The first rubber heel for shoes was patented on January 24,
1899 by Irish-American Humphrey O'Sullivan. O'Sullivan patented the rubber heel
which outlasted the leather heel then in use. Elijah McCoy invented an improvement to the rubber heel. The
first rubber soled shoes called plimsolls were developed and manufactured in
the United States in the late 1800s. In 1892, nine small rubber manufacturing
companies consolidated to form the U.S. Rubber Company. Among them was the
Goodyear Metallic Rubber Shoe Company, organized in the 1840s in Naugatuck,
Connecticut. This company was the first licensee of a new manufacturing process
called vulcanization, discovered and patented by Charles Goodyear. Vulcanization uses heat to meld rubber to cloth or other
rubber components for a sturdier, more permanent bond.
From 1892 to 1913, the rubber footwear divisions of U.S. Rubber were manufacturing their products under 30 different brand names. The company consolidated these brands under one name.When choosing a name, the initial favorite was Peds, from the Latin meaning foot, but someone else held that trademark. By 1916, the two final alternatives were Veds or Keds, with the stronger sounding Keds being the final choice.
Keds were first mass-marketed as canvas-top "sneakers" in 1917. These were the first sneakers. The word "sneaker" was coined by Henry Nelson McKinney, an advertising agent for N. W. Ayer & Son, because the rubber sole made the shoe stealthy or quiet, all other shoes, with the exception of moccasins, made noise when you walked. In 1979, the Stride Rite Corporation acquired the Keds brand.
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