Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Nate's Men's Clothiers, St. Albans, Burlington, Montpelier, and St. Johnsbury, Vermont

This week we continue to honor and reflect on the life of Ben Harris (1913-2014), who died at his home in St. Johnsbury on Sunday December 28. Some parts of his life, as revealed in the obituary that he created in rough draft a decade ago, have surprised many in the community -- like his skill as a sharpshooter during World War II. Others are familiar, like his abiding good humor and his love of a good joke.

Ben and his brother Nathan Harris co-founded in 1933 Nate's, Inc., which would become Vermont's largest men's clothier. Photos of the stores in their four locations have not yet been found for this column, but Charlie Dolgin, whose roots are in St. Johnsbury, provided photos of the fedora that he said he "discovered among the piles in the store basement during the 1971 Nate's renovation." 



And here is a blue wool shirt made for Nate's, offered for sale online recently with its custom tag. 


Finally, after Ben and his wife Rosalie were recognized in 2009 for their community service contributions, the Vermont State Legislature passed this resolution found in the 2010 records:

And from a March 10, 2005, Times Argus article when the Harrises won an award:
Outgoing chamber president David Redmond gave the annual Lifetime Achievement award to a retired businessman who is very active in the community. McCann introduced 92-year-old Ben Harris as the man who, with his brother, founded Nate's men's clothing store in Montpelier in 1938 during the Great Depression. The brothers went on to open another store in Burlington and one in St. Johnsbury by the same name in the 1940s and 1950s. Harris said he had always wanted to live in Burlington, but he settled in St. Johnsbury to run the store and grew attached to the area where he and his wife, Rosalie, raised their three children.

"Rose and I have had a wonderful life here," Harris said. "My dream was always to live in Burlington … (but) we had such a wonderful life here in St. Johnsbury we decided to stay and never regretted it.
(Note that the article says 1938, but the obituary says 1933.)

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