Shinola is a defunct American brand of
shoe polish. The Shinola Company, founded in
Rochester, New York in 1877 as the American Chemical Manufacturing and Mining Company, produced the polish under a sequence of different owners until 1960.[1] "Shinola" was a trade
name and
trademark for boot polish.[A] The suffix -ola is a popular component of trade names in the United States.[B] It was popular during the first half of the 20th century and entered the
Americanlexicon in the
phrase, "You don't know shit from Shinola," meaning to be ignorant.
The brand name was acquired by the retail company
Shinola in 2011.
History
George Melancthon Wetmore (August 31, 1858 – June 10, 1923) was born in
Gates, New York and, after attending
military school, got a degree at the
Rochester Business Institute. At age 18, he went to work for the American Chemical Manufacturing and Mining Company, which was founded in
Rochester, New York (near
Brown's Race) in 1877. The company was primarily focused on
carpet cleaning, but sold several specialty products, including boot and shoe polish. Wetmore found that the polish was cheaply made, did not hold or bond well, and 95% of it was dyed black using
lamp black. Wetmore designed a replacement and initially called it SHINOL′A. In 1886, Wetmore was promoted to vice president, and a few years later, to president of the company. By 1909, the company had moved to a larger facility to handle increasing orders.[1][6]
Shinola polish was noted for its distinct dark green tin with red and gold lettering. The tin came with a patented key "for the convenient lifting of the lid". Shinola was produced in several colors: black, white,
oxblood, red, tan, and brown. Several Shinola-branded
shoe shining accessories were sold as well, such as
shoehorns and the Shinola Home Set which included a polisher, bristle dauber, and the polish itself.[1][7]
Known by 1917 as simply The Shinola Company, the firm saw success expand globally, selling especially well in Europe, during the rise of
World War I as many young men entered the military and were expected to be well-dressed during training. The company used a series of slogans to promote the product. For example, “Makes old shoes look like new. Keeps new shoes from looking old.” It became the largest manufacturer of the product in the world circa 1917, being carried into war by
doughboys.[1] After Wetmore's death in 1923, the company was sold and became part of the "2 in 1-Shinola-Bixby Corp.", beginning a series of acquisitions related to the brand.[3] In the 1940s, the polish became a product of
Best Foods and was renamed to Shinola (losing the apostrophe).
Corn Products Company of
Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey later merged with Best Foods, and sold tins of the product as "New Shinola Wax", featuring a revised formula, as well as selling in a liquid form. In a 1945 ad that ran in Popular Mechanics magazine, Shinola marketed itself as a wax that could also be used as a polish for scratches in furniture, a polish for linoleum, and a finish for toy models (e.g. airplanes).[4][8] By the 1950s, it was sold as "Shinola Leather and Saddle Soap" by RIT Products, a division of Best Foods. In 1960, the company went out of business and the brand ceased to be produced.[1][9]
In 2011, venture capitalist
Tom Kartsotis bought the rights to the brand name, and created
a new retail company. The company was founded in 2012, and produces watches and leather goods.[9][10]
Cultural impact
Shinola was immortalized in
colloquialEnglish by the phrase "
You don't know shit from Shinola", which during
World War II became widely popular and a
barracks staple.[2][5]
Some have even theorized that the popular expression was a long term detriment to the brand's identity.[11] Nevertheless, the company did try to find other evocative promotional phrases, e.g., "Your shoes are showing", which they used in advertisements.[4]
In the 1979 film comedy The Jerk, the character Navin R. Johnson (played by
Steve Martin) is tested by "Daddy" (
Richard Ward) on whether he knows the difference between
shit and Shinola before leaving home.[12][13][14]
The 1992 movie Basic Instinct features Gus telling Dr. Lamott, "Most times I can't tell shit from Shinola, Doc. What was all that you just said?"[15][16]
Dolly Parton wrote the song "Shinola" – which also uses a lyric that plays on the colloquial phrase – for her 2008 Backwoods Barbie album.[17]
Rapper
MF DOOM referenced the phrase in the lyrics written for "Figaro" on the 2004 collaborative album
Madvillainy.[24]
Television show The Golden Girls Season 7 Episode 2: Rose: ”You know, back in Minnesota, I was known as the Sherlock Holmes of St. Olaf.” Dorothy: ”Figured out which one was Shinola, did you, Rose?” Rose: ”The hard way.”[11]
In Raising Arizona (1987) it surfaced as "Aw, he don't know a cuss word from Shinola."[2]
In the fourth part of the
Thomas Pynchon novel Gravity's Rainbow, the character "Pig" Bodine provides a lengthy explanation of the phrase "to know shit from Shinola" for a German character named Säure Bummer.[26]
References
Notes
^The original trademark was filed by the “2-in-1 Shinola-Bixby Corporation” in 1929.[2][3][4]
^"The 'ola' suffix is popular in the USA as part of trade names, e.g.
Crayola,
Granola etc. This leads to the pronunciation of Shinola as shine + ola. That spoils the alliteration a little as it would work better as shin + ola."[5]
^
abMartin, Gary (2015).
"Doesn't know shit from Shinola". Phrase Finder. Retrieved January 29, 2015. This phrase is typical of the barrack room vulgarity of WWII, which is where it originated. Other "doesn't know" phrases, also mostly from the military are, "doesn't know his arse from a hole in the ground" (or elbow, or a hot rock, or third base), "doesn't know enough to pee downwind", "doesn't know whether to scratch his watch or wind his ass". The tone is lifted a little by the English conductor Sir
Henry Wood who expressed a similar opinion with "he doesn't know his brass from his woodwind".
^"George Carlin, Filthy Words". Exploring Constitutional Conflicts. Retrieved December 18, 2016. The following is a verbatim transcript of "Filthy Words" (the George Carlin monologue at issue in the Supreme Court case of FCC v. Pacifica Foundation) prepared by the Federal Communications Commission...
^"Madvillain - All Caps lyrics". Genius.com. Retrieved October 13, 2019. Take it from the TEC-9 holder/They bit but don't know their neck shine from Shinola
^Patrick, Vincent (July 15, 2014) [1979]. The Pope of Greenwich Village (Paperback). Vincent Patrick. p. 179.
ISBN978-0-9903923-0-9.
^ Pynchon, Thomas. Gravity's Rainbow (1995) [1973]. London: Penguin Books. pp. 687-688. ISBN 978-0-1401885-9-2