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Brooks Brothers - Band Aid Bandages - China Medical Bandage

History

History

On April 7, 1818, at the age of 45, Henry Sands Brooks opened H. & D.H. Brooks & Co. on the Northeast corner of Catherine and Cherry Streets in New York City. He proclaimed that his guiding principle was, "To make and deal only in merchandise of the finest body, to sell it at a fair profit and to deal with people who seek and appreciate such merchandise." In 1850, Brooks' sons, Elisha, Daniel, and John, inherited the family business, and renamed the company "Brooks Brothers". In its early history, Brooks Brothers was most widely known for introducing America to the ready-to-wear suit. In the late 19th century, Brooks Brothers tailored many distinctive uniforms for elite regiments of the New York National Guard. The Golden Fleece symbol was adopted as the company's trademark in 1850. A sheep suspended in a ribbon had long been a symbol of British woolen merchants. Dating from the 15th century, it had been the emblem of the Knights of the Golden Fleece, founded by Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy. In ancient Greek mythology, a magical flying ram, or Golden Fleece, was sought by Jason and the Argonauts.

The first Brooks store, in New York City, 1845

The last member of the Brooks family to head the company was Winthrop Holly Brooks, who ran the company from 1935 until its sale in 1946, when the company was acquired by Julius Garfinckel & Co. After the acquisition, Brooks Brothers' director was John C. Wood, who made Brooks Brothers even more traditional. By 1969, as an integral part of the retail conglomerate Garfinckel, Brooks Brothers, Miller & Rhoads, Inc., the ten Brooks Brothers stores in operation were located in New York, Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Pittsburgh, Los Angeles, Atlanta, and Washington, D.C.

Though today many people consider Brooks Brothers a very traditional clothier, it is also known for having introduced many clothing novelties to the market. In 1896, John E. Brooks, Henry Sands Brooks' grandson, invented the button-down dress shirt collar after seeing the non-flapping collars on English polo players. Between 1875 and 1998[citation needed], Brooks Brothers did not make an off-the-rack black suit, because of the myth that Abraham Lincoln wore a bespoke black Brooks frock coat when he was assassinated by John Wilkes Booth. As a result, the traditional American rule is that black suits only are proper for servants and the dead. President Theodore Roosevelt was fond of Brooks Brothers clothes: he even ordered his dress uniform for the Spanish-American War at Brooks.

Through the middle of the 20th century, when men generally wore suits much more than nowadays, "a Brooks Brothers suit" might even be mentioned to suggest the wearer's ordinariness. A popular book on evolution suggested that a Neanderthal man might pass unnoticed if he went out wearing the suit.

Ralph Lauren started out as a salesman at Brooks's Madison Avenue store. He was granted the right to use the Polo trademark from Brooks Brothers, which retained its rights to the iconic "original polo button-down collar" shirt still produced today.

Brooks Brothers was acquired by the British firm Marks and Spencer plc in 1988. In 2001, Marks & Spencer sold Brooks Brothers to Retail Brand Alliance ("RBA"), a company privately owned by Italian billionaire Claudio del Vecchio (son of Luxottica founder Leonardo del Vecchio). Besides Brooks Brothers, RBA consists of Carolee a designer of jewelry for department stores and speciality stores. In 2007 RBA sold its high end women's brand Adrienne Vittadini.

Notable customers

A display in a Brooks Brothers store.

Brooks Brothers has dressed generations of families, prominent and less famous, as well as political leaders, Hollywood legends, sports greats and military heroes.

Andy Warhol was known to buy and wear clothes from Brooks Brothers. According to Carlton Walters: "I got to [know] Andy quite well, and he always looked bedraggled: always had his tie lopsided, as he didn't have time to tie it, and he never tied his shoe laces, and he even wore different colored socks, but he bought all of his clothes at Brooks Brothers..."

Brooks Brothers is the official clothier of the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra

Brooks Brothers supplies clothes for the TV show Mad Men. In October 2009, Brooks Brothers created a limited edition "Mad Men Edition" suit with the show's costume designer.

Chuck Bass and Nate Archibald on the Gossip Girl TV series frequently wear clothes from Brooks Brothers.

The young stars of Slumdog Millionaire were all dressed by Brooks Brothers for the 81st Academy Awards.

Brooks Brothers is frequently sought out by costume designers in Hollywood, dressing stars in such films as Ben Affleck in Pearl Harbor, Gene Hackman in The Royal Tenenbaums, and Will Smith in Ali. The company produced made to measure period costumes for Denzel Washington's The Great Debaters. George Clooney wears Brooks Brothers throughout the film Up in the Air and scenes were shot in a Brooks Brothers airport store.

