to medicine.

most marvellous cures have been made

of his

in his native city.

Female Diseases a

Room

specialty.

Office 8 1

Washing-

Residence Prospect St., BevHours at Office, from 9 to 4 Wednesday and


erly.
Saturday.

tori St.,

Salem,

5.

(lark's

TO LET FOR

PARTIES.

TERMS REASONABLE.
Accomodations Excellent.

116

ADVERTISEMENTS

Mrs. M. E. Wallis,
Regular an& ^ranetent^ JBoatbCtS,
First-Class Table Board.

Table Board,

No.

11

V. L.
Jobbing in

all its

Railroad Avenue.

Rankin,
branches.

Contractor

and

Builder.

Estimates Furnished on application.

Shop and Residence,

Beverly, Mass.

18 Highland Ave.,
117

ADVERTISEMENTS
Established

Tbe

Telephone Connections.

in 1844.

PicKett Coal Co.,


(Successor to John Pickett)
Dealers in

Coal,

W, Up Ikkihtc

Offices, 15

Water

164 Cabot

cor.

Order Box

Hair.

Street,

Milton

at H. P.

Woodbury's, at Cove.

TERMS, CASH.
Burton Avenue leads from Essex to Bisson streets,
and is one of the finest Avenues in the City, G. E. &
B. electrics pass close by and it is about 6 minutes
walk to City Hall, and a few minutes to the Beach,
where there is fine Boating and a short row to the
This Avenue is considered the healthiest
Willows.
part of the City, five Cottages already built and sold
to good parties, two more being finished and will be
For Sale; tht Cottages are well built and have modern conviniences and have six and seven rooms and
cellars.
Price reasonable and very easy terms.
P. S.
It is a fact that these Lots are the nearest to
the City Hall, that can be purchased for a reasonable
Can refer to those I have built.
price.

dry

J. H.
71

Essex

A\ORSE,

Beverly, /"Vass.

St.,
nS

ADVERTISEMENTS

CASH PAID FOR FAT CATTLE,


VEAL CALVES AND FAT HOGS.

New A\ilcb

<3ows op band for sale.

Particular attention paid to the

Cleaning Out of Vaults, Cesspools, Etc,,


By the ODORLESS EXCAVATOR PROCESS.

E. B.
may
Street, or

For

trie

be

RDWELL.

left at S. A.

Gentlee's, 291 Cab-

Box 1322, Beverly, Mass.

House, stable, Poultry House


ana" Kennel,

Cabot's

Sulpijo-Rflpliol

Liquid
Cleanliness

For sale by

Whitcomb=Carter

Co.

ADVERTISEMENTS

He
much

know

don't

shoeabout
making, but if you
want to talk about

FISH
he can
his

tell

you that

market

cheapest

the

is

in

place

Beverly.

Gflfllt E.

Fine Baker & Confectioner.


Delicious
Bread

Cream
and

rolls fresh

every

after-

noon.

Weddin g,
Birthday,

fancy o

mented

and
n a

a specialty.
Ice Cream, Sherbet and Frozen Pudding delivered to all parts of
the city and vicinity.
143 ^CABOT STREET,
BBVBRLY, MASS.

120

cake

RETURN TO:

CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT
198 Main Stacks

LOAN PERIOD
Home Use

ADVERTISEMENTS

We Sell Shoes, Why!


Because

we have

ditions required

succeeded

in

meeting the con-

by the people who buy

shoes,

Up=to=date Styles,

M134664

TS\

THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY


A SPECIALTY.
Call

and see

us.

Get Samples and Prices.

We

will Satisfy you.

THE KENDRICK PRESS,

Ensign N. Kendrick,

147 Cabot Street,

Proprietor.

BEVERLY..

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