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The School of Hard Knox

DaveProc

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,064
Location
Rhode Island
1940-1941 Chanticleer
St__Louis_Globe_Democrat_Fri__Mar_15__1940_.jpg The_San_Francisco_Examiner_Thu__Apr_10__1941_.jpg Chicago_Tribune_Sat__May_4__1940_.jpg Detroit_Free_Press_Thu__Apr_10__1941_.jpg
 
Messages
17,588
I never posted up my Knox American Royal made for the Saddle and Sirloin Club of Kansas City, but I can post some research on Woolf Bros & in particular, Mr. Herbert Woolf.

Woolf Bros, Kansas City was in business from 1879 to 1991. Herbert M. Woolf (1880 - 1964) took over the reins of the business when his father Albert died in 1915. Herbert Woolf was a lifelong bachelor, loved horses & Holstein cattle, & lived on his 320 acre ranch at Bonner Springs, KS. His horse named Beau Peavine won a grand championship at Madison Square Garden. Another of his horses, a thoroughbred named Lawrin won the Kentucky Derby in 1938. And William Randolph Hearst bought Holstein cattle from Woolf to populate the pastures of his famous San Simeon ranch.

The Saddle and Sirloin Club was established in 1945 as a private stables & Saddle club for members only, & to financially support the American Royal (established 1899) as the premier Hereford cattle & livestock show.

In 1945 when Saddle and Sirloin was founded at the end of WWII Herbert Woolf would have been 65 yrs old. I'm trying to find out if he was a founding member.
 

DaveProc

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,064
Location
Rhode Island
I never posted up my Knox American Royal made for the Saddle and Sirloin Club of Kansas City, but I can post some research on Woolf Bros & in particular, Mr. Herbert Woolf.

Woolf Bros, Kansas City was in business from 1879 to 1991. Herbert M. Woolf (1880 - 1964) took over the reins of the business when his father Albert died in 1915. Herbert Woolf was a lifelong bachelor, loved horses & Holstein cattle, & lived on his 320 acre ranch at Bonner Springs, KS. His horse named Beau Peavine won a grand championship at Madison Square Garden. Another of his horses, a thoroughbred named Lawrin won the Kentucky Derby in 1938. And William Randolph Hearst bought Holstein cattle from Woolf to populate the pastures of his famous San Simeon ranch.

The Saddle and Sirloin Club was established in 1945 as a private stables & Saddle club for members only, & to financially support the American Royal (established 1899) as the premier Hereford cattle & livestock show.

In 1945 when Saddle and Sirloin was founded at the end of WWII Herbert Woolf would have been 65 yrs old. I'm trying to find out if he was a founding member.
Very cool! Thank you for sharing Ken!
 
Messages
17,588
Very cool! Thank you for sharing Ken!
Thanks Dave. The Saddle and Sirloin Club is still in existence. They maintain their stables, their dining room serves dinner 3-4 nights a wk, & they have added a skeet & trap shooting range. No swimming pool; not your typical country club. They do have an arrangement with a nearby private golf course for members who like to play.

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Last edited:
Messages
17,588
This may add to the history & acquisitions timeline for Knox. All highlighting is mine.

Time Magazine on Knox Dunlap merger 1929

Monday, May. 27, 1929

When, last week, Knox Hat Co., Inc., announced an offering* of no par, non-voting common at $140 a share, a few U. S. hat wearers remembered the time (1917) when Knox shares were selling at $6. That was during a reorganization period following the retirement (1913) of Colonel Edward M. Knox, son of Founder Charles Knox, and before the arrival of the present management, which, under the leadership of President F. H. Montgomery, showed net earnings in 1928 of $859,997, or $10.10 a share on common stock. Acquiring Dunlap & Co. (1919), Long's Hat Stores Corp. (1927), Kaskel & Kaskel Corp. (1928), Knox Hat Co., Inc., today operates 62 retail stores as well as distributing Knox and Dunlap hats through some 2,500 agencies. Net sales in 1928 were $8,141,323.

Hats. The felt hat, as everyone knows, is made from rabbit fur. According to ancient Chinese legend, the discovery of the felt hat resulted from the aching feet of a tired Chinaman. This Chinaman, rabbit hunting, had caught several rabbits.

