Hi Everyone, I am Mel Wolf's son Joey (Howard Byer's first cousin).... So I guess I'm about the closest to Wolf Outerwear you can hear from. It was my dad (Mel) who worked alongside my grandfather (Simon) and Harry, and the three of them got into it in the small office about all the business details. I have vivid recollections dating back to 1954 and 1955. I am 70 years old now, and as a small child, I can recall playing in the empty "factory" (I didn't know what a factory was then!) on Saturday mornings. I can still feel the steel steps on a steep staircase that led up to the floor where everything took place, and I can visualize the rows of sewing machines. There were piles of leather scraps - or perhaps they were yet-to-be stitched pieces of leather, and long racks of garments in another large room. My younger brothers and I were nearly always arrayed in leather jackets with a rabbit's foot attached to the zipper. (I am a vegetarian today, and I am pretty sure I didn't realize that the rabbit's foot was for real). My dad (Melvin) was not a graduate of Harvard Business School. In fact, he went to Harvard and majored in sociology - wrote his undergrad thesis on the sociology of big band music. He was actually a fine saxophone player, combined being a jazz musician into his eighties with being a businessman. At business (Wolf Outerwear and later on in the bottle business), he was all business. An efficiency guy, an organizer. I wish I could report more to you on the stylistic side of Wolf Outerwear, but I have little knowledge of that. Simon (my grandfather) did work early on (from around 1915 on) in various clothing factories in Roxbury, so that he was well equipped and (in my grandmother's telling) quite determined to stake out his own place. He was the sweetest guy, a Red Sox fan, fairly dapper, and wore a diamond pinky-ring. While he was quiet and smiling at home and deferred to his center-stage wife, I did witness him being quite animated and even strident at Wolf Outerwear. As for Harry Wolfe (with an "e" - the family alternated with the spelling), Simon's nephew by a much older brother, he was a fairly grumpy guy who was usually out on the road - a salesman. Back to the business side - I coincidentally know the son of the man they sold the business to, who only had it briefly, before he read the tea leaves and stitchery moved to Asia. I also remember a few lovely people who worked on the factory floor - and Sam the Cutter, I can still picture him today! It was quiet and labyrinthine on Saturday mornings, but thrumming with action - if, for some reason, my mother was forced to take us by car to pick up my dad during the week. Lastly, I remember playing with the clock, punching out (as if I had put in a full day's work). It warms my heart to read your conversation about these gorgeous leather jackets and to see that Wolf Outerwear Guidemaster label......in 2021! Happy Holidays!
This is Simon Wolf my grandfather. He and his nephew Harry (junior partner) opened in the 1940's and operated Wolf Outerwear in Boston Massachusetts until my grandfather retired in '61 or '62. Harry bought and continued to run the business until it was sold to Bert Paley. Most of the info in this feed seems correct. The story I was told was that my grandfather had worked for other companies prior to opening his own factory and designed many of their coats himself. I remember hearing that over time he quietly took some of his designs as well as a few customers prior to leaving which they weren't too happy about. I'm not exactly sure when Wolf Outerwear opened, I'll try to find out, but I know they made bomber jackets for the second world war.
My mother worked for a short time in the office doing payroll. Her older brother Melvin worked there as well but after graduating from Harvard Business school decide to go a different way.
As a young child I remember getting on the elevator to go up to the cutting floor to be measured as my cousins and I all had small leather jackets of every color.
View attachment 220228 Finally, the leather jackets prized by collectors today are still considered one of the best leather jackets ever manufactured and I believe a white motorcycle jacket from Wolf Outerwear sold at auction in Japan and holds the record for the highest price ever paid.
This is Simon Wolf my grandfather. He and his nephew Harry (junior partner) opened in the 1940's and operated Wolf Outerwear in Boston Massachusetts until my grandfather retired in '61 or '62. Harry bought and continued to run the business until it was sold to Bert Paley. Most of the info in this feed seems correct. The story I was told was that my grandfather had worked for other companies prior to opening his own factory and designed many of their coats himself. I remember hearing that over time he quietly took some of his designs as well as a few customers prior to leaving which they weren't too happy about. I'm not exactly sure when Wolf Outerwear opened, I'll try to find out, but I know they made bomber jackets for the second world war.
My mother worked for a short time in the office doing payroll. Her older brother Melvin worked there as well but after graduating from Harvard Business school decide to go a different way.
As a young child I remember getting on the elevator to go up to the cutting floor to be measured as my cousins and I all had small leather jackets of every color.
View attachment 220228 Finally, the leather jackets prized by collectors today are still considered one of the best leather jackets ever manufactured and I believe a white motorcycle jacket from Wolf Outerwear sold at auction in Japan and holds the record for the highest price ever paid.