Friday, February 28, 2025

Computer Correspondence 

A typical morning for me is to drag myself out of bed, make that first cup of coffee to get my eyes open, and then fire up my computer, still in my union suit. With a smile on my face, I begin working on the Union Suit Fan and Union Suit Fans in the Limelight  blogs, as well as answering emails and looking over the many comments you add to these postings which I truly look forward to.  

Apparently, other union suit fans enjoy the start of their day by doing the same:

 

 

 
 

 









Keep your photos, comments and emails coming to me. I can't do it without you!! 

....Chris at  cayersnd@gmail.com


Shock & Ahhh in the new Disney movie,


Snow White, premiering on March 21st at Theaters! 

Watch for snapshots of the Dwarfs, having been awakened in the middle of the night in Union Suit Fans in the Limelight, my companion blog!


Sunday, February 23, 2025

The Beginning of Stanfield's 

Union Suits for Generations of Canadians and Many Others, including any number of U.S. Citizens.

So many of you Union Suit Fans viewers swear by Stanfield's Union Suits, that I contacted the famous long underwear manufacturing firm asking if I might use their story to pass along to you. It's found on Stanfield's web-site. An executive assistant was happy to hear from me. She encouraged me to use their published history as the story is a good one! 

I've featured Standfield's underwear in a number of postings including my blog readers, workers in their factory, models, and even the mayor of Truro ice-skating in his red union suit! It's a town who probably enjoy's wearing their underwear more than any other one I know of.  So, here it is straight from Truro, Nova Scotia, Canada. Happy wearing....

Charles E. Stanfield had no idea when he immigrated to Canada in 1855 that he would found the firm that would become recognized as Canada's leading manufacturer of men's underwear. In the beginning, Charles, along with his brother-in-law, Samuel E. Dawson, founded the Tryon Woolen Mills in Tryon, P.E.I. in 1856. Ten years later he sold his interests to Samuel and moved to Nova Scotia. In 1870 he founded the Truro Woolen Mills, which at that time was located on Brunswick Street. It was believed to be the first factory of its kind in Canada. 

Tryon Woolen Mills, Tryon, PEI - 1856
Tryon Woolen Mills, Tryon, Prince Edward Island - 1856

During this period, Charles was constantly looking to expand the operation. He purchased other mills around eastern Canada, including the Carding Mill in St. Croix, NS (1872) which he renamed the Ste. Croix Wool Factory. After a few years, Charles and family sold the Ste. Croix mill to Alxander Dunbar and returned to Truro to focus there. This marked the official renaming to the Stanfield Mill.

As the company grew, the factory was relocated from Brunswick Street to its current location on the south bank of the Salmon River (Logan Street) in 1882. These important events would be crucial to setting the company up for success in the coming decades and century.  

Stanfield’s annual stag picnic. August 17, 1935
Stanfield’s annual stag picnic. August 17, 1935

Building A Brand

Charles was a creative genius. He maintained a workshop in a barn behind his house where he spent the majority of his time creating new equipment and products.He developed and manufactured the first cardigan jackets and stockinettes in Canada. He introduced Canadians to heavy rib underwear and the famous “Drop Seat.” He also manufactured sweater cloth and knitting yarn.

In 1896, Charles sold his business to his two sons, John and Frank Stanfield who had their own vision for the company’s future. They believed the way to build a reputation was to build a stable product line in one specific field, despite their father’s advisement otherwise. They chose to specialize in knitted merchandise and renamed the company the Truro Knitting Mills Limited, accordingly. It was a good decision.

Illustrated historic advertisement for unshrinkable underwear

We Are Unshrinkable

Together, John and Frank developed the famous “Shrink-proof Process” which catapulted the little Truro underwear company to fame.

The Klondike Gold Rush of 1897 provided them with their first big break where some 100,000 people, spurred by rumors of gold, made their way north to the harsh terrain of the Yukon. The Stanfield’s “Unshrinkable” Underwear was pivotal to the would-be-prospectors and miners who could find no substitute for the warm, heavy, woolly underwear.

Stanfield’s Limited went on to incorporate in 1906. During World War 1, they manufactured wool blankets, knitting yarn and cloth that provided a major impetus for the expansion of the Firm. After the war, John Stanfield was appointed to the Senate.

Table sculpture of the Stanfield's Unshrinkable Underwear advertising
Black and white photo of a billboard

The Building Block

The early 1920’s marked a turning point when a peroxide process was developed to bleach underwear, opposed to the sulphur process that left a distinct odour behind.

