Timberland LLC is an American manufacturer and retailer of outdoor footwear and apparel owned by VF Corporation. The company also sells accessories including watches, eyewear, and leather goods. Timberland's corporate headquarters are located in Stratham, New Hampshire.
History
In 1918, Nathan Swartz, a Jewish-born shoemaker from the Russian Empire (modern-day Ukraine), started his shoe making career.[3][4] Nearby, the Abington Shoe Company was founded in 1933 in South Boston. Swartz bought half-interest in the company in 1952, and he and his sons eventually acquired the remaining shares.[5] Through the 1960s the company specialized in making private-label boots and shoes for other brands. In 1969, Abington moved to Newmarket, New Hampshire[6] and focused on producing waterproof boots made with injection molding, capable of withstanding the winters of the region.[3]
The Timberland boot was introduced in 1973.[7] Its popularity grew, prompting the Swartzes to discontinue manufacturing for others and concentrate on expanding their own brand.[8] The Abington Shoe Company was renamed The Timberland Company and incorporated in 1978.[3][9]
Jeffrey Swartz, grandson of founder Nathan Swartz, joined the company in 1986.[10] The following year the family took the company public.[11][12] Herman Swartz led the company until he retired in 1986. He was succeeded as CEO by his brother Sidney, who retired in 1998. Jeffrey Swartz succeeded him to become Chief Executive Officer of the company. In June 2011, Timberland signed a definitive takeover agreement with VF Corporation at $43 per share or approximately $2 billion.[13]
Products
The company is primarily known for its footwear. Notable examples:
The "Yellow Boot" is the company's best-known model, now considered iconic.[7]
Timberland PRO industrial boots
Footwear made with recycled, organic, and renewable materials.
As Timberland boots grew in popularity through the 1980s and 1990s, they were taken up by musicians, hip-hop artists, and other cultural figures, gaining the nickname, "the Air Jordans of boots"[17] and becoming "the required footwear of the inner-urban set".[18] Prominent artists who featured them in songs or music videos included Wu-Tang Clan, Nas, Tupac Shakur, The Notorious B.I.G., and Jay-Z.[9][19]
Controversy
In a 1993 New York Times article about "outdoor" clothing brands' cross-over appeal to Black and Hispanic inner-city youth, Jeffrey Swartz downplayed the importance of the urban youth market in Timberland's success, saying that the company concentrated its advertising on its core customers, "honest working people", adding that the urban market was not "sustainable".[18] Though Swartz denied any plan to distance his company's name from young Black and Hispanic consumers to maintain its image, his comments led to a backlash among some Black artists who publicly dropped the brand.[20] In an editorial in The Amsterdam News, Swartz denied the charges of racism[21] and met with Black cultural leaders to explain Timberland's position. The company began more publicly to embrace the urban youth market.[9][22] In the end, the controversy had little effect on sales.[23]
Volunteerism, philanthropy, and sustainability
The company's Path of Service program, first established in 1992, allows employees to take up to a week per year of paid leave to engage in local volunteer projects.[24]
In 2001, Timberland began partnering with international NGOs to plant trees to reverse desertification of farmland and promote the cultivation of vegetables. Its partnership with Japanese NGO Green Network has focused on planting trees in the Horqin Desert of western China. As of 2019, the ongoing partnership had planted 2 million trees.[25]
Beginning in 2010, Timberland entered into an agroforestry partnership with Haiti's Smallholder Farmers Alliance to increase farm acreage and crop yields through reforestation and improved farm methods. By 2015 the program had assisted some 3,200 farmers.[26] In 2016, Timberland extended the partnership in Haiti with a goal of creating a new supply chain for sustainable cotton. The first products with Haiti-sourced cotton came on the market in May 2021.[27]
In 2022, Timberland introduced the Timberloop product take back program, which gives customers the opportunity to return used footwear or clothing to be recycled or refurbished for resale. On Earth Day 2022, Timberland launched the Timberloop Trekker, a boot designed to be fully disassembled and recycled at the end of its life.[28] In 2023, Timberland will continue to increase the use of regenerative natural materials.[29]
^Rhodes, Lucien. "Sole Success". Inc.com. Mansueto Ventures. p. 9. Out of a total production that year of 600,000 pairs of footwear, 500,000 bore the Timberland trademark
^Nelson, George (April 26, 2005). Hip-Hop America. Penguin. p. 161. ISBN9780143035152. Tims, as they were nicknamed were for several years the Air Jordans of boots
^ abMarriott, Michel (November 7, 1993). "Out of the Woods". The New York Times. Section 9. p. 1. Retrieved June 10, 2022.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: location (link)