United Shoe Machinery Corporation

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This collection contains the transcripts and records of the 1949-1952 Sherman Act antitrust proceedings against the United Shoe Machinery Corporation in Massachusetts' federal court.

United Shoe Machinery was created in 1899 by a merger of Goodyear Machinery Company, Consolidated Hand Lasting Machine Company, and McKay Shoe Machinery Company. It quickly became an international corporation and achieved nearly complete market domination in the United States.

United Shoe made its fortune largely on its practice of leasing rather than selling its shoemaking equipment to its customers. Of this innovative approach, FORTUNE magazine wrote approvingly in 1933, "if you can save a man $10 and charge him $2 for the service, it does him no harm if you made a good profit on the $2." Its massive factory complex in Beverly, Massachusetts made the city the richest in the state, and in 1930 United Shoe built Boston's first skyscraper (at 160 Federal Street) for its corporate headquarters. The corporation flourished throughout the Great Depression and the Second World War.

On December 15, 1947 the United States filed a complaint against United Shoe Machinery Corporation in federal court in Massachusetts, alleging violations of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1 et seq., and charging that United Shoe had been illegally monopolizing the shoe manufacturing industry since 1912.

In his 60-page opinion, Judge Charles E. Wyzanski described the ensuing trial: "A trial of prodigious length followed. The court attempted to shorten the hearings by requiring defendant in advance of trial to submit to the Government's exhaustive requests for discovery, by requiring the Government at the opening of its case to file a brief correlating all its proposed evidence, by encouraging the use of sampling devices, and by insisting that the Government should, in formal answers, indicate in each branch of the case on what evidence it principally relied. Nonetheless, the hearing took 121 days and covered 14,194 pages of transcript and included the offer of 5512 exhibits totalling 26,474 pages (in addition to approximately 150,000 pages of OMR's and over 6,000 soft copies of patents) and 47 depositions covering 2122 pages. At the close of the evidence the Court asked for briefs, and requested findings of fact and conclusions of law. The Government offered briefs totalling 653 pages, and requests totalling 667 pages. United submitted briefs totalling 1240 pages, and requests totalling 499 pages." United States v. United Shoe Machinery Corp., 110 F.Supp. 295, 298-99 (D.Mass. 1953).

The court finally found that United Shoe had violated the Sherman Act, and it prescribed several different remedies but stopped short of dissolving or fracturing the corporation. On appeal, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed. United Shoe Machinery Corp. v. United States, 347 U.S. 521 (1954).

The case went back to court in 1967. The government petitioned for an order to dissolve the corporation; the corporation petitioned for a less strenuous remedy than the one previously ordered. The district court, under then Chief Judge Wyzanski, ruled that the original order would not be modified since nothing had changed significantly since then. United States v. United Shoe Machinery Corp., 266 F.Supp. 328 (D.Mass. 1967). The Supreme Court reversed, ordering the district court to supply a remedy that would effectively terminate the illegal monopoly, deny the corporation the fruits of its statutory violation, and ensure that this could not happen again. United States v. United Shoe Machinery Corp., 391 U.S. 244 (1968).

After the first wave of antitrust litigation, United Shoe continued to innovate within the shoe manufacturing industry, but it also developed such modern inventions as the hot glue gun, the soda can pop-top, the drive mechanism for the lunar module, and pop rivets for the Concorde. The company's name was changed to USM Corporation in 1968 to reflect its increasing diversification, but the company went deeply into debt financing its new acquisitions, and its stock value plummeted. In 1976 the company was bought by Emhart Corporation (now Emhart Teknologies, a wholly owned subsidiary of Black & Decker).

