The City That . . . . Collared the Country
In 1827 a Troy housewife, tired of scrubbing a whole shirt to clean one collar, took her scissors to it — and started an industry. Within a lifetime this city on the Hudson made nine of every ten collars in America, named the white-collar and blue-collar worker, and sent its steam-laundry women into the front ranks of American labor. The collar trade is long gone, but Troy kept the city the collar money built: one of the richest stands of Gilded Age architecture in the country, now a backdrop for The Gilded Age itself. Here is how a kitchen-table fix collared a nation — and shod the Union’s horses besides.
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