Earnshaw Knitting Mills.

Dublin Core

Title

Earnshaw Knitting Mills.

Subject

Entrepreneurship.; Brand name products.; Industries -- United States.; Corporation.; Incorporation.; Business.; Commerce.; Business enterprises -- Massachusetts -- Newton.; Factories -- Newton (Mass.).; Commercial buildings -- Newton (Mass.).; Earnshaw Knitting Mills -- Newton (Mass.).; Earnshaw, George Frederick --1871- 1940.;

Description

Earnshaw Knitting Mills cutting room - 148 California Street, Newton, MA. George Frederick Earnshaw was born in West Roxbury, MA, on July 1, 1871 and attended Boston Latin School. In 1905, he married Margaret Wright of Lowell, MA, and had six children. In 1911, Earnshaw moved to Chicago, where he founded Earnshaw Knitting Company. The company developed a layette line, under the label Vanta, based on the principle that it's safer to dress children without pins or buttons. In 1912, he patented "twistless tape." In 1922, Earnshaw moved the Earnshaw Knitting Company from Chicago to Newton, MA. The manufacturing business that began with a handful of workers had grown to more than 1,000 employees. In 1928, he resigned as president of the manufacturing company. He became the publisher of Earnshaw's Magazine, formerly The Infants' Department. In January 1938, he unveiled another business-boosting brainchild: "National Children's Week." George F. Earnshaw died on October 1, 1940, at age 69. In the years since his passing, the knitting company building was razed and Vanta baby goods are no longer on the shelves.

Contributor

Watertown Free Public Library

Rights

Management Restrictions apply. See application form at http://watertownlib.org/research/historic-watertown/photographs

Identifier

figure 4279

Files

Citation

“Earnshaw Knitting Mills. ,” Digital Commonwealth , accessed May 24, 2013, http://digitalcommonwealth.org/items/show/53970.

Comments

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