
Woolrich has been synonymous with quality outdoor clothing for over 180 years.
The company got its start in 1830 when John Rich, an immigrant from England, built
his first woolen mill in Plum Run, Pennsylvania. Rich would visit the lumber camps
that dotted the area and sell his woolen fabric, socks, coverlets, and yarn from
a mule cart.
By 1845, he built a new mill a couple of miles up the road next
to Chatham Run, which provided a steadier source of water. That building exists
today as part of the group of buildings, homes, and community establishments that
have become Woolrich, Pennsylvania.
Rich could certainly not have imagined
that his little woolen mill (created not long after the Revolutionary War) would
go on to experience the Civil War, the Great Depression, two world wars, and the
end of the Cold War. It would witness the beginning of the Industrial Revolution
in America, the amazing growth of American cities, and the telecommunications revolution.
Legend has it that Woolrich was the first company to use a zipper in men's trousers.
The timeless Railroad Vest, introduced when the railroad was being built through
Pennsylvania, is still a popular item. Another garment with roots back to the mid-1800's
is the Buffalo Check Shirt that has kept many generations of outdoorsmen warm.
Technological developments, new production methods, and changing American lifestyles
led to new products for all types of outdoor activities--all-wool bathing suits
and wool golf knickers joined rugged coats for hunters and trappers. As America
took to the roads in the early 1930's, Woolrich added automobile robes and steamer
rugs for the more mobile society. Woolrich was contracted by the government to outfit
Admiral Byrd's expedition to Antarctica in 1939, 1940, and 1941.
