Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-xbtfd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T06:27:38.017Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Production and Consumption of Lawn-Tennis Shoes in Late-Victorian Britain

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 June 2016

Abstract

The lawn-tennis shoe was a popular, widely available commodity in late-Victorian Britain. Associated with new forms of sporting practice and consumption, this type of footwear was mass-produced in modern factories, promoted in the popular leisure press, and sold to both men and women in a variety of retail environments. This article analyzes processes of product innovation, production, and sale, and it situates the shoes within a wider context of sport, commerce, fashion, and class and gender relations. Like other late-Victorian sporting and recreational practices, lawn tennis combined material objects, physical activity, and the stylized display of gender and class ideals. Footwear was valued for symbolic and physically practical reasons. Ideas of intended use determined its design and material form. Sportswear created and communicated new masculine ideals. As lawn-tennis shoes moved from the court into everyday usage, the meanings attached to them accommodated a broader range of practices and contexts.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The North American Conference on British Studies 2016 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 “Lawn-Tennis Appliances, Etc.,” Pastime, 7 May 1890, 297; 1 May 1889, 276; 7 May 1890, 298; 2 May 1888, 264.

2 Mary Douglas and Baron Isherwood, The World of Goods: Towards an Anthropology of Consumption (London, 1979), 41. See also Arjun Appadurai, ed., The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective (Cambridge, 1986); Daniel Miller, Stuff (Cambridge, 2010).

3 The Arts and Humanities Research Council-Economic and Social Research Council's Cultures of Consumption research program produced an extensive bibliography of scholarship from the humanities and social sciences, currently at http://www.consume.bbk.ac.uk/publications.html#bibliography.

4 An early example was Sidney Mintz, Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History (New York, 1985). More recently, see, for example, Bernhard Rieger, The People's Car: A Global History of the Volkswagen Beetle (Cambridge, MA, 2013); Giorgio Riello, Cotton: The Fabric That Made the Modern World (Cambridge, 2013).

5 On consumption as a driving force of history, see Neil McKendrick, John Brewer, and J. H. Plumb, The Birth of a Consumer Society: The Commercialization of Eighteenth-Century England (Bloomington, 1982); John Brewer and Roy Porter, eds., Consumption and the World of Goods (London, 1993). On consumption and identities, see Breen, T. H., “Baubles of Britain: The American and Consumer Revolutions of the Eighteenth Century,” Past and Present 119, no. 1 (May 1988): 73104CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Frank Mort, Cultures of Consumption: Masculinities and Social Space in Late-Twentieth Century Britain (London, 1996); Sean Nixon, Hard Looks: Masculinities, Spectatorship and Contemporary Consumption (London, 1996). For general approaches, see John Brewer and Frank Trentmann, eds., Consuming Cultures, Global Perspectives: Historical Trajectories, Transnational Exchanges (Oxford, 2006).

6 Pierre Bourdieu, Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste, trans. Richard Nice (Cambridge, MA, 1984).

7 Wiebe E. Bijker, Of Bicycles, Bakelites, and Bulbs: Toward a Theory of Sociotechnical Change (Cambridge, MA, 1995); Harvey Molotch, Where Stuff Comes From: How Toasters, Toilets, Cars, Computers and Many Other Things Come to Be as They Are (New York, 2003).

8 Dick Hebdige, “Object as Image: The Italian Scooter Cycle,” in idem, Hiding in the Light: On Images and Things (London, 1988), 77−115, at 81.

9 Paul du Gay et al., Doing Cultural Studies: The Story of the Sony Walkman (Milton Keynes, 1997).

10 Trentmann, Frank, “Materiality in the Future of History: Things, Practices, and Politics,” Journal of British Studies 48, no. 2 (April 2009): 283307, at 306CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

11 Roland Barthes, “The New Citroën,” in Mythologies, trans. Anne Laver (London, 1972), 88−90, at 88.

12 Trentmann, “Materiality in the Future of History,” 294−99, quotation at 297. On consumption and social practices, see Jukka Gronow and Alan Warde, eds., Ordinary Consumption (London, 2001); Elizabeth Shove, Comfort, Cleanliness and Convenience: The Social Organisation of Normality (Oxford, 2003); Warde, Alan, “Consumption and Theories of Practice,” Journal of Consumer Culture 5, no. 2 (July 2005): 131−53CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Elizabeth Shove et al., The Design of Everyday Life (Oxford, 2007); Elizabeth Shove, Frank Trentmann, and Richard Wilk, eds., Time, Consumption and Everyday Life: Practice, Materiality and Culture (Oxford, 2009); Elizabeth Shove, Mika Pantzar, and Matt Watson, The Dynamics of Social Practice: Everyday Life and How It Changes (London, 2012).