Stanfield’s also began carbonizing wool, a process that produced a much softer fabric. The late twenties saw the first line of cotton combinations and the use of synthetic rayon was used to produce ladies’ undergarments.

Stanfield’s entered the undershirt and brief field in the late thirties, two-piece winter underwear in the forties, and Thermal underwear in the fifties. The latter two gradually took over the winter underwear market, providing the building blocks for the company’s product growth over the many years to follow. Stanfield’s is also responsible for popularizing the T-shirt in Canada as well as men’s Polo Pyjamas.

Historical newspaper ad for unshrinkable underwear
Historic photograph of the inside of the Stanfield's factory
Stanfield’s factory production

An Industry Leader

Today, Stanfield’s is a leader in its field, taking pride in its products and ability to adapt and stay ahead of consumer market needs and wants.

Whether it be introducing new fabrics, blends or styles, we’ve always stood by our basic policy of “the best product at reasonable prices,” and will continue to do so as we move forward. Fashion forward, technologically advanced, and when possible the majority of its products will be made in Canada. Stanfield’s is a specialist in underwear products and has rightfully earned its reputation as ‘the Underwear Company!"

Photo of an elastic waistband with the Stanfield's name 


Monday, February 17, 2025

A Very Forgetful Boy!

Here's an email I recently received from Jeremy of New Haven, Connecticut:

Hi Chris:  Just discovered your union suit blogs. Great stories and pictures. I especially enjoyed your posting of the Forgetful Boy. Did that really happen to you? I was like that myself a few years back...really scattered brained!! But I never had to play basketball in a union suit or any other underwear. Although, I was pantsed in gym one day in high school. I was carrying two basketballs under my arms taking them back to the rack after practice when a senior came up behind me and jerked down my gym shorts. I had on white boxer briefs though. At least those stayed up. I threw one of the balls at him and knocked him in the back of his head...Jeremy 

Thanks for checking in, Jeremy. I always appreciate hearing from those who have recently discovered my blogs as well as those who have been viewing from the beginning. You'll have to let me know if you are a union suit fan yourself or if up there in Connecticut you choose other long underwear for your colder weather. Some readers of mine wear their union suits year round.

The "A Very Forgetful Boy" posting is an old one. Indeed, not you and few others have had to play (or practice) basketball, or any sports for that matter, in their long underwear. For other Union Suit Fan "later joiners" to this blog, here is the original posting from way back on October 9, 2017 which Jeremy discovered.

Note: If you view the following 2017 posting from a smart phone rather than a computer, the right side of the screen will probably fall off, becoming harder to read.

When this happens to this re-post, you can just pull the bar located at the bottom of your page over to the right to continue reading or, better yet, scroll down to the very bottom of this posting and click on "View Web Version."  

This will allow you to see that which I have originally entered on my computer and just what others see who view from their computers. Try it for better viewing, Union Suit Fans on iphones and androids.

A Very Forgetful Boy

Once there was a forgetful boy, a very forgetful boy. It was not unusual for him to run out of his house early morning and race to the bus stop without his lunch bag. Occasionally, he would forget his belt and had to hold his pants up with one hand all day long. One time the boy ran out of the house and was half way down the sidewalk in the rain before he realized he had no shoes on. His socks were soaked before he could turn around and run back to his room to change them. In school he would have invariably forgotten a text book or two, maybe pencils and, of course, his homework now and then. Participating in boy scout camp outs he would frequently forget his sleeping bag, or his jacket, maybe a flashlight or change of underwear. At other times he would forget to take his bible to Sunday school.

His mom, dad, teachers, and scout master were regularly exasperated. Pleading, reminders, even threats seemed to have no positive affect on this boy and his memory. Yet this forgetful boy did very well in his school subjects. He excelled in mathematics and science and recalled history and geography details. But as he graduated to high school he remained oh so forgetful. The boy's mom commented as many moms do about their sons, "if his head were not screwed on tightly he would forget it as well."

As a high school sophomore the boy continued getting excellent grades despite being his forgetful self. During this year he tried out and was chosen for the school's basketball team. True to form, arriving for practice he would, on any given day, forget clean socks, on another day his shorts, on another day his jockstrap. He was simply inept at remembering. His coach grew more and more impatient.