In catching the rabbits, however, he had tramped many a mile, and sore and painful were his feet. So he skinned two of his rabbits, put their fur in his shoes, and quickly eased his throbs and burnings.

How this experience resulted in felt hats rather than in felt shoes, legend does not relate, but it is undeniably true that the raw material for felt hats is the little animal with the long ears and the reputation for timidity and fertility. The straw hat lacks a romantic legendary origin, but includes in its ranks probably the world's most expensive hat—the Panama—handwoven from fibres of palm leaves in Ecuador and priced up to $500. Knox sells about a half dozen a year of the $500 variety.

Heads. The hatter deals with heads as much as with hats, and many a famed head, including the heads of 23 U. S Presidents, has been protected and ornamented with Knox hats. The hatter, of course, takes a bird's-eye view of heads and in the Knox files are thousands of outlines (technically known as "conforms") of heads as they appear when looked straight down at. Generally speaking, there are two main types of outline—a long, narrow ellipse hardly wider at the centre than at the ends, and a short, pear-shaped figure with the wide part at the back. Long and narrow were the heads of Theodore Roosevelt, Robert G. Ingersoll, Victor Herbert. Short and pear-shaped were the heads of Ulysses S. Grant, Charles Frohman, General Phil Sheridan.

Calvin Coolidge's cranium shows a distinct bump on the left side and William Howard Taft's has bumps on both sides.

Manhattan's Jimmy Walker has the narrow oval head; Pittsburgh's Andrew Mellon is pronouncedly among the pear-heads.

Knox men say that judges and generals have usually the same shaped heads.

The average hat size is 7⅛. Among average size takers are Calvin Coolidge and Al Jolson. John D. Rockefeller Sr. wears a 7¬? John D. Rockefeller Jr. a 7⅜. The largest hat ever made was a special order from a Ringling Brothers Giant, who weighed 480 pounds and took an 8⅞. There is not much variation in straw hat styles, straws of the present (delayed) season tending toward a narrowed brim and a slightly bell-shaped crown.

Figures on hat sales show that many a thrifty U. S. citizen must wear old hats through new seasons, as U. S. hat consumption is only ¬? a hat per capita per annum.

Charles Knox, founder of Knox Hats, came to the U. S. from Ireland in 1830, aged 12. The New York bound ship in which he crossed the Atlantic had been blown far out of its course and finally made port at Wilmington, Del., leaving Charles, 12, and his sister Margaret, 10, stranded 118 miles from their parents in Manhattan. "How are you going to get to New York?" asked the ship captain, who wanted to put Margaret in some Wilmington household and ship Charles as a cabin boy. "We'll walk," said Charles, and they did, in two weeks, to Battery Park, Manhattan.

Charles was apprenticed to Leary & Co., famed hatters of 105 Broad St. After learning his trade at a salary of $25 a year, he was given a $250 bonus and a $10 a week job. Still not quite 20 years old, Charles Knox opened the first Knox shop at 110 Fulton St. So small was his store that only one customer at a time could be accommodated. Thus the shop became known as the Hole in the Wall, a title which many a small retailer has since appropriated. But many a hat came out of the hole and Hatter Knox soon moved to larger quarters. Among early Knox customers were Daniel Webster, Horace Greeley, James Gordon Bennet, Thurlow Weed, Henry Clay, Abraham Lincoln.

In 1857 there came to the Knox store a mother with her 12 year old son, asked Hatter Knox to give her Robert a job.

Hatter Knox consented, employed 12-year-old to make fires, to sweep the shop, to run errands, all for $3 weekly.

Soon the boy graduated to the ranks of the hat salesmen, and several years later was still selling Knox hats, his salary now having risen to $12 weekly. Ambitious, he asked for $15. But Hatter Knox refused the raise. Angry, Robert left, started his own hat business. Thus began the famed Dunlap hat company, founded by Robert Dunlap, onetime Knox errand boy.

Meanwhile Hatter Knox was growing old, and gray were the hairs under the Knox hat worn on the Knox head. So gradually Hatter Knox's son, Colonel Edward Knox, took control of the business.

