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dress. Once she was able to advertise in newspapers in 1911, sales increased substantially. Soon she expanded to a new shop at 19 W. 38th Street where she employed a dozen employees. Introducing a mail-order catalogue increased sales further so that the company's revenue was over one million dollars
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between 119th and 120th
Streets. She rented a shopfront on the first floor of a building for $ 12.50 a month, with living quarters in the rear. She hung garments from the gas fixtures, and set up shop. Her sister's new husband lent her $ 300 to open a bank account as working capital for the purchase
300:, and a number of other causes. She died at her home in Manhattan on September 26, 1951, at the age of 74, leaving the business to her sons in her last will and testament. She was buried in Mount Pleasant Cemetery in Hawthorne (Westchester County), New York.
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worldwide. Three more children, Theodore, Helen and Arthur, were born to the couple. Her son
Raphael served as the company chairman and chief executive of Lane Bryant from 1940-1972, followed in that role by his half-brother Arthur.
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Twelfth Census of the United States New York State, Bronx
Borough, p. 39, line 37, household 375. Address: East 173rd St. This reference also lists her birth month and year, and immigration year.
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in 1917. Her second innovation was mass producing ready-made clothing for women in larger sizes and this was the basis of further growth, with sales greater than for maternity wear by 1923.
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Bryant earned a reputation for the clothing she made for pregnant women. Bryant created a comfortable and concealing tea gown by attaching an accordion pleated skirt to a
195:. Retivas. She became an orphan shortly after birth when her mother deceased and her father brought her to her grandparents who raised her. In 1895, she sought refuge in
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Please help improve this article by looking for better, more reliable sources. Unreliable citations may be challenged and removed.
179:. Despite difficult circumstances, she saw a need and came up with a solution that revolutionized the women's fashion industry.
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with her husband, who was a jeweler. He died not long after their son
Raphael was born. She then lived on West 112th St. in
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of fabrics. A bank officer misspelled her name on the application as "Lane", so that became the name of the store.
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using an elastic band. She had created the first known commercially sold
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428:. New York (published September 28, 1951). AP. July 27, 1951. p. 20
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refugee like
Himmelstein. A mechanical engineer with a degree from the
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In 1909, at age 32, she married Albert Malsin. Malsin was a fellow
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359:"Company News; Lane Bryant Plans A New Magazine For Large Women"
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Emigrants from the
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163:(March 11, 1877 – September 26, 1951) was an American
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at $ 1 a week. In 1899, she married David Bryant, a
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400:. New York Times News Service. January 8, 1996
392:"Top Lane Bryant Executive Raphael Malsin, 95"
492:American people of Lithuanian-Jewish descent
298:New York Federation of Jewish Philanthropies
275:, Malsin had worked for a firm that built
522:People from Morningside Heights, Manhattan
288:Lena Bryant Malsin took an active role in
60:Learn how and when to remove this message
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16:American clothing designer and retailer
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292:communal charities. She supported the
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532:20th-century American businesspeople
477:American businesspeople in retailing
357:Barmash, Isadore (January 6, 1981).
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527:20th-century American businesswomen
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517:Lithuanian women fashion designers
420:"Lane Bryant Firm Founder is Dead"
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187:Lena Himmelstein was born to a
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507:Lithuanian fashion designers
294:Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society
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453:at jewishvirtuallibrary.org
436:– via Newspapers.com.
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425:The Philadelphia Inquirer
234:In 1904, Bryant moved to
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502:Jewish fashion designers
329:. Jewish Virtual Library
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207:refugee. She moved to
183:Early life and career
255:Marriage and family
363:The New York Times
265:Anhalt Polytechnic
173:plus-size clothing
102:September 26, 1951
261:Lithuanian Jewish
193:Kaunas, Lithuania
189:Lithuanian Jewish
165:clothing designer
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331:. Retrieved
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140:David Bryant
104:(1951-09-26)
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472:1951 deaths
467:1877 births
177:Lane Bryant
129:Lane Bryant
118:Nationality
93:, Lithuania
37:may not be
461:Categories
304:References
201:sweat shop
191:family in
50:April 2023
451:Biography
371:0362-4331
248:maternity
227:and fine
221:tea gowns
217:negligees
213:Manhattan
432:July 10,
404:July 10,
376:July 10,
169:retailer
151:Children
121:American
110:New York
39:reliable
273:Germany
134:Spouses
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296:, the
290:Jewish
269:Köthen
244:bodice
209:Harlem
175:chain
91:Kaunas
229:silks
225:laces
126:Label
434:2023
406:2023
378:2023
367:ISSN
335:2013
219:and
167:and
99:Died
84:Born
267:in
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