Coatbridge Memories

Monklands Memories - Airdrie & Coatbridge areas

Home

Computers

Genealogy

Features 

Bricks

UGotmail

Leisure

Cheap Phone

Links

Contact us

Your Home Town

Birds of Prey

Memories

Poetry

Humour

Insurance

Holidays

Trams

People & Places

 

Memories Pages

Home Page
JOHN WHITE father of local history
Monklands Heritage Society

Life &Times -Bob McMillan
Sunnyside - Part 1

Summerlee & Hydrocon 

Detachable Collars

Boys at Play

Utilities

Sunnyside - Part 2

Coatbridge Co-op
Coatbridge Co-op Chap 1

Coatbridge Co-op Chap 2

Thom Gilchrist Obituary

Alexander Hospital

Memories-Tom Frew

Lamberton 1

  1. Anecdotes - TF

  2. Old Lambertonians

  3. Group photo

  4. Gallery 2

  5. Engineers

  6. Lamberton 1939

  7. Memories - TF??

  8. L1020341b.jpg

 

Lambertons 7 (KRG)
Skyscraper Wean”
Coatbridge Cinemas
Airdrie Cinemas
The Colliers of Scotland

Beamish Museum
Murray & Paterson Intro
M & Paterson History

M & P History 2

Stewart & LLoyds
Clyde Tube Works


GARROWHILL
***Alistair Stevenson
**More Recent Alistair
**Holiday in Riddrie
Memories of Watsons
by Carrick Watson
  FASKINE stories

The Faskine - William Kerr

Stories when you are dead - set in The Faskine

Faskine Tale  Elizabeth Tennant

Memories of Gartcosh & Kingshill John Duncan
Reminiscence Pages
Other Factories

RB Tennent Coatbridge
RB Tennent Poem Ww
My RB Tennent Years - Grant Cullen
Coatbridge Poem-WW

 

Honeywell
William Bain & Co
Calder Hot Roll John Marrs

Thomas Hudson & Co


Bairds of Old Monkland

Bairds of Gartsherrie

William Baird & Co



“Auld” Old Monkland
(Bob Cameron  c1986)

Old Monkland Memories
from Canada - John Marrs

Memories of Langloan c1987
Margie (Logue) Weisak
Langloan Lum

Janet Hamilton -
The Candy Man - Art McGivern
Baxters Buses
Iron & Steelworks New
 

Iron & Steelworks in Coatbridge

 

Gartsherrie ironworks

Bus Full of Memories -
Tam Craven
ABC Minors
Dick Barton - Special Agent
Birds of Prey
The Railways
Gartloch Hosp
Bert Gilroy
MEMORIES
The Penny Project
Cowboys
More Cowboys

 

clear gif



As remembered by Bob McMillan

Detachable collars

Between the late nineteenth century and mid-twentieth century, men's collars were often detachable from their shirts, connected only by two removable collar studs (one in front and one in back). Detachable collars were very stiff, and either stood straight up or were pressed over at an ironed-in, starched crease.

The collars were stiff, almost rigid. (indeed some were made from celluloid, a type of early plastic, and were moulded in to shape. Pity the poor wearer! They also turned yellow with age.)

These throw-backs to an earlier, Victorian age were made of linen, just like a good quality shirt of the period but were stiffened with a liner and heavily starched. They were stored and laundered unfolded and had to be doubled over to form the shirt collar. The two “Peaks” (the pointed end of each front side) were also stiffened with a “Bone” (a short, stiff strip of rigid material, possibly originally bone, that kept the peak flat and straight. This slotted in to a small pocket sewn in to the underside of the collar peak and had to be swapped to each new collar).

Between the stiffening liner, the fold-over of the collar and the starch used in the laundering process, the collars were almost rigid in use.


The collar shown here is the soft, or unstarched, version but the shape is the same.

The collar was attached to the shirt with two ‘studs’, one in the centre of the neck at the back and one at the front which also took the place of the top button of the shirt. Both studs had a broad head, slightly larger in diameter than a drawing pin, which was usually covered with white enamel or plastic on the surface that sat against your skin.

