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All the United States Connecticut Bridgeport Warner Brothers Corset Factory
Warner Brothers Corset Factory is permanently closed.

This entry remains in the Atlas as a record of its history, but it is no longer accessible to visitors.

Warner Brothers Corset Factory

This factory made "health corsets" that were a step towards liberating women's bodies.

Bridgeport, Connecticut

Added By
Molly McBride Jacobson
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A tag for a Warner’s Coraline corset.   Boston Public Library/CC BY 2.0
Old Warnaco plant in Bridgeport, abandoned, 2011   826PARANORMAL
Old Warnaco plant in Bridgeport, abandoned, 2011   826PARANORMAL
A 19th century sketch of the Warner Brothers Corset Factory.   Haabet/Public Domain
Inside the Coraline corset tag.   Boston Public Library/CC BY 2.0
  Calvin the Courageous / Atlas Obscura User
  Calvin the Courageous / Atlas Obscura User
  Calvin the Courageous / Atlas Obscura User
285 Lafayette Avenue, at the corner of Lafayette and Atlantic Aves, not far from Seaside Park. Originally built for the use of the female employees of the Warner Brothers Corset Company for dining, lecture and meeting hall with library, music and reading rooms. By 1917, the Warners employed some 2200 women employees. The buildings is currently used by the Bridgeport International Academy as of 1994. NRHP in 1982.   Calvin the Courageous / Atlas Obscura User
285 Lafayette Avenue, at the corner of Lafayette and Atlantic Aves, not far from Seaside Park. Originally built for the use of the female employees of the Warner Brothers Corset Company for dining, lecture and meeting hall with library, music and reading rooms. By 1917, the Warners employed some 2200 women employees. The buildings is currently used by the Bridgeport International Academy as of 1994. NRHP in 1982.   Calvin the Courageous / Atlas Obscura User
First floor, Gregory St side   n0m0reher0es / Atlas Obscura User
Flooded basement of the remaining main building.   n0m0reher0es / Atlas Obscura User
First floor, Myrtle Ave side of the remaining main building   n0m0reher0es / Atlas Obscura User
Dr. Warner’s Coraline Health corset, produced at the corset factory.   Haabet/Public Domain
“Blissful dreams assured by using Warner Bros Coraline Corsets.”   Boston Public Library/CC BY 2.0
Renovated lofts at the site of the old corset factory   Map Data © 2015 Google 
  missingfilm / Atlas Obscura User
  missingfilm / Atlas Obscura User
Dr Ira DeVer Warner and family are buried in Mt Grove Cemetery Bridgeport in an impressive tomb on top of a hill   Calvin the Courageous / Atlas Obscura User
  missingfilm / Atlas Obscura User
  Calvin the Courageous / Atlas Obscura User
  Calvin the Courageous / Atlas Obscura User
  Calvin the Courageous / Atlas Obscura User
  Calvin the Courageous / Atlas Obscura User
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About

It seems obvious now, but it wasn't until the late 1800s that doctors began to notice the injuries women received by wearing corsets made of steel and whalebone. Their lungs were crushed and their organs squeezed to the point of failure. At this factory, two doctors pioneered a corset that, along with burgeoning women's liberation, allowed women to do more.

Though they were associated with delicate femininity, corsets were actually heavy duty objects structured to literally force a woman's body into a given period's beauty standards. But towards the end of the 19th century, two things were happening to change the public feeling about corsets.

First, women were gaining more independence and social mores about clothing were loosening. Ladies displayed their shoulders and ankles in public when taking part in activities like swimming and bicycling, not to mention the long working hours of lower class women, and needed to be able to move better. Second, in the wake of a prolific era in medicine, there was a trend in health cures. People had the sense that we, as a public, could become our best selves by improving our health through health tonics, health tinctures, health seltzers, health soaps, and of course, health underwear.

After unsuccessfully lecturing against the deleterious effects of tightly cinched corsets, Doctors Ira and Lucien Warner pioneered a "health corset." It was made of flexible fabric, and instantly became the most popular model available on the market. They later introduced several practical inventions to women's undergarments, such as garter clips to connect one's hose to the corset. They stayed up with the times too—in 1915 they bought the patent for the first bra, invented by the 19-year-old Mary Phelps Jacob. 

The Warner Brothers, or "Warnarco" employed over a thousand seamstresses and produced over 6,000 corsets daily at their Bridgeport factory. This facility, like its product, did a lot to better the lives of women. The Warners arranged for free housing across the street from the factory for the female immigrants who worked for them. A school was also opened on the grounds where the employees could be educated in English and civics.

The corset fell out of fashion, and the bra industry became too competitive. The Warner Brothers Corset Factory closed and stood abandoned for a decades before being converted into swanky loft apartments.

Related Tags

Factories Underwear Women Feminism Abandoned

Community Contributors

Added By

Molly McBride Jacobson

Edited By

Meg, missingfilm, n0m0reher0es, Calvin the Courageous

  • Meg
  • missingfilm
  • n0m0reher0es
  • Calvin the Courageous

Published

October 3, 2016

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Sources
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warnaco_Group
  • http://wshu.org/post/story-bridgeports-revolutionary-corset-factory
  • http://www.ctpost.com/local/article/New-plans-in-works-for-Warnaco-property-5399325.php
Warner Brothers Corset Factory
Atlantic and Lafayette Streets
Bridgeport, Connecticut
United States
41.167641, -73.188233
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