We said the boat shoe got ruined. Then 14 men wrote in to prove it.
When Jeffrey's account ran — 30 years fitting boat shoes, watching every good American brand get bought and gutted — we figured it would land with a few nods. Instead the men who lived it showed up in the comments, one after another, with names, years, and dollar figures. Not vague grumbling. Specifics. Receipts.
Here is the evidence they filed, sorted by what it proves.
"It lasted for decades, then suddenly it didn't"
"The sole turned slick — and somebody got hurt"
"They charged more for less, and we noticed"
men, same story, different brands — Bass, Sperry, Cole Haan, Bean, Sebago, Timberland, Hubbard. The decline wasn't one company having a bad decade. It was the whole rack.
One verdict the cohort keeps filing on the other side
A guy named Tom Reilly rebuilt the 1935 shape these men have been mourning, at the price it used to cost. James McNabb, after his pair landed, wrote four words that say it all: "Reminds me of my first pair." Four colors — blue, brown, black, white. One pair $45, two for $80, three for $110.
Honest, since the whole point is honesty: a leather-finish upper, not full hide. Waxed cotton laces, not rawhide. A siped sole that grips a wet deck and won't rot or crack. Built overseas, like every $45-to-$110 boat shoe today. Not the $300 hand-sewn Quoddy or Rancourt pair — Tom will tell you that himself.
See The Newport →