LEADERSHIP QUOTE OF THE DAY (19 May 2012): To manage a system effectively| you might focus on the interactions of the parts rather than their behaviour taken separately. - Russell L. Ackoff
FASHION & GROOMING
The Oldest Jewellers in North America
Shreve, Crump & Low, a Boston, Massachusetts business in its third century of operation, is the oldest jeweler in North America and has built such prestigious trophies as the Davis Cup and the Cy Young Award.
The story of America's oldest and finest jeweler began in 1796 when John McFarlane a watchmaker and renowned silversmith opened a workshop across the street from Paul Revere at Downtown Crossing.
Throughout the 1800s the company grew in its prestige until a consolidation of firms created the name Shreve, Crump & Low in 1869.
Like any epic tale there are stories of promise, success and tragedy. Marred by the Great Boston Fire of 1872 that destroyed the entire store, Shreve's rebuilt and went on to serve Boston's high society from the Cabots to the Crowninshields to the Kennedys.
In 1899, a Harvard University tennis player named Dwight F. Davis commissioned a prodigious trophy from Shreve's to be awarded to the winner of a tournament to which they challenged a team from the United Kingdom. The prize is now famously known as the Davis Cup.
In 2011 owner David Walker announced a relocation to the first block of Newbury street, Boston's finest area of retail. The new store will be one of the finest independent jewelry stores in North America, encompassing three floors of luxury retail.
Coinciding with the opening of the new Newbury store, Shreve, Crump & Low announced an enormous addition to its Luxury Timepiece division, adding brands such as A.Lange & Sohne, Blancpain and Zenith.