13 Holt, Richard, “Historians and the History of Sport,” Sport in History 34, no. 1 (March 2014): 133CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 26.

14 Elizabeth Wilson, Adorned in Dreams: Fashion and Modernity (London, 1985), 9. For different perspectives on the notion of clothing as communication, see Malcolm Barnard, ed., Fashion Theory: A Reader (London, 2007), especially the essays by Barnard, Umberto Eco, Fred Davis, and Colin Campbell.

15 Alison Gill, “Limousines for the Feet: The Rhetoric of Sneakers,” in Shoes: A History from Sandals to Sneakers, ed. Giorgio Riello and Peter McNeil (Oxford, 2006), 372−85, at 373. See also Turner, Thomas, “German Sports Shoes, Basketball, and Hip Hop: The Consumption and Cultural Significance of the Adidas ‘Superstar,’ 1966−1988,” Sport in History 35, no. 1 (March 2015): 127−55CrossRefGoogle Scholar. On shoes more generally, see Colin McDowell, Shoes: Fashion and Fantasy (London, 1994); Valerie Steele, Shoes: A Lexicon of Style (London, 1998); Anne Brydon, “Sensible Shoes,” in Consuming Fashion: Adorning the Transnational Body, ed. Anne Brydon and Sandra Niessen (Oxford, 1998), 1−22; Lucy Pratt and Linda Wooley, Shoes (London, 1999); Shari Benstock and Suzanne Ferris, eds., Footnotes: On Shoes (New Brunswick, 2001); Riello and McNeil, Shoes; Rebecca Shawcross, Shoes: An Illustrated History (London, 2014); Helen Persson, ed., Shoes: Pleasure and Pain (London, 2015).

16 On the history of tennis, see Julian Marshall, The Annals of Tennis (London, 1878); Tom Todd, The Tennis Players: From Pagan Rites to Strawberries and Cream (Guernsey, 1979); Heiner Gillmeister, Tennis: A Cultural History (London, 1997); Elizabeth Wilson, Love Game: A History of Tennis, From Victorian Pastime to Global Phenomenon (London, 2014); Robert J. Lake, A Social History of Tennis in Britain (Abingdon, 2015); Tadié, Alexis, “The Seductions of Modern Tennis: From Social Practice to Literary Discourse,” Sport in History 35, no. 2 (June 2015): 271−95CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

17 John Lowerson, Sport and the English Middle Classes (Manchester, 1993), 3.

18 Todd, Tennis Players, 60−61; Holt, Sport and the British: A Modern History (Oxford, 1989), 125; Lake, Social History of Tennis, 14; Walter Wingfield, Sphairistikè or Lawn Tennis, 2nd ed. (London, 1874), 31−36, WTM:3883, Kenneth Ritchie Wimbledon Library (hereafter Wimbledon Library); see also five editions of idem, Sphairistikè or Lawn Tennis (London, 1874–76), in WTM:LIB/24, 25, 27, 35, Wimbledon Library.

19 Lake, Social History of Tennis, 13−17.

20 “Lawn Tennis,” Illustrated London News, 24 July 1880, quoted in George W. Hillyard, Forty Years of First Class Lawn Tennis (London, 1924), 3.

21 Lawn Tennis for 1883 (London, 1883), iii.

22 Tadié, “Seductions of Modern Tennis,” 280, 292.

23 Reckwitz, Andreas, “Toward a Theory of Social Practices: A Development in Culturalist Theorizing,” European Journal of Social Theory 5, no. 2 (May 2002): 243−63CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 249.

