Monday, October 6, 2014

HISTORY OF CORTLAND CORSET COMPANY'S MILLER STREET FACTORY INCLUDES PURCHASE BY GILLETTE SKIRT COMPANY



The Cortland Democrat, Friday, February 10, 1888.
Cortland Corset Company.
   One of the busiest factories in Cortland is that situated on North Main St., and occupied by the Cortland Corset Co. Although the business has been started but a few weeks it has grown to proportions that have astonished its most sanguine friends, and it bids fair in the near future to develop into a trade that shall be second to none in the country.
   Last Monday afternoon a representative of the DEMOCRAT called at the factory, and was shown through the different departments by Mr. E. G. Gould, the courteous and efficient secretary of the company. The first room inspected was that in which the cloth is cut up for use. Two long tables are arranged, one on each side of the room, and on these the cloth is unrolled, a number of thicknesses deep. Guided by metal patterns the workmen cut this with their keen knives with great rapidity, and, by varying the position of the pattern, with but little waste it is then passed into the stock room, which adjoins the cutting room where it is given out as needed on the floor above.
   In the stock room are kept all the materials for making corsets, such as thread, steels, wires, laces, etc. A clerk is in charge here whose duty it is to keep a record of all material given out and to also note the department to which it is sent.
   Ascending to the second floor by means of the elevator the visitor is greeted by the click of sixty-five Wheeler A. Wilson sewing machines which are run at an extremely high rate of speed. A competent forewoman is in charge of the room to give out the work and see that it is correctly done.
   The corsets are first embroidered on machines especially constructed for that purpose, and, as the work is done with no other guide than the hand and eye of me operator, it will be seen that no inconsiderable amount of artistic talent is necessary for its execution. The steels are now inserted, the work properly folded and it is then passed to the machines where it is put together. The bone, wire and side steels are then put in and the work thus far done is put into the hands of the first inspector.
   Should anything be wrong it is returned to be repaired, while if no mistake has been made it is handed to a peculiarly constructed machine which shapes it properly. The ends are then bound and the corset is now sent to the first floor to be completed. Here the eyelets are inserted, then it is turned over to the ironer. An ingenuous spraying contrivance dampens the goods a little and they are ironed while yet moist. The bust is shaped over a steel block heated by steam, then the trimming is stitched on and the work is again inspected. If this be satisfactory they are packed each in a box and are ready to be shipped.
   The company are making several grades of corsets but it is their intention to push their Zenobia and C. C. C., both of which are protected by letters patent. The distinguishing feature of the Zenobia is a side section at top and bottom of kid leather which allows the corset to conform to the movements of the body without the tedious process of breaking in.
   The demand for these goods is so great already that the company are unable to keep up with their orders and they hope soon to devote their whole force to the making of these two brands. They have recently placed these goods on sale at several stores in town, the names of which may be learned by a reference to their advertisement in another column. The company are now making sixty dozen a day and hope soon to make one hundred dozen.
   The motive power is supplied by a twenty horse power engine and a forty horse power boiler both of which were made at the Porter M'f'g. Co. of Syracuse. The building is heated with steam and the latest improved apparatus is employed. The rooms are high and well lighted and ventilated, with city water on both floors. Provision has also been made whereby the floor could be flooded in a moment should fire break out.
   The operatives, in all about one hundred, are without exception, of a remarkably fine appearance and ladylike bearing and seem strongly to corroborate Secretary Gould’s emphatic assertion that they were in every way a superior lot of hands. We wish the new enterprise the fullest measure of success.

The Door and Window Screen Company.
   In the month of October, 1887 in the old Wickwire block on R. R. St., Messrs. H. H. and W. J. Greenman commenced building a window screen on which they had taken out letters patent. That their goods met with a ready sale may be inferred from the fact that the shops on R. R. St. soon became too small and they were obliged at the close of the season to remove to the more commodious factory on Port Watson St., which they now occupy.
   Last October the business was merged into a stock company, additions were made to the already large shops, more machinery was added and the work was begun with the determination on the part of the company to make enough goods to supply the orders which constantly flowed in upon them.
   The first floor of the factory on Port Watson St. is almost entirely occupied by the machinery, all of which is of the most approved pattern. Here the material is received, cut up, and made ready for use. On the second floor the doors are put together and stained, and the finished goods crated for shipment. The third floor is devoted to the screen windows of which nearly one hundred dozen are made daily. The frames are glued together on the first floor and are then brought to this one, where the wire cloth is tacked on.
   Girls are employed almost exclusively on this floor and they seem to take to the use of the saw and hammer as kindly as though they were their natural implements. About thirty young ladies are working now and the number will be increased to fifty in a short time.
   The window screen, on which the Messrs. Greenman have in so short a time built so large a trade, is extremely simple of construction. To each end of the frame over which the wire is nailed, is fitted a semi-elliptical spring of wire, the ends of which project upward. On the ends of the spring rests a bend made large enough to enable it to slip over the ends of the frame. By pressing on each head the width can be considerably lessened, while when in position, the resistance of the spring holds the screen firmly in place.
   The company number among their customers some of the best wholesale houses in the country, whose orders for goods are sufficient indication of their merit. The members of the new company are all gentlemen of acknowledged ability who would spare no pains to maintain and add to the already vast trade which it now enjoys.

