What Happened To The Shoe Repair Shop? Why We Stopped Fixing Things
What Happened To The Shoe Repair Shop? The Man Who Could Make Anything Last Subscribe: @BeforeItVanished0 At their peak in the 1930s, there were 120,000 shoe repair shops across the United States. Today, fewer than 3,500 remain. That is a 97 percent decline in less than a century. The cobbler, once found on nearly every main street in America, has all but vanished. For most of the twentieth century, getting your shoes repaired was as routine as getting a haircut. When the sole wore thin or the heel ground down, you walked them to the little shop with the bell above the door and handed them to a man who could make them last another five years. He marked the damage with chalk, wrote you a ticket, and told you Tuesday. The shop smelled of leather and glue and polish. A Singer sewing machine hummed in the back. He stood all day hammering new soles onto iron shoe jacks, and he knew every customer by name. Many of these men were immigrants. Italian and Greek families who brought the trade across the ocean and built businesses that lasted generations. In Virginia Beach, a Greek cobbler worked the same shop for over fifty years. In Michigan, a man was still repairing shoes four days a week at ninety-three, in the same store his grandfather opened in 1923. In Portland, Maine, a third-generation family keeps their hundred-year-old shop busier than ever. What killed the shoe repair shop was simple economics. Shoes became cheap enough to throw away. Manufacturing moved overseas. Synthetic materials replaced leather. Sneakers replaced dress shoes. When a new pair costs less than a resole, repair stops making sense. Americans now discard over 300 million pairs of shoes every year. Ninety-five percent end up in landfills where synthetic materials take decades or even centuries to decompose. Half of all remaining cobblers are over fifty. A quarter are over seventy-five. Most have no exit plan. They work until they cannot anymore. The trade that once employed over a hundred thousand is fading with the generation that built it.

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