One cold Monday morning, the boy forgot his entire uniform. He had taken it home to be washed but left it in the laundry room in his rush to catch the school bus. Upon arriving at the boys' locker room for practice, the coach had had enough. "You are not going to play in your street clothes and shoes," he told the boy. "Today, you'll practice in just your underwear and socks!”

No amount of pleading or promising to do better could change the coach's mind. "Strip and hit the court," he commanded. And so, the boy did - reluctantly.

It was mid-January so like other men and boys, his winter underwear consisted of a long-handled union suit. Hanging up his clothes and storing his shoes, he proceeded to the gym wearing only his long woolen underwear and socks.

The other boys laughed heartily at seeing their distressed team mate in his union suit. They chided him with diversionary comments such as "You forgot to button your flap" and "Look! His face is as red as his underwear!" Another team mate chortled, “Wait until the girls see you at our next game in just your union suit!”

Teenage boys, then as now, have no mercy. Good nature teasing each other is a favorite past time. Blowing his whistle, the coach finally stopped the chatter bringing some semblance of order to practice. The boys were soon concentrating upon basketball rather than the forgetful boy, ignoring the discomfort of one of their own.

Despite his embarrassment the boy did his best to persevere on the court, slipping and sliding around the gym in his socks, sweating in his woolen underwear. Yet he managed to hit some layups and a couple of hook shots. After a while he thought no more of having to run around in his underwear.

The hour passed and the boy returned to the locker room in his soggy union suit. The other boys continued razzing their unfortunate colleague. But the boy could give as good as he got. He had composed himself and offered some zingers of his own. Finally, after the other boys finished showering and dressing, they left for home tired but exhilarated.

The forgetful boy promised his coach he would do better to remember. It turned out the boy learned his lesson for he never forgot his uniform again. 

I wish I could tell you that he became less forgetful from that day forward but some things never change. The boy became a man and now forgets where he places his car keys, his anniversary date, and the ages of his children.


Solid Jackson appears in his
Long Red Woolen Union Suit
to the Amusement of His Team Mates
and to the Consternation of His Coach.
But his mom worries if he doesn't stay warm!

Special Thanks to The Kilroys, America's Funniest Family!, a popular 1940's comic book family, who featured a boy by the name of Solid Jackson. Solid was a zany friend of the Kilroys' teenage son, Natch. Solid always seemed to find himself in the wackiest of predicaments such as his mom requiring him to wear his long red woolen underwear to his high school basketball games so he wouldn't catch cold. Solid Jackson was the perfect foil to align with my "forgetful boy" story.

The Kilroys stories and art: by Dan Gordon and others. His comic books featured various teen-ager hijinks.



Saturday, February 8, 2025

Sadly No Wager Again This Year: 

Not even for the Super Bowl. Tom Moss and I have been emailing back and worth during this past football season. I was interested in whether he and RC would be having another political or football wager this election year. They began wagering against each other over twelve years ago. Sharing with Union Suit Fan began a fun-filled decade for you and me. The payoff always required one of them having to appear at their office or out in public, clad only in a suit of long red, one-piece underwear. Tom said he has been quite willing, but that his "nemesis" had enough of losing so, despite Tom's may pleadings the past two years, RC declined. I've published more than a half a dozen of their bets with great pictues of the loser in various situations, wearing just a smile (sometimes), a hat and a bright red union suit. 

Since there hasn't been a wager lately, I asked Tom to recount their first bet when these two buddies were first brought to my attention. Since then, I've had the pleasure of documenting them right here in the Union Suit Fan universe. The bets between two great friends, photos and stories, have received hundreds of views.

Here's Tom's memory of that first bet: 

Years ago, I pestered RC to bet me that (redacted) would beat (redacted) in the 2012 Presidential Election. I just thought it would add some fun and interest to that election. I knew RC was a "dyed-in-the-wool" (redacted). I was an Independent with (forgive me) (redacted) leanings. But RC absolutely refused to a wager because he told me he only bet on a "sure thing" (I love telling this story, so bear with me). After my proposing this bet over and over ad nauseam, RC finally agreed, probably just to shut me up. 
Well, you might have guessed the outcome. The guy who only bet on a sure thing lost our wager and his pants! 
We both worked in the (redacted) building downtown back then. So, the next morning after the election, RC with a hungdog face plodded down to my office from up on the fourth floor. He asked what he needed to do to pay off our wager, perhaps a case of beer or a steak dinner.
"Oh, no," I told him, "nothing like that, nothing that costs you money." 
"Oh, yeah," he said looking down right suspicious.  
"No," I said, "it's simple. All you have to do is come to the office and work all day.....in Your Underwear."