From the guide to the Stenographic Record of Trial before Wyzanski, J., U.S. v. United Shoe Machinery Corporation, 1949-1952, District Court of the U.S., District of Massachusetts, (Harvard Law School Library, Harvard University)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn Various. 1987 Library Accessions, 1753-1976, n.d. Peabody Essex Museum
referencedIn Emhart Corporation. Emhart Corporation records, 1883-1989. University of Connecticut, Homer Babbidge Library
referencedIn Wilmington Trust Company. Trust Dept. Investment analysis files ("T-U"), 1909-1959 (bulk 1931-1954). Hagley Museum & Library
referencedIn Rice & Hutchins. Records, 1876-1928 (inclusive). Harvard Business School, Knowledge and Library Services/Baker Library
referencedIn Copelof, Maxwell, 1879-. Papers, 1940-1954 Harvard Law School Library Langdell Hall Cambridge, MA 02138
creatorOf Stenographic Record of Trial before Wyzanski, J., U.S. v. United Shoe Machinery Corporation, 1949-1952, District Court of the U.S., District of Massachusetts Harvard Law School Library Langdell Hall Cambridge, MA 02138
creatorOf United Shoe Machinery Corporation. [United Shoe Machinery Corporation publications]. Cornell University Library
creatorOf USM Corporation. United Shoe Machinery Company records, 1915-1974. Lynn Historical Society Library
referencedIn Emhart Corporation Records., undated, 1883-1989 Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Center.
creatorOf Adrian & Busch. Trade catalogs of cobbler and shoemaking equipment, 1873-1924. University of California, Santa Barbara, UCSB Library
referencedIn Commonwealth Shoe & Leather Company. Records, 1884-1931 (inclusive). Harvard Business School, Knowledge and Library Services/Baker Library
referencedIn Beverly Public Schools (Beverly, Mass.). Beverly Public Schools/Beverly trade school records, 1909-1995. Beverly High School
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Alfred G. Nelson person
associatedWith Bartschi, Arnold person
associatedWith Beverly Public Schools (Beverly, Mass.) corporateBody
associatedWith Briggs, Ross person
associatedWith Buckingham, Earl person
associatedWith Clarence S. Walker person
associatedWith Commonwealth Shoe & Leather Company. corporateBody
associatedWith Compo Shoe Machinery Corp. corporateBody
associatedWith Copelof, Maxwell. person
associatedWith Daniel J. Matthews person
associatedWith David E. Goldstrom person
associatedWith David S. Evans person
associatedWith David S. Loudon person
associatedWith Dean, Joel person
associatedWith Domestico, George person
associatedWith Emhart Corporation. corporateBody
associatedWith Ennina M. Smith person
associatedWith Feman, Louis person
associatedWith Francis L. Garfield person
associatedWith Francis O. Schmitt person
associatedWith Frank C. Rand person
associatedWith Franklin A. Reece person
associatedWith Frank Y. Gladney person
associatedWith George M. Belcher person
associatedWith George R. Brown person
associatedWith Gerald J. Bellmore person
associatedWith Harley W. Russ person
associatedWith Harold E. Booma person
associatedWith Henry L. Waelter person
associatedWith Henry S. Hubbell person
associatedWith H. LeBaron Sampson person
associatedWith Howard, Willard person
associatedWith Jacob S. Kamborian person
associatedWith J. L. Moran person
associatedWith Joel Dean person
associatedWith John F. Smith person
associatedWith John W. Corcoran person
associatedWith Joseph A. Kuebler person
associatedWith Joseph F. Wogan person
associatedWith Joseph Harrington, Jr. person
associatedWith Joseph W. Holmes person
associatedWith King, Stanley person
associatedWith Lester J. Ross person
associatedWith Lewis B. Walker person
associatedWith Louis E. Beaudin person
associatedWith MacLerie, Samuel person
associatedWith Max W. Tetlow person
associatedWith Merwin F. Ashley person
associatedWith Myron O. Frost person
associatedWith Nelson B. Todd person
associatedWith Orkgiesen, Charles person
associatedWith Palmer, Wilson person
associatedWith Paul H. Mason person
associatedWith Paul O. MacBride person
associatedWith Preston T. Stephenson person
associatedWith Rexford O. James person
associatedWith Rice & Hutchins. corporateBody
associatedWith Richard A. Ruedebush person
associatedWith Richard S. Meriam person
associatedWith Robert A. Crosby person
associatedWith Robert B. Emerson person
associatedWith Robert D. Salinger person
associatedWith Robert F. Whitney person
associatedWith Robert M. Bigelow person
associatedWith Roberts, Clifford person
associatedWith Robert W. Schiff person
associatedWith Rowe, Hartley person
associatedWith Roy D. Jackson person
associatedWith Russell B. McNeill person
associatedWith Russell K. Nash person
associatedWith Samuel B. Vaisey person
associatedWith Shain, Simon person
associatedWith Sidney W. Winslow, Jr. person
associatedWith Solar, William person
associatedWith Stefan H. Robock person
associatedWith Thomas C. Rowen person
associatedWith Thomas F. McManus person
associatedWith Thomas M. Reynolds person
associatedWith United States. District Court (Massachusetts) corporateBody
associatedWith USM Corporation. corporateBody
associatedWith Various. family
associatedWith Wallace J. McGrath person
associatedWith Wallace M. Kemp person
associatedWith Walter M. Jarman person
associatedWith William M. Moses person
associatedWith Wilmington Trust Company. Trust Dept. corporateBody
associatedWith Wolff, Sam person
associatedWith W. Sidney Pelton person
associatedWith Wyzanski, Charles E. (Charles Edward), 1906- person
Place Name Admin Code Country
Subject
Antitrust law
Monopolies
Trusts, Industrial
Occupation
Activity

Corporate Body

Active 1873

Active 1924

Information

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Ark ID: w6sz1502

SNAC ID: 37921607