
With the release of our shiny new “Vienna” Congress Boots this season, we thought we’d give a little history of this interesting, rather special kind of footwear.
In the US the elastic-sided boot was known as the “Congress Boot”
      or “Congress Gaiter.” Elastic-sided boots were patented in England
      in 1837 by J. Sparkes Hall but the elastic wasn’t particularly
      good. Vulcanization was developed in 1839 by Goodyear but the
      resulting improved elastic does not appear to have been used in
      ladies’ boots until the late 1840s.
| The Met, early 19th century elastic-sided shoes. 13.49.37a,b | 
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| Shoe Icons – high cotton shoes with elastic at the sides. This is likely an example of “shirred goods.” 1840s | 
There were two types of elasticized fabric used in congress boots – one was the true elastic web made from vulcanized India rubber thread, which is most like what we have today. Boots with the elastic webbing date from the 1850s (England) and the 1860s (US). The other type was known as “shirred goods” and was made of stretched rubber threads, running horizontally, that when “released” drew up the fabric they were sewn into for a shirred or puckered look. Boots with shirred goods are contemporary with the elastic web boots, with the web being the preferred method presumably due to stretch, recovery, and longevity.
Nancy Rexford notes that the
      congress boots (with inferior and then better elastics) were worn
      in England for 10 years before they made their way to the US
      around 1847. (Women’s Shoes in America, 1795-1930, pg. 206).
This
      coincides roughly with Queen Victoria’s coronation in 1838. J
      Sparkes Hall was a bootmaker to Queen Victoria and
      claimed the Queen “walks in them daily and thus gives the
      strongest proof of the value she attached to the invention.”
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| An interesting page from “Der Bazar: Illustrirte Damen-Zeitung, Volume 7,” 1861, showing a variety of congress gaiters with bows and other decoration. | 
After 1847 congress gaiters were very popular for ladies – with
      restrictive clothing, people needed to put on their
      shoes and not worry about laces coming untied. Bending down in
      corsets or tight clothing isn’t comfortable, polite, and sometimes
      not even possible, so the 18th and 19th centuries saw several
      alternative fastening methods for shoes – buttons, buckles,
      elastic – contemporary with shoe strings (laces).
The popularity of congress boots continues through the 1870s but
      the function of the boots begins to shift from being a fashionable
      style to being more for outdoor or practical use only. By the late 1880s congress boots for ladies are not considered the height of fashion but
      they were still being made.
There was a bit of a revival in the
      1890s and turn of the 20th century for the “Ladies’ Up to Date
      Congress Shoe,” but it faded out fairly quickly. Elastic-sided
      boots continued to be made in the early 20th century but were
      relegated to “comfort shoes” and were not at all seen as
      fashionable for women. A quick bimble through Zappos today, however, will turn up a variety of congress gaiters, now commonly called Chelsea Boots, some very fashionable. Now that’s a footwear style with staying power, 170 years old!
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| American Duchess “Vienna” Congress Gaiters in black or patina brown – true, glorious reproductions perfect for the 1850s, Civil War, and bustle periods. | 
 
				 
				


 
					
		