He yelled, "IN MY UNDERWEAR?!  ARE YOU CRAZY!  I wouldn't do that in a million years. IN MY UNDERWEAR? AT THE OFFICE??"  
I said, "Hey, a bet is a bet and you lost this one. Enjoy, spending the day here at the office in your underwear!"  Without a word, he turned around and stormed out of my office and back to his.

Well, a long story short(er), he relented and paid off the bet but not the way I particularly imagined and I'm still a little ticked about it, if you want to know the truth. RC, being a man of his word, couldn't not pay off the wager. 
For that bet, I did not specify what type of underwear he'd need to wear to work. I knew he wore printed boxer shorts (we ran across each other at the gym locker room some days). So, I was pretty sure he wouldn't be arriving in briefs and an undershirt. My three boys, by the way, call old man briefs "whitety tighties." RC wouldn't be caught dead in them. Like their dad and RC, my three boys wear boxers. Okay, TMI. 
RC in his underwear at the computer, back in the day.

               

But anyway, to my eventual disappointment, I did not specify any particular day for RC to come to work for the big payoff. I couldn't wait to meet and greet him as he'd arrive after having driven across town, running to the elevator, up to his office to work all day long, spending those hours in only his underwear. I congratulated myself on such a great wager payoff and told everyone in our office just what to expect .
However, it did not work out quite as I hoped.  
RC chose a Saturday to pay off our wager! Not a week day when everyone would be in the office, but a Saturday. The dirty rat! He knew there would be a lot fewer managers and co-workers there on a weekend than a week day, so he would have to suffer less. 
As it turned out, RC came in really early the very next Saturday, brought his lunch, and stayed late. And, since it was the middle of November, he did not wear his boxer shorts (red polka dots would have been perfect) but a Suit of Long Red Underwear... his Union Suit. Can you imagine him traipsing around the office in a union suit? 
To add insult to injury, he text me at home that morning and said he was at work. And that true to our agreement, he was wearing only his underwear. I later learned he had driven carefully all across town in his union suit so as to not get a speeding ticket or be in an accident, caught wearing only his underwear. 
He told me when he arrived that he looked around the parking garage to see if anyone was around, then high-tailed it to the elevator and up to the fourth floor in that long red underwear. Only one other worker rode up with RC, not the dozen I was hoping would join him. His biggest trouble was sneaking down the hall during his ten hour day to the men's room. And, he did get caught a couple of times. Thank goodness for that at least. Afterall, the whole idea was to have numerous witnesses to his predicament.  
Now, I was busy with my boys that weekend so couldn't drop everything to come to the office. I told him to at least send a picture to prove he was at the office in his underwear. RC shared an office with a young intern who also was at work that day. It was he who could hardly stifle laughter to take the famous photo of RC standing in his work room by a file cabinet in this red union suit!  
Chris, I didn't get to see RC work that day in his union suit but I did get the last laugh. I took that photo, had a 7 x 10 print made, and put it up on the company bulletin board with his name on it in big capital letters, where it stayed for years. Maybe it's still there for all we know. And, of course, I put his underwear photo on my facebook page where a couple hundred people got to enjoy the "loser" of our first union suit wager.      

    
LOL!! Isn't it great to see him standing there in his socks, hat and union suit 
with that look on his face?! Not a happy camper that day
 ....Tom, Kansas City Chief Fan (my socks:) 

It sure is Tom. This and all your and RC's union suit wager photos have been stupendously received by us Union Suit Fans! You two should know that multitudes of my blog viewers and I are disappointed there is no bet again this year.

        Happy Super Bowl viewing anyway, sports and union suit fans! ...Chris 


Added February 10th.  Never to miss joining in the fun, here's ole Buckeye, just like RC, sitting at his desk in boxer shorts! 



Sunday, February 2, 2025

Happy Groundhog Day Union Suit Fans!  

Does this mean winter is about half over? The Pennsylvania Rodent saw his shadow early this morning so returned to his burrow to hibernate for another six weeks. At least he did in the Keystone State.



How does this intelligent groundhog know how to keep warm?
Like you and me, he wears a Union Suit! That's how!


Thanks to Jerry Walters, Visionary and Creator 
of Larry Longhandles who wears a top hat, vest
and that suit of long handled underwear.

Saturday, February 1, 2025