24 Lake, Social History of Tennis, 12.

25 Eric Hobsbawm, “Mass-Producing Traditions: Europe, 1870−1914,” in The Invention of Tradition, ed. Eric Hobsbawm and Terence Ranger (Cambridge, 1983), 263−307, at 299−300; Park, Jihang, “Sport, Dress Reform and the Emancipation of Women in Victorian England: A Reappraisal,” International Journal of the History of Sport 6, no. 1 (May 1989): 1030, at 17CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Kathleen E. McCrone, Sport and the Physical Emancipation of English Women (London, 1988), 156; Holt, Sport and the British, 125; Wilson, Love Game, 12.

26 On mid-Victorian housing development, see Geoffrey Best, Mid-Victorian Britain, 1851−75 (London, 1971), 5−22.

27 Robert Durie Osborn, Lawn Tennis: Its Players and How to Play with the Laws of the Game (London, 1881), 11−12. It should perhaps be noted that Osborn's idyllic description is one of the most frequently reproduced by historians.

28 Arthur James, Chapters of Autobiography, ed. Mrs. Edgar Dugdale (London, 1930), 223−26.

29 Lake, Social History of Tennis, 17.

30 Thorstein Veblen, The Theory of the Leisure Class: An Economic Study of Institutions (New York, 1899).

31 Quoted in Wingfield, Sphairistikè or Lawn Tennis, 21.

32 Cited in “Wednesday, June 25, 1884,” Pastime, 25 June 1884, 410.

33 “Our Ladies Column,” Bristol Mercury and Daily Post, 12 September 1885, 6.

34 See, for example, Lawn-Tennis, 15 September 1886, 1.

35 McCrone, Sport and the Physical Emancipation of English Women, 162−66; Lake, Robert J., “Gender and Etiquette in British Lawn Tennis 1870--1939: A Case Study of ‘Mixed Doubles,’International Journal of the History of Sport 29, no. 5 (April 2012): 691710, at 696−700CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

36 The standard text is J. A. Mangan, Athleticism in the Victorian and Edwardian Public School: The Emergence and Consolidation of an Educational Ideology (Cambridge, 1981). See also Park, Roberta J., “Sport, Gender and Society in a Transatlantic Victorian Perspective,” British Journal of Sports History 2, no. 1 (May 1985): 528, at 5−6CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

37 McCrone, Sport and the Physical Emancipation of English Women, 157; Derek Birley, Sport and the Making of Britain (Manchester, 1993), 317; Derek Birley, Land of Sport and Glory: Sport and British Society 1887−1910 (Manchester, 1995), 75−76; Lake, Social History of Tennis, 10.

38 Hillyard, Forty Years of First Class Lawn Tennis, 1−3.

39 Park, “Sport, Dress Reform and the Emancipation of Women,” 12−17.

40 McCrone, Sport and the Physical Emancipation of English Women, 14.

41 Hargreaves, Jennifer A., “Playing Like Gentlemen while Behaving Like Ladies: Contradictory Features of the Formative Years of Women's Sport,” Journal of British Sports History 2, no. 1 (May 1985): 4052, at 43CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

42 Jennifer A. Hargreaves, Sporting Females: Critical Issues in the History and Sociology of Women's Sports (London, 1994), 111.

43 McCrone, Sport and the Physical Emancipation of English Women, 163.

44 See Kathleen E. McCrone, “Play Up! Play Up! And Play the Game! Sport at the Late Victorian Girls’ Public Schools,” in From “Fair Sex” to Feminism: Sport and the Socialization of Women in the Industrial and Post-Industrial Eras, ed. J. A. Mangan and Roberta J. Park (London, 1987), 97−129. For an American comparison, see Patricia Campbell Warner, When the Girls Came Out to Play: The Birth of American Sportswear (Amherst, 2006), 141−226.

45 See Peter Levine, A. G. Spalding and the Rise of Baseball: The Promise of American Sport (New York, 1985), 71−96; Lowerson, Sport and the English Middle Classes, 225−60; Stephen Hardy, “‘Adopted by All the Leading Clubs’: Sporting Goods and the Shaping of Leisure, 1800−1900,” in For Fun and Profit: The Transformation of Leisure into Consumption, ed. Richard Butsch (Philadelphia, 1990), 71−104.

46 “Lawn-Tennis Appliances for 1887,” Pastime, 4 May 1887, 288.