The New Directory.
   The Globe Directory Publishing Co., of Utica, will soon begin a canvass of this village and Homer, preparatory to issuing a new directory of these places. If we may judge from the prospectus of the company, the work will be in every way the most complete and satisfactory that has yet been issued. It will contain a complete list of names, occupation and address of residents, a business directory of merchants and manufacturers, a record of the village government, together with many facts of more than local interest.
   Notwithstanding the large amount of labor and expense connected with the publication of so extensive a work, the publishers have fixed the price at the small sum of one dollar a copy, hoping to place one in each family in town. The book will be well printed and bound and is guaranteed by the publishers to equal in appearance any of the directories which are usually sold at from two to three times the price asked for this.
   A good directory is almost an essential for everyone, and it is to be hoped that the majority of our citizens will improve this chance to supply themselves with a copy of this work. The agents who conduct the canvass will be pleased to take orders for the work, which need not be paid for until delivery. We predict a large sale in this town.


The Cortland Democrat, Friday, December 5, 1919.

Twenty Years Ago.

   The Gillette Skirt company bought the old Cortland Corset company building on Miller-st. to be used as a skirt factory. This was burned on the night of Jan. 8, 1904, and the present cement block structure was later erected, now used by the Newton shirt factory.



1899 Harris photo. Grip's Historical Souvenir of Cortland.
Cortland Standard, Thursday, December 22, 1904.
FIRE RECORD FOR 1904.
Sixteen Fire Alarms.
   Second [Fire]—Jan. 8. The large factory of the Gillette Skirt Co., situated between Homer-ave. and Miller-st. with most of its contents, was totally destroyed. The fire was one of the largest that has occurred in this city in a number of years. The building was entirely of wood and burned rapidly, and, owing to the great distance from the fire station, and the deep snow, the most the firemen could do was to save adjoining property. The alarm was turned in a t 10:30 p. m. from box 223. The origin of the fire is still a mystery. No night watch was employed and when the employees left at 6 p. m. everything seemed to be in perfect condition. Insurance on building and contents $16,000, which did not cover the loss.

Keep the Skirt Factory.
   Cortland will need to get a hustle on if it keeps the Gillette Skirt Co. in town. Saturday it had offers of a site and aid in erecting its buildings from Binghamton and Syracuse. A. P. McGraw is today trying to sell at a bargain to the company the brick building in McGraw in which it is now temporarily locating. A representative of the board of trade of Weedsport is here in town today, aiming to induce the company to locate at his home. The company has not yet decided to leave town but it acknowledges that in its present situation with everything it has destroyed and nothing remaining as a nucleus to keep it in Cortland some of these offers of sites on railroads and of help in building do look pretty attractive.
   The question presents itself fairly and squarely to the residents of Cortland, does the place want to let the Gillette Skirt Co. depart? Isn't this a proper and legitimate undertaking for the board of trade to consider? This company has grown steadily each year from the time when it employed a dozen hands till just before the fire. It had 130 in the factory and thirteen men on the road. There is every reason to suppose that in the course of a few years its capacity and employees would again be doubled. Mr. Gillette himself is public spirited and liberal, a good citizen, just the kind of man Cortland wants to have stay here. The same may be said of others who are associated with him. If it is worth the while of other places to acquire the Gillette Skirt Co., it is worth the while of Cortland to retain it.--Cortland Standard, January 11, 1904.



The Gillette Skirt Co.

   This company began the manufacture of skirts three years ago. Their first factory was located in a small building on Port Watson street. A few months only had elapsed before a change to larger quarters was found to be necessary and the Wells block was secured. Here the business has been conducted on the second and third floors of the building. This has proved too small for present requirements and the company has purchased the property formerly occupied by the Cortland Corset Co. on Homer avenue and Miller street. This will furnish several times their present capacity for producing goods.—Grip’s Historical Souvenir of Cortland, 1899.



SALE OF THE CORSET COMPANY’S PROPERTY.

   The real estate and personal property of the Cortland Corset Company, located on North Main street [Miller Street—CC editor] in this village, was sold by Referee S. S. Knox, on Saturday last to S. E. Welch of this place, and Byron H. Bierce of Scott, for $3,000, they being the highest bidders for the same. We understand that Messrs. Welch and Bierce assume all of the liabilities of the Company amounting to about $18,000. The Company was organized about three years since with a capital stock of $25,000 and for some months seemed to be in a prosperous condition, but about a year ago they virtually shut down and have practically done no business since. We are unable to learn the cause of the trouble, as the directors seem to be rather reticent about talking in relation to the matter.—Cortland Democrat, Friday, January 17, 1890.
 
 
 




Recommended:
 
1) 1889 Cortland Directory: http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~nycortla/dir89x90/dir89cv2.htm  


2) 1894 Cortland map, Cortland Corset Co. #15 marked on roof, between Homer Ave. and Miller Street (zoom to enlarge and drag mouse to move around map): http://www.stockmapagency.com/1894_Map_of_Cortland_UC-NEYO-CORT1894-ANT.php



 
 

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