When Charles Knox died (1895) the business had already been for some years under the direction of Colonel Knox* whose chief problem was competition with the rapidly rising Dunlap hat. Whether because Robert Dunlap, liberal, kindly, used frequently to suspend production in Dunlap shops while he bought beer for the men and ice cream for the women, or because of a secret process by which Hatter Dunlap succeeded in turning out the blackest derbies ever known, the Dunlap hat eventually outsold the Knox in Manhattan. For many a year small hat-makers held up their spring lines until they could see and imitate the Dunlap derby and the Knox felt. As for Knox-Dunlap competition, both the Knox and the Dunlap businesses declined with the age and retirement of their two leaders and soon after the present Knox management had rehabilitated the Knox company it absorbed the Dunlap also.

*Although the Colonel was an honorary title, conferred by Congress, Colonel Knox was no armchair military man. He fought in the Civil War and was wounded at Gettysburg.
 
Messages
19,134
Location
Funkytown, USA
This may add to the history & acquisitions timeline for Knox. All highlighting is mine.

Time Magazine on Knox Dunlap merger 1929

Monday, May. 27, 1929

When, last week, Knox Hat Co., Inc., announced an offering* of no par, non-voting common at $140 a share, a few U. S. hat wearers remembered the time (1917) when Knox shares were selling at $6. That was during a reorganization period following the retirement (1913) of Colonel Edward M. Knox, son of Founder Charles Knox, and before the arrival of the present management, which, under the leadership of President F. H. Montgomery, showed net earnings in 1928 of $859,997, or $10.10 a share on common stock. Acquiring Dunlap & Co. (1919), Long's Hat Stores Corp. (1927), Kaskel & Kaskel Corp. (1928), Knox Hat Co., Inc., today operates 62 retail stores as well as distributing Knox and Dunlap hats through some 2,500 agencies. Net sales in 1928 were $8,141,323.

Hats. The felt hat, as everyone knows, is made from rabbit fur. According to ancient Chinese legend, the discovery of the felt hat resulted from the aching feet of a tired Chinaman. This Chinaman, rabbit hunting, had caught several rabbits.

In catching the rabbits, however, he had tramped many a mile, and sore and painful were his feet. So he skinned two of his rabbits, put their fur in his shoes, and quickly eased his throbs and burnings.

How this experience resulted in felt hats rather than in felt shoes, legend does not relate, but it is undeniably true that the raw material for felt hats is the little animal with the long ears and the reputation for timidity and fertility. The straw hat lacks a romantic legendary origin, but includes in its ranks probably the world's most expensive hat—the Panama—handwoven from fibres of palm leaves in Ecuador and priced up to $500. Knox sells about a half dozen a year of the $500 variety.

Heads. The hatter deals with heads as much as with hats, and many a famed head, including the heads of 23 U. S Presidents, has been protected and ornamented with Knox hats. The hatter, of course, takes a bird's-eye view of heads and in the Knox files are thousands of outlines (technically known as "conforms") of heads as they appear when looked straight down at. Generally speaking, there are two main types of outline—a long, narrow ellipse hardly wider at the centre than at the ends, and a short, pear-shaped figure with the wide part at the back. Long and narrow were the heads of Theodore Roosevelt, Robert G. Ingersoll, Victor Herbert. Short and pear-shaped were the heads of Ulysses S. Grant, Charles Frohman, General Phil Sheridan.

Calvin Coolidge's cranium shows a distinct bump on the left side and William Howard Taft's has bumps on both sides.

Manhattan's Jimmy Walker has the narrow oval head; Pittsburgh's Andrew Mellon is pronouncedly among the pear-heads.

Knox men say that judges and generals have usually the same shaped heads.

The average hat size is 7⅛. Among average size takers are Calvin Coolidge and Al Jolson. John D. Rockefeller Sr. wears a 7¬? John D. Rockefeller Jr. a 7⅜. The largest hat ever made was a special order from a Ringling Brothers Giant, who weighed 480 pounds and took an 8⅞. There is not much variation in straw hat styles, straws of the present (delayed) season tending toward a narrowed brim and a slightly bell-shaped crown.

Figures on hat sales show that many a thrifty U. S. citizen must wear old hats through new seasons, as U. S. hat consumption is only ¬? a hat per capita per annum.

Charles Knox, founder of Knox Hats, came to the U. S. from Ireland in 1830, aged 12. The New York bound ship in which he crossed the Atlantic had been blown far out of its course and finally made port at Wilmington, Del., leaving Charles, 12, and his sister Margaret, 10, stranded 118 miles from their parents in Manhattan. "How are you going to get to New York?" asked the ship captain, who wanted to put Margaret in some Wilmington household and ship Charles as a cabin boy. "We'll walk," said Charles, and they did, in two weeks, to Battery Park, Manhattan.