47 Peter Mounfield, “Boots and Shoes,” in A History of the County of Northampton, vol. 6, Modern Industry (London, 2007), 71−95; idem, The Footwear Industry of the East Midlands (III): Northamptonshire, 1700−1911,” East Midland Geographer 3, no. 24 (1965): 434−53Google Scholar; idem, The Footwear Industry of the East Midlands (IV): Leicestershire to 1911,” East Midland Geographer 4, no. 25 (1966): 823Google Scholar. See also James A. Schmiechen, Sweated Industries and Sweated Labor: The London Clothing Trades, 1860−1914 (Beckenham, 1984), 29−32.

48 “Hides and Leather,” Times, 4 January 1894, 13.

49 See Williams, Jean, “Given the Boot: Reading the Ambiguities of British and Continental Football Boot Design,” Sport in History 35, no. 1 (March 2015): 81107CrossRefGoogle Scholar, especially 81–94. The impact of existing type form and factory tooling on innovation is highlighted in Molotch, Where Stuff Comes From, 106−8.

50 “Home Markets,” Times, 26 February 1894, 13; “Hides and Leather,” Times, 2 January 1895, 13.

51 On the history of rubber, see Henry Hobhouse, Seeds of Wealth: Four Plants That Made Men Rich (London, 2003), 125−88; John Loadman, Tears of the Tree: The Story of Rubber (Oxford, 2005).

52 Lawn Tennis for 1883, 96−97.

53 Wingfield, Sphairistikè or Lawn Tennis, 37.

54 Lawn Tennis: Its Laws and Practice (London, 1877), 14, in Tracts Published at “The Bazaar” Office, 1147 e16, British Library (hereafter BL).

55 Giorgio Riello, One Foot in the Past: Consumers, Producers and Footwear in the Long Eighteenth Century (Oxford, 2006); John Styles, The Dress of the People: Everyday Fashion in Eighteenth Century England (New Haven, 2007).

56 On nineteenth-century consumer culture, see Rachel Bowlby, Just Looking: Consumer Culture in Dreiser, Gissing and Zola (London, 1985); Elaine S. Abelson, When Ladies Go A-Thieving: Middle-Class Shoplifters in the Victorian Department Store (New York, 1989); Susan Strasser, Satisfaction Guaranteed: The Making of the American Mass Market (New York, 1989); Lynda Nead, Victorian Babylon: People, Streets, and Images in Nineteenth-Century London (New Haven, 2000); Erika Rappaport, Shopping for Pleasure: Women in the Making of London's West End (Princeton, 2000); eadem, Art, Commerce or Empire? The Rebuilding of Regent Street, 1880−1927,” History Workshop Journal 53, no. 1 (Spring 2002): 94117CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed.

57 The classic nineteenth-century portrayal of women shopping is Emile Zola, Au Bonheur Des Dames (Paris, 1883). On late-Victorian male consumption, see Christopher Breward, The Hidden Consumer: Masculinities, Fashion and City Life 1860−1914 (Manchester, 1999); Brent Shannon, The Cut of His Coat: Men, Dress, and Consumer Culture in Britain, 1880−1914 (Athens, OH, 2006); Laura Ugolini, Men and Menswear: Sartorial Consumption in Britain, 1880−1939 (Aldershot, 2007).

58 See Biddle-Perry, Geraldine, “The Rise of ‘The World's Largest Sport and Athletic Outfitter’: A Study of Gamage's of Holborn, 1878−1913,” Sport in History 34, no. 2 (June 2014): 295317CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

59 “Manfield's Tennis Shoes,” advertisement, Pastime, 18 June 1890, 1.

60 Holt, Richard, “The Amateur Body and the Middle-Class Man: Work, Health and Style in Victorian Britain,” Sport in History 26, no. 3 (December 2006): 352−69, at 361CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See also Day, Dave and Oldfield, Samantha-Jayne, “Delineating Professional and Amateur Athletic Bodies in Victorian England,” Sport in History 35, no. 1 (March 2015): 1945CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

61 Herbert W. W. Wilberforce, Lawn Tennis (London, 1891), 19.

62 On the impact of product endorsement in the early sporting goods industry, see Miller, Lori K., Fielding, Lawrence W., and Pitts, Brenda G., “The Rise of the Louisville Slugger in the Mass Market,” Sport Marketing Quarterly 2, no. 3 (September 1993): 916Google Scholar.

