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Burt and Packard from History of the Old Colony Railroad.

Smithsonian Libraries and Archives

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No Copyright - United States
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Object Details

Book Title

History of the Old Colony Railroad.

Caption

Burt and Packard.

Educational Notes

This ad is Korrect. That is, it’s correctly advertising the “Korrect Shape” shoe, a type of box tow heel for both men and women. Until the mid-1800s, all shoes were made straight. This meant that there was no right or left shoe, and either shoe in a pair could go on either foot. As shoemaking technology advanced, the types of shoes that could be made expanded. There were now right and left shoes made in many more styles, materials, and for different purposes. In addition to being made for practical purposes like protecting a person’s foot from the elements or preventing a person’s feet from becoming injured by walking barefoot on the ground, shoes began to be made for comfort. The Korrect Shape shoe was even advertised as a shoe that promoted good foot health by preventing people from getting corns, or painful calluses of thick skin that a person can get from wearing shoes that don’t fit right or from wearing shoes for a long period of time. If this ad was indeed correct, the wearers of the Korrect Shape shoe were probably glad that they had made the purchase!

Date

1893

Publication Date

1893

Image ID

SIL-39088008759466_historyofoldcolo00bost_0219

Catalog ID

544123

Rights

No Copyright - United States

Type

Prints

Publication Place

Boston (Mass.)

Publisher

Hager & Handy

See more items in

See Wonder

Data Source

Smithsonian Libraries

Topic

Advertising
Advertisement
Korrect Shape shoe
Shoes
Fashion
Footwear
Health
Style
Foot
Shoemaking
History

Metadata Usage

CC0

Record ID

silgoi_104032
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