Charles was apprenticed to Leary & Co., famed hatters of 105 Broad St. After learning his trade at a salary of $25 a year, he was given a $250 bonus and a $10 a week job. Still not quite 20 years old, Charles Knox opened the first Knox shop at 110 Fulton St. So small was his store that only one customer at a time could be accommodated. Thus the shop became known as the Hole in the Wall, a title which many a small retailer has since appropriated. But many a hat came out of the hole and Hatter Knox soon moved to larger quarters. Among early Knox customers were Daniel Webster, Horace Greeley, James Gordon Bennet, Thurlow Weed, Henry Clay, Abraham Lincoln.

In 1857 there came to the Knox store a mother with her 12 year old son, asked Hatter Knox to give her Robert a job.

Hatter Knox consented, employed 12-year-old to make fires, to sweep the shop, to run errands, all for $3 weekly.

Soon the boy graduated to the ranks of the hat salesmen, and several years later was still selling Knox hats, his salary now having risen to $12 weekly. Ambitious, he asked for $15. But Hatter Knox refused the raise. Angry, Robert left, started his own hat business. Thus began the famed Dunlap hat company, founded by Robert Dunlap, onetime Knox errand boy.

Meanwhile Hatter Knox was growing old, and gray were the hairs under the Knox hat worn on the Knox head. So gradually Hatter Knox's son, Colonel Edward Knox, took control of the business.

When Charles Knox died (1895) the business had already been for some years under the direction of Colonel Knox* whose chief problem was competition with the rapidly rising Dunlap hat. Whether because Robert Dunlap, liberal, kindly, used frequently to suspend production in Dunlap shops while he bought beer for the men and ice cream for the women, or because of a secret process by which Hatter Dunlap succeeded in turning out the blackest derbies ever known, the Dunlap hat eventually outsold the Knox in Manhattan. For many a year small hat-makers held up their spring lines until they could see and imitate the Dunlap derby and the Knox felt. As for Knox-Dunlap competition, both the Knox and the Dunlap businesses declined with the age and retirement of their two leaders and soon after the present Knox management had rehabilitated the Knox company it absorbed the Dunlap also.

*Although the Colonel was an honorary title, conferred by Congress, Colonel Knox was no armchair military man. He fought in the Civil War and was wounded at Gettysburg.

I like the section about the average hat sizes. That's one thing we've debated quite a bit around here. It seems things haven't changed a much as we thought.
 
Messages
17,588
I like the section about the average hat sizes. That's one thing we've debated quite a bit around here. It seems things haven't changed a much as we thought.
I liked the part about the conforms referencing back to the conformateur, something else that has been debated heavily, concerning soft hats at least.

In researching Woolf Bros I remember reading among the things available at their auction in 1991 were the custom fit shirt patterns for President Harry Truman & KS Senator Bob Dole.
 

Tukwila

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New to me green 50s Knox Tom 'n' Jerry. It has a felt ribbon treatment which I usually don't care for - but this one is growing on me.

Crown: open 5 3/4", (as bashed 5" front, 4 1/4" back)
Brim: 2 3/4"
Felt Ribbon: 7/8"

View attachment 363932 View attachment 363933 View attachment 363934 View attachment 363935 View attachment 363936 View attachment 363937 View attachment 363938 View attachment 363939 View attachment 363940 View attachment 363941
Another snappy Tom n Jerry lid! Fabtastic!
 
Messages
12,384
Location
Albany Oregon
New to me green 50s Knox Tom 'n' Jerry. It has a felt ribbon treatment which I usually don't care for - but this one is growing on me.

Crown: open 5 3/4", (as bashed 5" front, 4 1/4" back)
Brim: 2 3/4"
Felt Ribbon: 7/8"

View attachment 363932 View attachment 363933 View attachment 363934 View attachment 363935 View attachment 363936 View attachment 363937 View attachment 363938 View attachment 363939 View attachment 363940 View attachment 363941

Perfect brim for you at 2 3/4". That stitching is what makes this hat. love that color, I don't wear much green, but I would buy a whole new wardrobe to match this one!
 

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