United States Leather Company
Encyclopedia
The United States Leather Company (1893-1952), was one of the largest corporations in the United States circa 1900, and one of the original companies in the Dow Jones Industrial Average
Dow Jones Industrial Average
The Dow Jones Industrial Average , also called the Industrial Average, the Dow Jones, the Dow 30, or simply the Dow, is a stock market index, and one of several indices created by Wall Street Journal editor and Dow Jones & Company co-founder Charles Dow...

. It was often referred to by contemporary sources as the "Leather combine" or "Leather trust.".

History

It was originally capitalized at $130 million, approximately equivalent to $3.1 billion in 2009 dollars. The company was concerned, specifically, with "hemlock sole leather," which was made via a process that required extracts from large quantities of hemlock bark. It required two-and-a-half cords of wood to provide tannin for 100 hides. According to the Boston Globe the combine obtained "a proprietorship of 75% of the bark property." In assessing the importance of the combine, the Globe noted that "all red leather is hemlock leather, and oak tan is used only on union leather, which cuts a very inconsiderable figure beside the hemlock-tanned product." Thus, the company "will have a pretty substantial hold on the leather industry of this country."

The company was headquartered in New York, with strong ties to Boston (then an important leather center). The first president was Thomas E. Proctor of Boston, and initial financing was by New York and Boston firms. Edward R. Ladew
Edward R. Ladew
Edward R. Ladew was the cofounder of Fayerweather & Ladew with Daniel Burton Fayerweather, a leather manufacturer. In 1893 he became vice president of the United States Leather Company...

was the first vice president.

The formation of the company was seen as a reaction to problems in the tanning industry, and as a competitive move against the Chicago meat-packing interests.

In 1905 efforts began to reorganize the United States Leather Company as a subsidiary of the Central Leather Company. The merger was held up by several New Jersey court injunctions. On September 24, 1909, the shareholders of the companies voted in favor of the merger, meeting the court's objections and completing the merger.

In 1927 another reorganization merged the Central Leather Company into its subsidiary, and the reorganized company again took the name "United States Leather Company."

In 1952, the company was liquidated, the only company of the original twelve in the Dow Jones Industrial Average to do so (as of 2007). Its headquarters building, then at 27-29 Spruce Street in New York, was sold. The first distribution to shareholders, $10/share, was made on January 31, 1952. The company continued to hold assets of the Keta Gas and Oil Company.
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