The Cobbler's Bench

Discussion in 'Other Reminiscences' started by Joe Riley, Jul 16, 2016.

  1. Nancy Hart

    Nancy Hart Veteran Member
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    Henry Linder - The Shoe Cobbler
    Landrum, South Carolina

    Shortly after the war ended, Linder found his way to Tryon, NC. He began working for Myrtle Tucker, who owned the Tryon Shoe Hospital in town. Linder was still open for business, 63 years later, in a small shop behind his house in Landrum, SC.

    2012
     
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  2. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    The Sole Cobbler
     
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  3. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    Cobblers Bench Shoe Repair Frederick Maryland
     
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  4. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    Tonight, we have a "Really Big Shoe"!
    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

     
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  5. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    A Cobbler from Yarmouth
     
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  6. Nancy Hart

    Nancy Hart Veteran Member
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    That man has a nice smile. I wish I had his equipment.

    This is the first time I've heard the name Hagopian since I was a kid. I only found out recently it is spelled with an "a" and not a "y" (var.), and that it's an Armenian name.

    There was a dirt lane alongside my grandmother's house in Ohio that led back to a big old 2 story house. It was never painted, and so became dark and worn as the lumber aged. Rather scary looking to kids. The Hagopians lived there. My grandmother would always talk about those "Hy-GO-pians."

    They kept to themselves a lot. That always gets one into trouble. I never saw them, except their car driving by occasionally. The house was torn down by the time I grew up.

    Sorry, this has nothing to do with cobblers, except the man in the video says don't judge a customer by how they first look when they come into the store. :oops:
     
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    Last edited: Jan 29, 2022
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  7. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    A Labor Day look inside a Naval Academy tradition - the cobbler shop (Video)

    Labor Day began in New York City, September 1882, as a tribute to the American worker, those "who from rude nature have delved and carved all the grandeur we behold."
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    "More than a century later, increasingly fewer workers in Anne Arundel County are doing the delving and the carving. Today, the most common county jobs are managers, secretaries, salespersons and teachers. Industries change, so the holiday has come to celebrate all working classes."


    "And yet, in Annapolis, beneath the grandeur of the Naval Academy's Bancroft Hall, in a cluttered basement shop, among workbenches smudged with polish, one of the old trades endures.....Cobbling." (READ MORE)
     
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    Last edited: Feb 15, 2022
  8. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    The Cobbler Trade (The Shoe Doctor)
     
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  9. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    Old-school shoe repair in a throw away society | Made to Last
     
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  10. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    Longtime Medina shoe shop owner worried about getting the boot from the city
     
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  11. Nancy Hart

    Nancy Hart Veteran Member
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    Small town close to Akron. The oldest of my 5 cousins lived, and taught school, in Medina. Only people from Akron know how to pronounce the name correctly. ;)
     
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  12. Joe Riley

    Joe Riley Supreme Member
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    "Nothin' could be fina, than to cobble in Medina"!;)
     
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  13. Nancy Hart

    Nancy Hart Veteran Member
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    You got it right, Joe! :cool:
     
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  14. Nancy Hart

    Nancy Hart Veteran Member
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    Shoemaker to the Stars

    Salvatore Ferragamo (1898 – 1960) was born to a poor family in Bonito, Italy, the eleventh of fourteen children. After making his first pair of shoes at age 9, young Salvatore decided that he had found his calling. He studied shoemaking in Naples for a year and then opened a small store in his parents' home.

    In 1915, he emigrated to Boston, where one of his brothers worked in a cowboy boot factory. After a brief stint at the factory, Salvatore and his brothers moved to California. In 1923, he took over the Hollywood Boot Shop across the street from Grauman's Egyptian Theater.

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    (1956. Photo by Enzo Graffeo/BIPs/Getty Images)

    Although initially the shop was for repair and made-to-measure shoes, Ferragamo eventually found success designing footwear for the cinema.. He made shoes for movie stars of the era including “The Bella”, a pair of black calfskin pumps with ankle straps and oversized vanilla bows, which Gloria Swanson wore in the 1928 film Sadie Thompson.

    upload_2022-3-28_22-38-18.png upload_2022-3-28_22-38-56.png

    Salvatore returned to Italy in 1927. Ferragamo shoes are made in Italy and you can still buy "The Bella" today, for only $1090.
     
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  15. Nancy Hart

    Nancy Hart Veteran Member
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    The Big Shoe - Bakersfield, CA

     
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