Among the manufacturing and service industries regularly presenting the public with giveaway advertising items like paperweights and pocket mirrors, the shoe industry of the early 20th Century stands out as a major participant. On September 28, 2012, I presented on this blog a group of 10 paperweights under the title “Shoes Preserved Under Glass.” Herein is presented eleven advertising pocket mirrors — all related to the footwear industry. They present the fashion in the shoes of the time as well as the methods of merchandising. Just as important they point up major changes taking place in shoe manufacturing.
In 1904, a cartoonist named Richard Outcault went to the St. Louis World’s Fair where he hoped to sell the rights to a pair of comic page characters he had created known as Buster Brown and his dog, Tige. Among buyers was a St. Louis shoe manufacturer named George Warren Brown. For the princely sum of $200 he bought the rights to feature the pair in his marketing and never looked back. In ensuing years Buster and Tige became closely identified with Brown’s shoes, as on the pocket mirror shown here. By 1958, largely through creative advertising, the Buster Brown line had become the largest brand of footwear for children.
A similarly conservative figure was August Schreiner of Rochester, New York, who advertised the “The Snow Shoe” on a pocket mirror. A shoe and boot trade publication in 1916 said of him: “Mr. Schreiner is one of a very few of our old shoemen who continue to make custom shoes. This, he says, obliges his older customers and he does quite a brisk business in this line.” In less than three years, however, Schreiner was advertising in the local newspaper the equivalent of a bankruptcy sale, saying” “A force of circumstances, which none could foresee, prompts this action.”
Conditions in shoe factories were such to spur the development of a strong and militant labor union for shoemakers by 1889, evolving to become the Boot and Shoe Worker Union (BSWU) of the AFL. Regarded as a “radical” union in its early days, the BSWU was formed to establish uniform wages for the same class of work, including equal pay for women, and to abolish child, convict, and contract (low paying home industry) labor. The union was international, including French-speaking Canadian workers.
The “Enna Jettick” shoe brings us back to the wardrobe changes that were affecting the industry. As shirts got shorter and shorter, women were giving more attention to make fashion statements with their shoes and investing more money in them. The company behind this brand was Dunn & McCarthy, a shoe manufacturer of Auburn, New York, in business since 1867. The Enna Jettick line was issued during the flapper era of the 1920s and, true to the zany antics of that era, advertised with its own blimp airship. In Auburn, the company bought a park on the banks of Cayuga Lake, installed a merry-go-round, and in 1930 named it Enna Jettick Park.
The face of each of these pocket mirrors shows us the image that the advertiser chose in order to sell his products. Behind each mirror is a story of an industry in flux virtually from the end of the Civil War until the 1920s as the transition from village cobbler to industrialized manufacturing occurred and changed forever the way shoes are made and merchandised.
Note: For anyone interested in the origins of the celluloid-backed pocket mirror as an advertising giveaway, I have treated that subject in a post of July 4, 2009.










