Hannah Furness wrote in Telegraph, UK on December 3 2015:
“...Sir Winston Churchill was not so adept, it appears, at
paying his bills. The archives of Henry Poole & Co, the Savile Row tailors
who dressed the young Sir Winston, have revealed how the politician repeatedly
refused to pay for his suits, leaving a £197 bill outstanding. He became so infuriated by requests for
payment, it discloses, that he “took umbrage and quit” their patronage,
claiming it was good for “morale” and the tailor’s business for him to be
dressed well. His last order was placed
in 1937, for minor repairs to a yachting cap, according to the Henry Poole
& Co archives, which stretch back to 1865 and are to be made public today....”
The Savile Row tailors played such a big part in the history of 20th century. Here are a couple of more examples from the history of subcontinent.
Katherine Frank, 'Indira: The Life of Indira Nehru Gandhi', 2001:
"...Anand Bhawan was not merely an elaborate replica of an
English country estate. The Nehru household was actually bifurcated between
East and West, India and Britain. Motilal Nehru wore expensive suits ordered
from Savile Row tailors (though contrary to rumour his linen was not shipped
back to Europe to be laundered). He eschewed religion, drank Scotch whisky, ate
Western food (including meat) prepared by a Christian cook, and insisted that
only English be spoken at his table. He employed British tutors and governesses
to educate his children and, after Harrow, sent his son to Cambridge..."
Nisid Hajari, ‘Midnight's Furies: The Deadly Legacy of
India's Partition’, 2015:
“...Jinnah had a cold, relentless courtroom style that
earned him enemies but also victories; by 1916 he had become a force at the
Bombay Bar. At the beginning of the twentieth century, politics on the
subcontinent was a matter for gentlemen—successful lawyers, doctors, and
wealthy industrialists—who gathered under the auspices of the Indian National
Congress, established in 1885, to debate how to move the country gradually
toward self-government within the British Empire. Jinnah fit right in with this
crowd. If anything, his Savile Row suits were better tailored, his pants more
sharply creased, his two-toned shoes even shinier than those of more
established figures. Within the Congress, he quickly became known as a man to
watch...”
And I am also sure that Mr. Nehru and Mr. Jinnah paid their bills unlike Mr. Churchill. Nehru and Jinnah would eventually stop wearing the western clothes.
Artist: Peter Arno (1904-1968), The New Yorker, March 28 1942
And I am also sure that Mr. Nehru and Mr. Jinnah paid their bills unlike Mr. Churchill. Nehru and Jinnah would eventually stop wearing the western clothes.
Artist: Peter Arno (1904-1968), The New Yorker, March 28 1942