Версия от 19:53, 26 февраля 2024; EducationBot(обсуждение | вклад)(Новая страница: «{{Английская Википедия/Панель перехода}} {{Use mdy dates|date=August 2020}} The '''Detmer Woolen Company''' was founded in 1885 in New York City by Julian Francis Detmer.<ref name=detmer>''Julian F. Detmer, Retired Importer'', ''The New York Times'', November 27, 1958, pg. 29.</ref> The business dealt primarily with textile mills in New England.<ref name=brooklyn/> Detmer (December 4, 1865 – November 26, 195...»)
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The Detmer Woolen Company was founded in 1885 in New York City by Julian Francis Detmer.[1] The business dealt primarily with textile mills in New England.[2]
Detmer (December 4, 1865 – November 26, 1958) was a native of Cleveland, Ohio who came to New York City and started a woolens wholesale and importing firm.
He was president of Detmer & Moore, Detmer & Richter, the Detmer Woolen Company, and Detmer, Bruner
and Mason.
The Detmer Woolen Company maintained offices in the Parker Building, New York City when the structure burned in January 1908. The fire which destroyed the edifice began in the Detmer offices on the fourth floor.[3]
In late April 1909 the business leased Шаблон:Convert of floor space from the Bush Terminal Company on the fourth floor of Loft Building No. 3 at the foot of Thirty-Seventh Street, in South
Brooklyn, New York. Detmer Woolen maintained its Manhattan, New York offices but removed its
entire inventory of stock to its new Brooklyn headquarters.[2]
In July 1915 customs officials won a judgment against the Detmer Woolen Company. The ruling involved a discrepancy in the classification of woven fabrics made of silk and wool. The importers
claimed a duty of 35% which was challenged and reversed to the amount of 45%. The Detmer Woolen Company failed to request a commission to study the construction of cloth in the factory abroad.
The 10% extra duty resulted from the primary value of the fabric being adjudged to be silk rather
than worsted cloth.[4]
Julian Francis Detmer retired from the woolens business in 1935. He lived until the fall of 1958, and died just a few days before what would have been his ninety-third birthday.[1] His legacy includes the establishment of the Detmer Nurseries (arboretums)
near his home in Tarrytown, New York. The gardens were destroyed in 1968 and 1974 as part of a commercial residential development project.[6]