Admiral Byrd was a label used by Roughwear Clothing Co. The 2 way pocket is their patent.
The label was first used around 1937 and continued with variations into the 1950s.
Roughwear and California Sportswear were the 2 largest supplier of leather jackets.
Both made numerous jackets for Wards, Sears, Penney. The Admiral Byrd labels was also used independent of any other labeling, as noted above on a vest.
The unlabeled brown aviator is mine. I never thought of it as being Roughwear/Byrd, yet is is the same jacket as the Windward/Byrds posted. The lining in mine was replaced with an effort to match the original lining. Notice how that red plaid lining shows up in Byrd jackets.
John Lofgren Monkey Boots Shinki Horsebuttt - $1,136 The classic monkey boot silhouette in an incredibly rich Shinki russet horse leather.
Grant Stone Diesel Boot Dark Olive Chromexcel - $395 Goodyear welted, Horween Chromexcel, classic good looks.
Schott 568 Vandals Jacket - $1,250 The classic Perfecto motorcycle jacket, in a very special limited-edition Schott double rider style.
Unlabeled Aug. 1939 (zipper) of @Woolwonders but has Admiral Byrd details (sleeve strap) and horse label:
View attachment 739477 View attachment 739478 View attachment 739479 View attachment 739480
View attachment 739484
Compare with this 1930s, same horse label, note the same pocket stitching detail, without the top pocket zipper:
View attachment 739481
View attachment 739482
View attachment 739483

Byrd also uses other makers, like Block-Bilt. I don’t see Byrd is just another face for Roughwear, i.e., Roughwear was not the only maker for Byrd. I see Byrd as a broader umbrella that uses Roughwear and other makers such as Block-Bilt. See link below.
This is similar to the relationship between Guide Master Wolf outerwear the jacket maker and Kit Karson, who was a famous American frontier. Wolf was not the only maker for Kit Karson, which employed other makers to seller under his namesake brand.
Admiral Byrd thread
This is the thread on leather jackets from Admiral Byrd. It is a highly underrated pre-war brand that was active during 1930s-1940s. It is sometimes labeled in addition to a Montgomery Ward / Windward label. I suspect that it was not a maker but sourced leather jackets from other makers and put...www.thefedoralounge.com
Unlabeled Aug. 1939 (zipper) of @Woolwonders but has Admiral Byrd details (sleeve strap) and horse label. It is suspected to be Admiral Byrd, made by Ram-Jack (see next post):
View attachment 739477 View attachment 739478 View attachment 739479 View attachment 739480
View attachment 739484
Compare with this 1930s, same horse label, note the same pocket stitching detail, without the top pocket zipper:
View attachment 739481
View attachment 739482
View attachment 739483
Ram-Jack is suspected as the maker for Admiral Byrd because it uses same horse label and the same pocket stitching:
View attachment 739495 View attachment 739497 View attachment 739496
View attachment 739498 View attachment 739499
View attachment 739500 View attachment 739501
GM Wolf uses the same pocket stitching but different horse label
View attachment 739502 View attachment 739503