Wolcott & Gregg Sewing Machine Store
Located on E. Wisconsin near what is now the Iron Block building, the store offered an item that was greatly desired.
The Wheeler & Wilson sewing machine emporium, featured in our two previous photographs for Yesterday’s Milwaukee, hardly had a monopoly in the business. In fact there was a competitor just across the street.
This is a photo of the storefront of Wolcott & Gregg, located on E. Wisconsin Ave., just a bit east of today’s Iron Block Building. Their business was called the Domestic Sewing Machine Company. The photographer again was Edwin D. Bangs, who shot the photo of the Great Storm of 1871 and whose history we discussed here. This photo most likely also dates from the early 1870s.
It would not have been unexpected for a city to have two sewing machine stores located so close to each other, for this was a very popular item. From the 1840 to the end of the 19th century, the sewing machine went from a circus attraction to a necessity for every household. It has been estimated by that by the year 1900 over 20 million sewing machines a year were being produced from factories all over the world. A quickly growing city like Milwaukee was a great place to sell the machines.
Iron Block Building Today (next door)
Bonus Image
Jeff Beutner is a collector of photographs, postcards and stereoviews of old Milwaukee. This column features these images, with historical commentary by Beutner.
Yesterday's Milwaukee
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When Boston Store Was Big
Apr 18th, 2018 by Jeff Beutner -
Sherman Park Has Been a Melting Pot
Aug 25th, 2017 by Jill Florence Lackey, PhD -
The Rise and Fall of Bronzeville
Aug 5th, 2017 by Jill Florence Lackey, PhD