Neha Patil (Editor)

Metric Hosiery Company

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Type
  
Founders
  
Weiss & Cahn

Industry
  
Clothing manufacturer

Products
  
Hosiery

Founded
  
January 1930 (1930-01) in New York, United States

Headquarters
  
442-448 Fourth Avenue, Manhattan, USA

The Metric Hosiery Company was a New York City firm which lost out to a rival business, when E. J. Korvette stores transferred their buying of hosiery to Maro Industries. Gabriel I. Levy, a Yonkers lawyer, filed a $4.6 million damage suit in 1966. The former hosiery mill agent filed the civil suit in United States District Court for the southern District of New York, in hopes of breaking up a one-year-old merger between Spartan Industries and E.J. Korvette.

Business history

Metric Hosiery leased property at 442 - 448 Fourth Avenue (Manhattan), in January 1930. The business was listed as a new incorporation in November 1932. The owners' names were Weiss & Cahn and the business was located at 220 West 42nd Street (Manhattan). The corporation's initial market capitalization was $20,000. The manufacturer was represented in advertising by the Theodore J. Funt Company, in November 1945. At one point Metric Hosiery was a client of Raymond Loewy, "the father of industrial design".

References

Metric Hosiery Company Wikipedia