oose
Active Member
Hi,
Well at least the building is still there
http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?f=q&sourc ... ,,0,-34.69
stu
Well at least the building is still there
http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?f=q&sourc ... ,,0,-34.69
stu
Roughwear said:Thanks for this address. The more I consider the evidence Harry L Buegeleisen seems the only candidate for HLB Corp. Who else could it be?
deeb7 said:Roughwear said:Thanks for this address. The more I consider the evidence Harry L Buegeleisen seems the only candidate for HLB Corp. Who else could it be?
Well anybody, until we find the missing link.
So far we have the suit ... an HLB Corp jacket, with Buco trousers. Across the Brooklyn bridge we have the goggles factory, Harry Buegeleisen Inc, Strauss & Buegeleisen, HB Rocket goggles, Resistal goggles.
As yet, there's not a connection between the two.
bjoy said:I had been tenatively assuming that the Buegeleisen in the company called Strauss & Buegeleisen was the Harry (of Harry Buegeleisen, Inc) when he was younger.
I was doing research on that angle and discovered that may not be true. In a 1918 New York Times article, it appears that Strauss & Buegeleisen was making more gas masks than goggles, and that the corporate spokesman's name was "Elias Beugeleisen".
The story (images of two newspaper articles) is in a PDF at http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-fr ... 946996D6CF.
Note that the story spells his name as "Beugeleisen" which is why it was hard to find. Is this a misspelling or actually someone perhaps not related to the firm's co-owner? Note that he is quoted as saying that "he and Mr. Strauss were born in America" which implies he was the co-owner.
The article is a public dispute about the quality of the goggles and whether they were of German origin.
bjoy said:Note that the story spells his name as "Beugeleisen" which is why it was hard to find. Is this a misspelling or actually someone perhaps not related to the firm's co-owner? Note that he is quoted as saying that "he and Mr. Strauss were born in America" which implies he was the co-owner.
Roughwear said:David you're such a sceptic! But there is a connection. Harry and Joseph Buegeleisen were brothers. HLB Corp was Harry's firm, whilst Buco or Joseph Buegeleisen Co was his brother's. Simple really. :lol:
Roughwear said:Harry may possibly have been Elias's son or nephew. Often you find these specialist firms were real family affairs-think of Spiewak and Sons and the Bronco/Sheeplined link-with the sons learning the business from their father(s) and later starting their own businesses in the same or a similar field.
Andrew said:... Maybe a local could check the phonebooks for descendants who may have history- it's fairly recent history still...
One connection is that "Harry Buegeleisen, Inc" was making Resistal branded goggles in the 30's. Apparently these were marked H.B.N.Y. on the goggles, and the box had Harry's company name. Yet this brand was being sold by "S&B" at least as early as 1918.
Another probable connection is a fragment of text presented by Google Books that says "The new concern is located at 287 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, NY, and is under the direction of Harry Buegeleisen and his brother, Elias. ..." from a 1933 "aero digest" volume. Maybe the "S&B" owner is Harry's brother, or he had a sibling named after him? (The text fragment does not provide the name of that "new concern" so it is not certain if this is the right Harry.)
It appears that "Harry Buegeleisen, Inc" was located at 22 Bergen Street, Brooklyn from at least 1938 to 1945 based on various refererences:
http://books.google.com/books?cd=9&q=%2 ... arch+Books
He was still based in Brooklyn (not the same street address though) as late as 1955 using the same company name. Of course that overlaps the time period of "H.L.B. Corp" which we recently learned had its plant in Manhattan.
Roughwear said:As far as locations are concerned as this was a family business it is likely that the Brooklyn and Manhattan "factories" were managed by different family members. H.L.B Corp was established in the mid 1930s to make aviation clothing, whilst Harry Buegeleisen Inc, was the older firm, which specialised in manufacturing goggles. I can see no problem with the two names running side by side.