63 “Novelties and Improvements in Lawn-tennis Implements,” Pastime, 29 April 1885, 266. For reviews of the Renshaw see Lawn Tennis for 1885, 151; “Lawn-Tennis Appliances for 1886,” Pastime, 21 April 1886, 255; “Lawn-Tennis Appliances for 1887,” Pastime, 4 May 1887, 289; “Lawn-Tennis Appliances, etc.,” Pastime, 2 May 1888, 268; “Round the Manufactories,” Lawn Tennis Magazine, June 1885, 30. The model was heavily advertised; see, for example, “Wm. Hickson and Sons,” Pastime, 4 May 1887, 307.

64 “Slazenger & Sons,” in Robert Durie Osborn, The Lawn-Tennis Player (London, 1888), n.p.

65 “The Pastime Album,” Pastime, 2 June 1886.

66 “Lawn-Tennis Appliances, etc.,” Pastime, 2 May 1888, 268.

67 Holt, “The Amateur Body,” 354−358; Heller, Michael, “Sport, Bureaucracies and London Clerks 1880−1939,” International Journal of the History of Sport 25, no. 5 (April 2008): 579614CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 579−606. See also Biddle-Perry, Geraldine, “Fashioning Suburban Aspiration: Awheel with the Catford Cycling Club, 1886−1900,” London Journal 39, no. 3 (November 2014): 187204CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

68 Images of two nineteenth-century tennis dresses held by Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Museum are in John Barrett, Wimbledon: Serving Through Time (London, 2003), 64.

69 Park, “Sport, Dress Reform and the Emancipation of Women,” 16. See also Warner, When the Girls Came Out to Play, 7−8.

70 “Dress for Lawn-Tennis,” Pastime, 20 July 1887, 53.

71 Jennifer Hargreaves, “Playing like Gentlemen,” 42.

72 “Slazenger and Sons,” Pastime, 21 April 1886, 278.

73 Victorian Shopping: Harrod's Catalogue 1895 (Newton Abbot, 1972), 802; “Harrod's Stores, Court Boot and Shoe Makers,” Hearth and Home, 3 June 1897, 128.

74 “At Mr. J. Bird's, 19 & 21, Martineau Street,” Birmingham Pictorial and Dart, 7 July 1899, 14.

75 “Fashion's Oracle,” Hampshire Telegraph and Sussex Chronicle, 1 September 1888, 9.

76 Elizabeth Semmelhack, “A Delicate Balance: Women, Power and High Heels,” in Riello and McNeil, eds., Shoes, 224−49, at 230. See also Valerie Steele, “Shoes and the Erotic Imagination,” in Riello and McNeil, eds., Shoes, 250−71, at 251−54.

77 “H. Kelsey, Ladies’ and Children's Boot and Shoe Maker,” advertisement, Hearth and Home, 26 July 1894, 376; “Harrod's Stores,” Hearth and Home, 3 June 1897, 127.

78 “The New Patent Tennis Shoe. ‘The El Dorado,’” Pastime, 8 May 1889, 299.

79 “Fashion's Oracle,” Hampshire Telegraph and Sussex Chronicle, 1 September 1888, 9.

80 “Things worth buying,” Ladies’ Monthly Magazine, Le Monde Élégant, or the World of Fashion, 1 June 1889, 100.

81 Park, “Sport, Dress Reform and the Emancipation of Women,” 17.

82 See McCrone, “Play Up! Play Up! And Play the Game!”

83 Lake, Social History of Tennis, 32−33.

84 McCrone, Sport and the Physical Emancipation of English Women, 162.

85 Lottie Dod, s.v., “Ladies’ Lawn Tennis,” in The Encyclopaedia of Sport, vol. 1 (London, 1897), 618.

86 Donald J. Mrozek, Sport and American Mentality 1880−1910 (Knoxville, 1983), 125; Henry Hall, ed., The Tribune Book of Open-Air Sports, prepared by The New York Tribune with the aid of Acknowledged Experts (New York, 1887), 105−6, cited in Warner, When the Girls Came Out to Play, 44.

