Canadian Cowboy
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 234
- Location
- Detroit,MI-Windsor,ON
Some of the Loungers were asking about the Relationship between Biltmore hat co. and the Stetson Co.,It is in 4 Parts.
Part One,
BILTMORE HATS: A BRIEF HISTORY
By Dr. Andrew M. Thomson
In the 2006 movie The Good Shepherd, one of the characters removes his fashionable hat. The hat’s interior displays the crest of Guelph’s Biltmore Hat Company. In an age of product placement, the company had not arranged this golden advertising opportunity. It simply made sense that in the filmmakers’ desire to reflect the elegance of post-war espionage, the Biltmore hat symbolized everything they could desire. The hats were the height of fashion, but their production was a business, and that business was one Guelph’s most important. The Biltmore Hat Company has experienced periods of great success and harsh failure over the course of almost 90 years of operation in Guelph, but it remains a beacon of style even as it struggles with new business realities.
The Biltmore story began, not in Guelph, but in Niagara Falls. John Fried founded the company in 1917 as the Fried Hat Co. The company did not last long in Niagara Falls and a move to Toronto was similarly short-lived. In 1919, the Fried Hat Company moved to Guelph. In April 1920, Fried sold the business to a group of three Guelph men led by Frank Ramsay. Ramsay and his partners, Arthur W. Mean and Edward L. Macdonald, agreed to pay Fried $45,000, over the course of six years. The new partners changed the name of the company to Biltmore Hats in homage to the luxurious hotel of that name in New York City where Ramsay had stayed on a buying trip. To the new owners, the name suggested the elegance they wanted associated with their product.
As the business began to grow Ramsay bought out his partners and brought in more expert executives. William Franke was hired as Vice-President and Treasurer and William J. Tiller was made General Manager. By the time Fried had been paid, the company had expanded to include a straw hat division on Yorkshire and Suffolk. The original work force of 30 had expanded to over 165 and the value of the company was place at over $600,000.
CC
Part One,
BILTMORE HATS: A BRIEF HISTORY
By Dr. Andrew M. Thomson
In the 2006 movie The Good Shepherd, one of the characters removes his fashionable hat. The hat’s interior displays the crest of Guelph’s Biltmore Hat Company. In an age of product placement, the company had not arranged this golden advertising opportunity. It simply made sense that in the filmmakers’ desire to reflect the elegance of post-war espionage, the Biltmore hat symbolized everything they could desire. The hats were the height of fashion, but their production was a business, and that business was one Guelph’s most important. The Biltmore Hat Company has experienced periods of great success and harsh failure over the course of almost 90 years of operation in Guelph, but it remains a beacon of style even as it struggles with new business realities.
The Biltmore story began, not in Guelph, but in Niagara Falls. John Fried founded the company in 1917 as the Fried Hat Co. The company did not last long in Niagara Falls and a move to Toronto was similarly short-lived. In 1919, the Fried Hat Company moved to Guelph. In April 1920, Fried sold the business to a group of three Guelph men led by Frank Ramsay. Ramsay and his partners, Arthur W. Mean and Edward L. Macdonald, agreed to pay Fried $45,000, over the course of six years. The new partners changed the name of the company to Biltmore Hats in homage to the luxurious hotel of that name in New York City where Ramsay had stayed on a buying trip. To the new owners, the name suggested the elegance they wanted associated with their product.
As the business began to grow Ramsay bought out his partners and brought in more expert executives. William Franke was hired as Vice-President and Treasurer and William J. Tiller was made General Manager. By the time Fried had been paid, the company had expanded to include a straw hat division on Yorkshire and Suffolk. The original work force of 30 had expanded to over 165 and the value of the company was place at over $600,000.
CC