This old glove
by Julie Carter
An
old leather glove. If it could talk, it might tell you a story of a
time when men put on gloves as often as they put on their hat.
For
some, it was part of a morning ritual, first thing. And once on, they
didn’t come off, even for the portrait of him and his bride.
The
antiquity of gloves goes back to prehistoric times when they were worn
by cavemen to protect their hands and took the form of bags, a primitive
type of mitten.
In England after the Norman Conquest,
royalty and dignitaries wore gloves as a badge of distinction. The glove
became a token when it was thrown to the ground at the feet of the
adversary as a challenge of integrity and an invitation to duel.
It was in the 12th century that
gloves became part of fashionable dress. During the reign of Queen
Elizabeth I, no well-dressed woman would appear in public without them.
Working folk have spent a small fortune in
gloves in a lifetime. Heavy leather gloves -- mule skin or something
tough, elk or deerskin gloves for comfort and dress, lined gloves for
warmth, cotton gloves to work in the summertime.
Any kind of glove will wear out when
working. The favorites, or maybe just the most necessary at the time,
will receive repair with something as functional as duct tape.
Whether tucked in a back pocket for
safekeeping, laid on the dash of the pickup or in the pocket in the
door, a coat pocket, wherever --there is an unwritten law that the good
ones will get lost first, at least one of them.
Wearing a pair of mismatched gloves only
means there is another pair just like them somewhere, usually to be
found when you aren’t looking. They can be buried in corral dirt, under
the seat of the pickup, or tucked in fence wire behind a post where you
last needed to take them off for a project.
In the early 1800s, a French Master Glover
began making gloves in sizes and a consistent shape establishing a
reliable fit. I’m not sure I ever owned a pair that fit right but part
of wearing gloves is learning to function with them, even awkwardly.
Memories of the gloves worn by fathers and
grandfathers can be found in the recesses of most of our minds. Those
special times as a child when we would proudly slip on those big old
worn out gloves and think it made us all grown up and ready to work by
their side.
With the advent of the ball point pen, the
glove became not just hand protection, but a notepad for recording
cattle counts, dates to remember and a place to do a little math to
figure feed prices or cattle weights.
Ranch records are sometimes written on a
leather glove. In an effort to dignify his bookkeeping practices, one
old timer would drop his gloves in a briefcase when he was headed to the
accountants.
Today
gloves are a specialty item for work and recreation – hundreds of
different kinds for the doctor, nurse, hunter, skier, golfer, roper and
more.
And
yet, nothing is more sentimental than that old worn leather glove that
held a set of reins, drove a tractor over the country side, or built the
fences that stand yet today on homesteads across the country.
We
can look at an old glove and know that in every crease, every worn out
spot, every dark stain, there is a story to be recalled.
2/5/2012
1 comment:
A long time ago I knew a cowboy who went to work for Elliott Waite "Chope" Phillips, son of Philmont donor Waite Phillips . This cowboy was young and energetic and when Chope told him to clean up the saddle room he want to work. Some of the things this cowboy gathered to throw away was a pile of left handed gloves, not just a few but quite a few. He gathered up all of the gloves and a pretty good load of other things and drove them to the edge of the canyon and deposited them where other unwanted things were laid to rest.
A few days later Chope asked the cowboy what had happened to that pile of gloves. When Chope found out he told the cowboy to go and bring them all back.
So much for the memory of old gloves!
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