At his second inauguration, United States President Abraham Lincoln wore a coat specially crafted for him by Brooks Brothers. Hand stitched into the coat's lining was a design featuring an eagle and the inscription, "One Country, One Destiny." It is common mythology that Lincoln was wearing a black suit by Brooks Brothers when he was assassinated. This story, although widely touted, is not true. Lincoln was, however, wearing a Brooks Brothers overcoat when he was killed. Brooks Brothers' choice to exclude black suits in its made to measure lineup was entirely sartorial in nature.

United States President Ulysses S. Grant began his association with Brooks Brothers during the Civil War, when he ordered tailored uniforms for the Union officers in the American Civil War.

Many more presidents, including Herbert Hoover, Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, George H. W. Bush (who, however, when accused of being a Brooks Brothers Republican, revealed that he was wearing a J. Press suit), and Bill Clinton were known to wear Brooks Brothers clothing lines. Barack Obama wore a Brooks Brothers coat, scarf, and gloves during his inauguration in 2009.

Stephen Colbert, of the Colbert Report and formerly of the Daily Show and Strangers with Candy, has all of his suits for the Colbert Report supplied by Brooks Brothers.

James Thurber refers to Brooks Brothers shirts in some of his short stories. Kurt Vonnegut also refers to a Brooks Brothers suit worn by the main character in his book Jailbird.

In the novel Junkie, by William S. Burroughs, an addict trades what he claims is a Brooks Brothers jacket for two caps of heroin.

Richard Yates not only wore Brooks Brothers clothing throughout his life, but he often referred to the brand in his writing, notably in A Good School, in which one of the characters tries to hang himself with a Brooks Brothers belt.

Bret Easton Ellis refers to clothing from Brooks Brothers worn by Patrick Bateman and his colleagues in his controversial novel American Psycho.

The lead character Lestat de Lioncourt in Anne Rice' s Vampire Chronicles often describes himself to be wearing suits by Brooks Brothers.

Novelist W.E.B. Griffin has often included mention of Brooks Brothers military uniforms, Dress uniform and Dress Mess uniform in particular, in his best-selling Brotherhood Of War and The Corps book series.

Today

Brooks Brothers store on Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills, California

Currently, there are 210 Brooks Brothers stores in the United States and 70 in other countries, including Japan, China, Taiwan, Dubai, France, England, Scotland, Chile, Canada, and Italy. In 1998, Brooks Brothers launched its official website. The symbol of the Golden Fleece is Brooks Brothers's trademark. It consists of a sheep suspended in a ribbon, which was the symbol of Flemish wool merchants in the 15th century and later traditionally had been a symbol of British wool merchants. In ancient Greek mythology, a magical ram's skin, or Golden Fleece, was sought by Jason and the Argonauts. United States flagships are in New York, Chicago, Boston, and Beverly Hills.

Most of Brooks Brothers' clothing is imported, with sportscoats, shirts, and some accessories manufactured in the United States. All Brooks Brothers necktie silk is woven in England or Italy and the ties are still "cut and piled" at the Brooks Brothers tie factory in Long Island City, New York, NY. Brooks also has a series of books on etiquette and manners for ladies and gentlemen. Its higher end label is the Golden Fleece line.

In September 2007, Brooks Brothers CEO, Claudio Del Vecchio, announced the unveiling of a new high end collection of men's and women's wear named Black Fleece. Del Vecchio announced that the star guest designer for the new collection would be New York menswear designer Thom Browne. Black Fleece received so much critical and commercial success that Brooks Brothers opened a standalone Black Fleece boutique on NYC's Bleecker Street in the Winter of 2008.

In 2008, the company began an extensive renovation of its flagship store at 346 Madison Ave. and in January 2009 closed a smaller location at 5th Avenue and 53rd street in New York City.

See also

J. Press

Paul Stuart

Brooks Brothers riot

Ralph Lauren

Thom Browne

References

^ Connie Glaser: Tradition, flexibility key to retailer's longevity: bizwomen.com, 2007

^ Vanderbilt, Complete Guide to Etiquette (1956)

^ Ruth Moore. Evolution. Time Life Nature Library. ca 1964.

^ Patrick S. Smith, Warhol: Conversations about the Artist Ann Arbor: UMI Research Press, 1988 p. 340.

^ www.jazzatlincolncenter.org/about/news/060615-news.html

^ Edinburgh Evening News

^ Brooks Brothers | About Us | Notable Customers

^ Brooks Brothers | About Us | Notable Customers

^ J.P. Freire. Tea Party protestors aren't the only ones wearing Brooks Brothers, The Examiner

^ http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/22/AR2007032202044.html The Man in the Browne Flannel Suit, The Washington Post, March 23, 2007


External links

Brooks Brothers Official Web Site

Categories: Clothing brands of the United States | Clothing retailers of the United States | Companies established in 1818 | High fashion brands | Suits (clothing) | Shops in New York City | Companies based in New York CityHidden categories: Articles needing additional references from February 2009 | All articles needing additional references | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements from February 2008

by: gaga
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