Posted 9 years ago
Efesgirl
(1017 items)
This was the first thing I grabbed when I entered the thrift shop today. The condition of the cloth lining is immaculate. I came up with Earl Gresh possibly being the designer and patent owner. This particular purse only has the PATENTED label. His name doesn't appear anywhere. The material used to line the purse is exactly the same as what is used in Earl Gresh purses. These purses date to the 1930s/1940s.
Perhaps this is a copy. Perhaps it's one of the very first ones, before he added his name to it. (yeah, sure, lol!) Either way, I love it.
Information below from Florida's Lost Tourist Attractions, http://www.lostparks.com/gresh.html
"Earl Gresh was a man of many careers: a bandleader, WSUN radio's first announcer, a boat builder, a fisherman, an editor. But, in the Great Depression of the 1930's, it was his talent for woodworking that pulled him through. In 1931, working out of a small shop behind his house at 232 12th Avenue Northeast in Saint Petersburg, Earl began making a living fashioning wooden buttons, lures, purses, and tackleboxes and selling them to locals and tourists alike. His products caught on, enabling him to move to a larger gift shop at 2221 Fourth Street North in 1937. It was here that, in 1940, he built his Wood Parade, a museum of wood featuring samples of woods from around the world. A large cypress tree stump formed the centerpiece of his museum, but his crowning work was the sixteen half-size marquetry murals that depicted the life of Christ. (These were later moved to Memorial Park Mausoleum at 49th Street and 54th Avenue North).
With the Sunshine Skyway diverting cars to 34th Street and reduced tourist traffic, the Wood Parade closed in 1959. In his later years Earl devoted himself to fishing, founding the St. Petersburg Rod and Gun Club. He died in 1977 at the age of 81."
Thanks for looking, CW friends!
Additional info:
https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=950&dat=19430220&id=i7xSAAAAIBAJ&sjid=f30DAAAAIBAJ&pg=2783,6067526&hl=en
I think you know what you're looking for in a thrift shop, before you even see it.
Spiritbear - I know what I would like to find in these thrift shops. Sometimes I'm lucky, like yesterday. I wonder what today will bring to me. :-)
I've never seen a wooden purse Bonnie... Very Cool!