PrintFeatures:
- Antique full-grain leather
- Eagle overlay on shaft
- Lightly cushioned insole
- Leather lined
- Snip toe
- Leather outsole
- Handcrafted and finished—no two are alike
Only the most experienced leather craftsmen make Corral Boots. These Crackle Distressed Western Boots are made with antique full-grain leather and feature two eagle inlays on the front and back of the shaft. The boots themselves are leather lined and lighted cushioned. With a leather outsole, these boots are the perfect representation of true western culture.
Style(s): R2235
Print
Toe Type:
Round
Outsole:
Leather
Lifestyle:
Western
Heel Type:
Roper
Lining:
Leather
Upper Material:
Leather
Shaft:
11"
Material:
Leather
Color:
Tan
Closure:
Pull-On
Print
After "Daddy Joe" died in 1918, other members of the family wanted to
move the business to Fort Worth. Miss Enid felt so strongly that "Daddy
Joe" wanted the company in Nocona, she stayed. In 1925, her brothers
packed up the equipment and moved to Fort Worth.
Miss Enid had made her decision. She borrowed $5,000 to keep seven
employees in her small shop and founded the Nocona Boot Company.
During those first years, Miss Enid turned her home into a boarding
house, worked as a sales clerk, shipping clerk, stenographer and credit
manager. At first, some men had trouble doing business with a lady
bootmaker, but they soon discovered the quality was just as good as her
late father's.
The discovery of oil near Nocona brought many new customer's to Miss
Enid's young company. They made a 16 inch "lace-up" boot that was tough
enough to survive the oil fields and the wildcatters kept coming back
for more.
Accompanied by her sister, Miss Enid made her first sales trip into West
Texas in 1926. "The roads looked like cattle trails in those day's" she
said. "And for good reason, they were cattle trails. Our old Model T
took a pretty good beating on that first trip. In fact, we lost a back
wheel once, it came loose and jumped over a fence. Despite the hazards
of the road, the trip was successful. We came back with a book full of
orders and a new market for boots."
On the way to the company's national reputation as a quality bootmaker,
Miss Enid sponsored a Pony Express race from Nocona to San Francisco.
Fourteen cowboys and one cowgirl took off at 9 AM on March 1,1939, from
Nocona and the first rider reached San Francisco at 2 PM on March 24th.
In 1981, the Nocona Boot Company merged with Justin Industries, parent
company of the Justin Boot Company, bringing the bootmaking histories of
the two family companies full circle.


