The little-known link of Levis to yodeling

Some important information needed in life is left out of our educational system. One such bit of information is the history of Levi Strauss and the copper rivet.

How should we refer to such extraneous information?  Years ago when I was in medical school, acronyms were already taking over.  Everything had an acronym — “PMC” is used to refer to Portneuf Medical Center.  One of my professors spent far too much time considering the right acronym for this category of information.  He came up with LKFAWGAD (pronounced lick faug ad), an acronym for Little Known Facts About Who Gives A Damn.  Since the story of Levi Strauss is truly an all-American story, I would venture to say this is an important LKFAWGAD.

This is the LKFAWGAD of Levi Strauss and the copper rivet.  Levi Strauss is a bit of an American legend.  In many ways he represents all that encompasses the American dream.  He was born in Bavaria, Germany, immigrating to the United States at the age of 14 and within 10 years earned citizenship.  He settled in San Francisco, starting a dry goods business.

At the same time, a tailor named Jacob Davis in Reno, Nevada, started ordering cloth from Levi to make work pants for miners.  One of Jacob’s customers kept ripping the pockets on the pants.  Jacob kept trying to figure out a way to reinforce the pockets for the man and finally came up with placing copper rivets at the stress points on the pocket corners and the bottom of the button fly. An ingeniously simple concept.

And now the American promise and the American dream.  Jacob’s new “riveted work pants” caught on quickly and were in demand.  Worried someone would steal his idea; he decided to apply for a patent to protect his invention but did not have the needed $68 for the application.  He wrote Levi, they became partners, and in 1873 they received patent number 139,121.  For the nearly 20 years of their patent’s life, they were the only company allowed to make riveted work pants.

The story is still not complete.  Levi and his partner Jacob are also responsible for one of the most original of American singing styles.  It is amazing that a dry goods merchant and a tailor could also be involved in music and the arts. But they were.

If you recall, the copper rivets were on the pocket corners, front and back, and at the bottom of the fly where the four seams came together creating a significant stress point.  For years there had been rumors and mutterings about those crotch rivets, as they were called.  The cowboys were not happy with them and they complained regularly.

What was their problem?  Levi and Jacob had given them a durable denim work pant with copper rivets so they wore well and were ideal for the cowboy’s job.

The problem is the physics of copper.  Copper is an excellent conductor and therefore can get hot rather quickly.  Take a moment imagining a tired cowboy at the end of a long day squatting by the campfire having a last cup of coffee before a few hours sleep and another day of the same.  If he stayed at the fire too long, anatomy near the crotch rivet could get a rather uncomfortable burn making the next day in the saddle a long day.

But, even worse was when the cowboy did not realize the rivet had gotten hot and he got back on his horse.  When he settled down into the saddle, that hot copper rivet came in contact with …  Suffice it to say many historians give tribute to Jacob Davis’s copper rivet for creating the cowboy yodel.  It seems the yodel was pretty much all the cowboy could utter for the duration of his agony.

The Levi Company abandoned the crotch rivet in 1942, in part because of the years of pleas from the cowboys and in part because of wartime rationing restrictions.  But the yodel would be with us forever, reminding us of the lone cowboy riding the range with a red hot copper rivet taking him to higher yodeling octaves than had ever been reached before.

Thank you for the yodel Mr. Strauss and Mr. Davis.

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