The ‘back stud’ had a short stem with a fixed disc of about 4 mm in diameter on the end. This was inserted through a ‘button hole’ in the band at the top of the shirt back (where the collar of a modern shirt would join the shirt back) from the wearer’s side towards the outside so that the broad head of the stud sat on the inside of the shirt band.

The shirt had no top button at the front. Instead it had a button hole on both sides. The ‘front stud’ was inserted in a similar fashion to the back stud but in to one top button hole. The 4 mm disc on the end of this stud was on a pivot so that it could fold almost flat against the stem of the stud. This was necessary for getting the stud through the two layers of shirt and two layers of collar without distorting the smooth crispness of the collar.
 

The front stud on left & rear stud on the right

The shirt would normally be worn without the collar until the last minute, especially if the wearer had cut himself shaving. As collars, and the laundering of them, cost money they were treated with care. Personal pride, and the housewife’s pride in turning her family out all neat and tidy, meant that the collar had to be spotless and pristine every time.

With the shirt on the wearer,  the front stud was pushed through the top button hole on the second part of the shirt, thus keeping the shirt front closed. The collar, still unfolded, was attached to the back stud by pushing the 4 mm disc through a ‘button hole’ in the collar. The chosen tie was placed against the bottom section of the collar (think of how you place your tie on your shirt collar today) and the top section of the collar folded down in to place. Both ends of collar were brought round to the front of the shirt and the front stud pushed through the ‘button holes’ in the ends to secure the collar. It must have been like having an iron band round your neck! Now the tie could be fashioned in to the knot of the wearer’s choice and this covered the front stud.

My father would never go out of the house in the evening or at weekends without a collar and tie on. Even on holiday he was to be seen on the promenade at Ayr or Saltcoats in the height of summer (hmmm) in suit, collar and tie. The only concession made on holiday was to use shirts with sewn on collars rather than the removable ones.
 

Holidays at Ayr and Saltcoats. Note that in the height of summer (Hmm) Dad still has on not just a suit but collar, tie and pullover!

Gents underwear was usually an armless cotton vest and underpants akin to a pair of shorts. Many men still wore ‘Long-john’ type underwear that went right down to the ankles or an all-in-one ‘combination’ garment with arms and legs. This garment covered the body from shoulders to ankles and buttoned up the front.

 

 
 Life &Times Insurance Reminiscence Genealogy Leisure Memories

Hydrocon  

Detachable Collars

Boys at Play

Utilities

Sunnyside - Part 1

Sunnyside - Part 2

Red Bridge 1

Red Bridge 2

Coatbridge Co-op 1

Coatbridge Co-op 2

Kipps

Thom Gilchrist Obit

Alexander Hospital

 

Travel Insurance

Home Insurance

Life Insurance

Motor Insurance

Payment Protect

Private Health

Critical Illness

Long Term Care

Glossary -Terms


You got Mail

Contact us

Links
Your Home Town

Memories

Start a project?

Street Games

Skipping Songs

ABC Minors

 Dick Barton

 Dr Who

 Cowboys

 More Cowboys

 Tea Dances

How did we survive?

Young at Heart

Genealogy Info

Scottish Genealogy

Before the Famine

Irish Emigration

Ulster Emigration

Lanarkshire Parish

Lanarkshire Links

Irish Links

Books

Can YOU help?

Irish Philosophy

Scot Roots

Scots Family

Summerlee Trams

North Calder Heritage

Strathclyde  Park 

Drumpellier Park

Glenboig Park

Northburn Park

Summerlee Heritage

Monklands Ramblers

Palacerigg Park

Britannia Panopticon

Birds of Prey

Nearby places

Humour pages

Poetry Corner

“Auld” Monkland

Bairds of Old Monkland

Langloan c1987

Coatbridge Cinemas

Airdrie Cinemas

Lambertons

Murray & Paterson

Stewart & LLoyds

RB Tennent 

Honeywell

William Bain & Co

Calder Hot Roll

Thomas Hudson

The Faskine

Use the new Forum    Recommended Professionals & Tradesmen            Send an email to Monklands Memories

Copyright Monklands Memories  2000-2012   Site designed by Sennet   Pensions Information  Tell  friends about Monklands Memories