87 I. E. Horsman, Rules for Lawn Tennis, 1883 (New York, 1883), 1, 30.

88 Peck and Snyder, Sporting Goods: Sports Equipment and Clothing, Novelties, Recreative Science, Firemen's Supplies, Magic Lanterns and Slides, Plays and Joke Books, Tricks and Magic, Badges and Ornaments (1886; repr., Princeton, 1971); Fred L. Israel, ed., 1897 Sears Roebuck Catalogue (New York, 1976).

89 See Park, “Sport, Gender and Society,” 5−28; Warner, When the Girls Came Out to Play, 43−60.

90 Biographical note on Henry E. Randall, unnumbered, Northampton Museum and Art Gallery (hereafter Northampton); The Shoe and Leather (and Allied Trades) News Illustrated Biographic Directory of British Shoe and Leather Traders (London, c. 1916), vii, unnumbered, Northampton.

91 H. E. Randall, Export Catalogue (Northampton, c. 1910), n.p., 1984.193.1., Northampton.

92 H. E. Randall, “H. E. Randall's List of Shops,” advertisement, c. 1890, unnumbered, Northampton; biographical note on Henry E. Randall, unnumbered, Northampton.

93 “H. Randall, Patentee, The ‘Tenacious’ Lawn Tennis Shoe,” Pastime, 21 May 1884, 335; “Lawn-Tennis Appliances, etc.,” Pastime, 7 May 1890, 298.

94 Shove et al., Dynamics of Social Practice, 11.

95 On changing styles of play, see Lake, Social History of Tennis, 25−27.

96 “Correspondence,” Pastime, 30 April 1884, 278.

97 “Correspondence,” Pastime, 7 May 1884, 295.

98 “Correspondence,” Pastime, 14 May 1884, 313.

99 “H. Randall, Patentee, The ‘Tenacious’ Lawn Tennis Shoe,” Pastime, 21 May 1884, 335.

100 See, e.g., “‘Tenacious’ Lawn-Tennis Shoes,” Boots and Shoe Trades Journal, 4 July 1885, 1; “‘Tenacious’ Lawn-Tennis Shoes,” Boots and Shoe Trades Journal, 5 September 1885, 139; “‘The Tenacious’ Lawn-Tennis Shoe,” Boots and Shoe Trades Journal, 17 October 1885, 231. See also Randall's advertisement in Julian Marshall, Lawn Tennis with Laws of the Game and Illustrated Price List for 1885 (Horncastle, 1885), 26.

101 “The Sportsman's Exhibition at Westminster Aquarium,” Pastime, 2 June 1886, 368. H. E. Randall is the only firm mentioned.

102 “A Tip-Top Show,” Shoe and Leather Record, 15 May 1896, 1127.

103 Randall, “H. E. Randall's List of Shops.”

104 H. E. Randall, H. Randall the Noted Anatomical Boot Maker, promotional card, Evan 4189, BL.

105 H. E. Randall, Victory of the Tenacious Lawn Tennis Shoes: A Romance, promotional booklet, Evan 5257, BL.

106 Kotro, Tanja and Pantzar, Mika, “Product Development and Changing Cultural Landscapes—Is Our Future in ‘Snowboarding’?,” Design Issues 18, no. 2 (Spring 2002): 3045, at 42CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

107 “A Pleasing Ceremony,” Graphic, 26 June 1886, 707.

108 Ibid.; “Lawn-Tennis Appliances, etc.,” Pastime, 7 May 1890, 298.

109 “Randall's ‘Tenacious’ Lawn-Tennis Shoes,” Pastime, 21 May 1890, 337; “H. E. Randall,” Pastime, 4 May 1892, 285.

110 H. E. Randall declined rapidly after the death of its founder and in 1953 was taken over by a rival. Few records survive.

111 Shove et al., Dynamics of Social Practice, 44.

112 Pantzar, Mika, “Domestication of Everyday Life Technology: Dynamic Views on the Social Histories of Artifacts,” Design Issues 13, no. 3 (Autumn 1997): 5265CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See also Shove, Elizabeth and Southerton, Dale, “Defrosting the Freezer: From Novelty to Convenience,” Journal of Material Culture 5, no. 3 (November 2000): 301−19CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

113 “Correspondence,” Pastime, 7 May 1884; 14 May 1884, 313.

