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View Full Version : Good Morning...Pants with copper rivets lead to untold popularity



Okla-homey
5/20/2008, 05:53 AM
May 20, 1873: Levi Strauss and Jacob Davis receive patent for blue jeans

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135 years ago on this day in 1873, San Francisco businessman Levi Strauss and Reno, Nevada, tailor Jacob Davis are given a patent to create work pants reinforced with metal rivets, marking the birth of one of the world's most famous garments: blue jeans.

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Born Loeb Strauss in Buttenheim, Bavaria, in 1829, the young Strauss immigrated to New York with his family in 1847 after the death of his father.

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Strauss' birthplace in Buttenheim

By 1850, Loeb had changed his name to Levi and was working in the family dry goods business, J. Strauss Brother & Co. In early 1853, Levi Strauss went west to seek his fortune during the heady days of the Gold Rush.

In San Francisco, Strauss established a wholesale dry goods business under his own name and worked as the West Coast representative of his family's firm. His new business imported clothing, fabric and other dry goods to sell in the small stores opening all over California and other Western states to supply the rapidly expanding communities of gold miners and other settlers.

By 1866, Strauss had moved his company to expanded headquarters and was a well-known businessman and supporter of the Jewish community in San Francisco.

Jacob Davis, a tailor in Reno, Nevada, was one of Levi Strauss' regular customers. In 1872, he wrote a letter to Strauss about his method of making work pants with metal rivets on the stress points--at the corners of the pockets and the base of the button fly--to make them stronger. As Davis didn't have the money for the necessary paperwork, he suggested that Strauss provide the funds and that the two men get the patent together. Strauss agreed enthusiastically, and the patent for "Improvement in Fastening Pocket-Openings"--the innovation that would produce blue jeans as we know them--was granted to both men on May 20, 1873. Strauss and Davis received United States patent #139121 for using copper rivets to strengthen the pockets of denim work pants.

Levi Strauss & Co. began manufacturing the first of the famous Levi's brand of jeans in San Francisco, using fabric from the Amoskeag Manufacturing Company in Manchester, New Hampshire.

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Strauss brought Davis to San Francisco to oversee the first manufacturing facility for "waist overalls," as the original jeans were known. At first they employed seamstresses working out of their homes, but by the 1880s, Strauss had opened his own factory.

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The famous 501 brand jean--known until 1890 as "XX"--was soon a bestseller, and the company grew quickly. By the 1920s, Levi's denim waist overalls were the top-selling men's work pant in the United States. As decades passed, the craze only grew, and now blue jeans are worn by men and women, young and old, around the world.

Oh, and BTW, if you're over 35, you probably recall those copper rivets on the back pockets of Levis. They took them off in the 70's and replaced those rivets with bar-tacking because the darn things tended to scratch surfaces like car paintwork and furniture.

StoopTroup
5/20/2008, 06:40 AM
I remember getting into my first pair of jeans.

Glad her Daddy didn't catch me. :D

Preservation Parcels
5/20/2008, 07:40 AM
Nice, Homey. On the drawing, notice the rivet at the base of the button fly. That was removed early on, too. Underdrawers weren't universally worn at that time, and the men sitting around fires received some rather uncomfortable "branding" when the copper absorbed the heat. :eek:

StoopTroup
5/20/2008, 07:43 AM
OUCH!

Okla-homey
5/20/2008, 08:09 AM
You people are slipping. The guy who put jeans on the world's butt was from Buttenheim.