WEAR WILD WOOLIES
The John Clark Saddle Company originated in Portland Oregon where they worked with some of the largest rodeos in the Northwest for their trophy saddles. They also were known for their amazing work with wooly chaps like these featured here. This vintage pair has hand-tooled leather, classic commercial findings, and of course, their signature statement caramel angora wooly legs. They’re incredible, unique, and impossible to ignore – stunning finds for the true collector!
Clark Saddlery Company
Founder: John Clark, 1870
Location: Portland, Oregon
John Clark started Portland, Oregon Saddlery in 1870 and it continued to operate in competition with Hamley and George Lawrence through the 1920s. Established in 1870, the John Clark Saddlery Co were manufacturers of an extensive line of harness and complete saddlery supplies. They were located at 104-106 Front Street in Portland. Their catalog No. 9 (c. 1914) numbered over 470 pages and included impressive full page photos of their pictorial 1913 War Bonnet Roundup (Idaho Falls, Idaho) Prize presentation saddle as well as their Frontier Days Roundup (Walla Walla, Wash) Prize saddle. They were well known as manufacturers of an extensive variety of leather and woolly chaps and even printed a separate bulletin to highlight new models many of which were ornately studded or two-tone angoras. Clark also made cinchas, scabbards, gun rigs, saddle and pommel bags, lather cuffs, spur leathers, reatas, Buermann bits and spurs
- artist:John Clark Saddlery, Portlad, OR
- hallmarks:62/31 Clark
- materials:leather, angora, commercial metal finding
- measurements: belt 45" , pant length 38"
- nice vintage condition
- style number:Misc673