The Electric Shoe Repair Shop

Cobbler
c.1913-c.1920


Union, SC 29379

FAMILIES: Fram

Solomon Fram (1875-1958) was born in Lithuania and raised in London, England. In 1899, he married Eastern European immigrant Katy (also spelled Katie) Goldburg (1876-1962) and then the following year, Solomon and Katy immigrated to the United States via Canada and settled in Worcester, Massachusetts. There, Solomon worked as a peddler before joining his brother Israel From (1879-1935) in Union, South Carolina in the early 1910s.1 Building on skills he learned in Europe, Solomon quickly opened The Electric Shoe Repair Shop and successfully operated as a cobbler several years.

 

In 1920, he sold the business and moved to Chester, South Carolina with his wife and children. After approximately three years in the dry goods industry there, Solomon and his family returned to Union County where Solomon managed a department store until his retirement in the mid- to late 1940s.

 

 

1 According to descendants, many members of Solomon’s family changed the spelling of their last name from Fram to From when they immigrated to the Unites States in order to maintain their preferred pronunciation of their surname. However, Solomon kept the original spelling.

Main Image: Cropped advertisement for The Electric Shoe Repair Shop. Reprinted from The Union Times, February 21, 1913.

 

Above Image: Full length advertisement for The Electric Shoe Repair Shop. Reprinted from The Union Times, April 4, 1913.

The Jewish Merchant Project is supported by the generosity of the Henry & Sylvia Yaschik Foundation and the Stanley B. Farbstein Endowment at the Coastal Community Foundation.

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Sylvia Vlosky Yaschik Jewish Studies Center
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