114 “The Alleged Prize Fight,” Times, 13 May 1882, 6; “The Wide World,” Cycling, 6 August 1892, 36; “Hints for Ladies,” Derby Mercury, 22 August 1894, 6; “Duel Between Experts,” Daily News, 18 March 1897, 7; “Tee Shots,” Golf Illustrated, 15 December 1899, 256; “Amateur walking match at Leamington,” Bell's Life in London and Sporting Chronicle, 1 September 1883, 296; Dixon, J. E., “Cross-Country Running,” Physical Culture 1, no. 6 (1898): 412Google Scholar; Experto Crede, “Sport in Other Lands: Shooting in Bengal, and How to Obtain It,” Country Life Illustrated, 27 May 1899, 650; Dolf Wyllarde, “Sport in Other Lands: Goat Shooting in Madeira,” Country Life Illustrated, 16 December 1899, 774.

115 “BASKET BALL SHOES,” A. G. Spalding advertisement, in L. H. Gulick, How to Play Basket Ball (London, 1907), n.p. On the creation of basketball see Robert W. Peterson, Cages to Jumpshots: Pro Basketball's Early Years (New York, 1990), 15−31, 185−86; Myerscough, Keith, “The Game with No Name: The Invention of Basketball,” International Journal of the History of Sport 12, no. 1 (April 1995): 137−52CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

116 Shove, Elizabeth and Pantzar, Mika, “Consumers, Producers and Practices: Understanding the Invention and Reinvention of Nordic Walking,” Journal of Consumer Culture 5, no. 1 (March 2005): 4364, at 61CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

117 “An Ascent of the ‘Pieter Both’ Mountain, Mauritius,” Graphic, 5 July 1879, 18; “An Ascent of the ‘Pieter Both’ Mountain, Mauritius,” Manchester Times, 12 July 1879, 222.

118 “Golding, Bexfield & Co.,” Pastime, 21 Sept 1883, 271; “Wm. Hickson and Sons’ Tennis Shoes,” Pastime, 1 May 1889, 284.

119 See Pantzar, “Product Development and Changing Cultural Landscapes,” 38−41; Thomas Turner, “Transformative Improvisation: The Creation of the Commercial Skateboard Shoe, 1960−1979,” in Skateboarding: Subcultures, Sites and Shifts, ed. Kara-Jane Lombard (Abingdon, 2016), 182−94.

120 William H. Dooley, A Manual of Shoemaking and Leather and Rubber Products (London, 1913), 239.

121 Christopher Breward, The Hidden Consumer, 198. See also idem, “Fashion and the Man: From Suburb to City Street, The Spaces of Masculine Consumption, 1870−1914,” in The Men's Fashion Reader, ed. Peter McNeil and Vicki Karaminas (Oxford, 2009), 409−28.

122 Brent Shannon, The Cut of His Coat, 186, 189.

123 “Holiday Haunts,” Daily News, 6 December 1884, 3.

124 “Failure of the Strike Negotiations,” Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper, 8 September 1889, 1.

125 Shannon, The Cut of His Coat, 179−82.

126 “London Letter,” Western Mail, 11 August 1893, 4.

127 “London Correspondence,” Freeman's Journal and Daily Commercial Advertiser, 13 August 1895, 5.

128 “From Our London Correspondent,” Leeds Mercury, 13 June 1900, 4.

129 See Tom Vanderbilt, The Sneaker Book: Anatomy of an Industry and an Icon (New York, 1998); Robert Jackson, Sole Provider: 30 Years of Nike Basketball (New York, 2002); Neal Heard, Trainers (London, 2003); Roberto Garcia, Where'd You Get Those? New York City's Sneaker Culture: 1960−1987 (New York, 2003); Unorthodox Styles, Sneakers: The Complete Collectors Guide (London, 2005); Ben Osborne, ed., Slam Kicks: Basketball Sneakers that Changed the Game (New York, 2013).

130 Christopher Breward, “Fashioning Masculinity: Men's Footwear and Modernity,” in Riello and McNeil, eds., Shoes, 206−23, at 207.