saddle shoes: an American high school account, the 1970s
Figure 1.--. |
I have enjoyed reading the information you have been gathering on your webpages, particularly the saddle shoes.
I did have back and white blucher style saddles in pre-school and
kindergarten. I was four or five years old. I believe that I wore them to school, not just for dress-up.
I did not wear saddle shoes in grade school, until the last year. Nor do I remember other boys wearing saddles during most of grade school. I do not know why I and the other boys stopped wearing them in grae school. So I'm guessing they just weren't in style. Girls on the other hand commonly wore them, which was perhaps why us boys i not. While I did not have any saddle shoes through most of my grade school years, I started wearing them again in 6th grade.
When I started wearing saddle shoes again in the 6th grade, I would take them off when I came home from school. I woul wear sneakers for the rest of the day.
I mostly wore long pants in my grade shoe years. Short pants were not common at all. We certainly never wore them to school.
HBC note: American schools are primarily: elemtary school (grades 1-6), junior high/middle school (grades 7-8), and high school (grades 9-12). But this can vary around the country. Some school systems include the 6th grade in with the middle school.
By the time I was in middle school, some boys were wearing the
round bump-toed saddles, usually in blue and cream or brown and brown suede. I was very happy to get a pair of brown on brown suede saddles, and later a pair of blue on cream in middle school. I picked them out, but Mom always liked them. She tried to find me some
black and white saddles when I said I wanted some in high school.
I wore them as school shoes because Mom didn't like me wearing
sneakers to school. I wore the saddle shoes with brown, blue or black socks with jeans or khakis.
The Spalding saddles were generally recognized as the best. They were
better made and held up longer than most of the other brands. If you read
the material that came with the shoes, Spalding claims to have made the
first saddle shoes in 1906. By the time I discovered them, the Spalding
saddle had evolved into a rounder toe than the classic pointed toe Spalding
of the 40's and 50's. Seventeen magazine usually worked Spalding saddle
shoes into their back-to-school fashion layouts. The models were often
shown in men's oversized shirts or other masculine styles. They seemed to
regard saddle shoes in the same way. Spalding also ran a great magazine
advertisement that showed their saddles with the caption "Endangered
Species" (I think in the August or September 1980 issue of Seventeen). In
the early 80's, Spalding quit making saddle shoes, however, the B.A. Corbin
company continued to produce the Spalding saddle shoe for several more
years. These days you have to go with the Willits brand to get a
high-quality all-leather saddle shoe.
When I was in high school, no guys were wearing black and white saddles. I
had blue and cream colored and brown smooth and tan suede saddle shoes. I
never found any black and white saddles for men until I was in college in
the 80's. At this time there was a retro-fashion thing going on and saddle
shoes came back briefly. Bass shoe produced black and white saddles for men
and women, along with a multitude of other color combinations, all with the
thicker red crepe sole.
It used to be that you could find women's saddles in most shoe stores, at
least at back-to-school time, but it has been a while since I have seen them in anything but children's sizes. I remember one Kinney's store that always displayed their classic black and white saddle shoes on both the women's and men's side of the store, but that was the only place I ever saw that. You can still find black and white saddles for men, but they are generally from the more expensive brands or they have golf spikes.
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