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George W. Simmons' Popular Tailoring Establishment
George W. Simmons' Popular Tailoring Establishment "Oak Hall" Boston
1844 Lithograph on paper 16 x 12 1/4 in. (40.6 x 31.1 cm) Sheet: 19 1/2 x 13 9/16in. (49.5 x 34.5 cm.) Inscribed across bottom: Printed under image from left to right: F. H. Lane, del., Lane & Scott's Lithography, 16 Tremont Temple, Boston
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Historical Materials
Below is historical information related to the Lane work above. To see complete information on a subject on the Historical Materials page, click on the subject name (in bold and underlined).
Essay to come.
Oak Hall was a men's clothing store located in Boston located at 32 and 34 Ann (later North) Street. It was started by George W. Simmons and known for providing ready-made clothes. The elaborate advertising campaigns by Simmons emphasized its distinctive and eponymous oak facade.
Courtesy American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Mass. (CL.F9116.011.1854 CL.F9116.011.1854)
Also filed under: American ensign / flag »
Courtesy American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Mass. (CL.F9116.011.1854)
Also filed under: American ensign / flag »
See p. 33.
Also filed under: Clothing and Gear »
Lane & Scott's Lithography was a Boston-based firm formed by Fitz Henry Lane and John W. A. Scott. The partnership spanned 1844–48, after both artists had apprenticed for prominent Boston lithographer, William Pendleton. The firm was located at 16 Tremont Temple, Boston and created sheet music covers, book illustrations, advertisements, prints, and town views. Lane left the firm around 1847 or 1848 and Scott printed some works under his own name.
This information has been summarized from Boston Lithography 1825–1880 by Sally Pierce and Catharina Slautterback.
9 x 14 in.
Cape Ann Museum Library & Archive
Showing Lane's neighborhood while working in Boston. Lane had studios at the intersection of Washington and State Streets, Summer, Tremont and School Streets.
Also filed under: Boston City Views » // Maps » // Professional » // Residences » // Tremont Temple »
Boston: : Printed for the author, by C.C.P. Moody, Old Dickinson Office–52 Washington Street., 1851
Courtesy of the American Antiquarian Society, Worcester.
Call Number LML Plym Russ P851
American Antiquarian Society copy of book inscribed: Belonging to J.G. Orton. Bought in Pilgrim Hall Plymouth, Mass. Oct. 10th 1851
Map of Plymouth Village in 1846 signed: Lane & Scott's Lith., Boston
Boston
Eastburn's Press
Link to Google Books.
Also filed under: "Jamestown" (U.S. Sloop of War) » // Forbes, Robert Bennet » // Professional »
Commentary
One of Lane & Scott’s earliest commissions was this advertisement for “Oak Hall,” a Boston store that sold ready-made clothing. It appeared in a pamphlet, Oak Hall: or The Glory of Boston: A Poem in Four Parts, printed by Mead & Beal in 1844. According to the preface, the “poem gives a descriptive account of the external and internal wonders of the celebrated fashionable clothing emporium.” Publishing a poem in a trade catalogue was an innovative approach to advertising at the time.
George W. Simmons's store in Boston was popularly known as "Oak Hall" for the ornate woodwork on its front door. It sold all kinds of ready-made clothing for men, including that needed by sailors, and, later, sets of clothing for those headed for the California gold fields. It was renowned also for its ambitious and creative advertising campaigns.
This elaborate trompe l'oeil picture by Lane was the folded frontispiece of a small advertising booklet for the store. In the mid-1840s, Lane was living in Boston and working as a lithographer—a partner in his own firm with John Scott. The prints the firm is known to have produced include architectural and town scenes, ship portraits, and landscapes.
This print is unlike any of those, perhaps due to George Simmons's creative ideas. The print creates the illusion that the viewer is standing on the sidewalk looking through the front door into a long salesroom that extends far into space. The text below the image is angled in an unconventional way (a type-setting challenge) and uses humor in addition to plaudits to poke fun at commercial rivals as it also promoted Oak Hall's many advantages.
–Melissa Geisler Trafton
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