Skip to main content

Meyer, Max, 1876-1953 (1876-1953)

 Person

Dates

  • Existence: 1876-1953

Biography

First chairman of the FIT Board of Trustees and acting president of the college at his death in 1953.

"Born in Alsace in 1876, Max Meyer immigrated to the US with his family in 1890. The family's decision to move was largely undertaken so that Max could avoid compulsory service in the Prussian army and to improve the marriage prospects for his sisters, one of whom married Abraham Beller, the owner of A. Beller & Co. (established in 1890), a cloak and suit manufacturer. Max's formal education ceased at the age of 14 when he went to work for his new brother-in-law, sweeping the sidewalks and executing other menial tasks. Max quickly earned the trust and respect of his new boss and by the age of 21 was promoted to buyer.

Mr. Meyer made his first trip to Paris in 1897. Meyer later recollected that he believed that he was among the first buyers from American ready-to-wear manufacturers to purchase models directly from the couture houses. Over the course of his 39 year career as a buyer and executive for A. Beller & Co., Meyer visited Paris 110 times licensing designs from top houses including Chanel, Lanvin, Cheirut, Jenny, Paquin, Premet, Callot Soeurs, Worth, Drecoll, Poiret, Patou, and many others. Largely the garments were suits or outerwear, but occasionally dresses, which coordinated with an outerwear garment, were included in their collections.

The A. Beller & Co. adaptations of imported models as well as the company's own original designs were of the highest quality and retailed at high-end department stores. The company's product was considered the gold standard for American manufacturers, and as executives, Beller and Meyer were widely respected within the industry. Meyer, in particular, was heavily involved with various garment trade worker unions and an activist for worker's rights and labor reform. Meyer retired from A. Beller & Co. in 1929 two years before the company would shutter its doors amid the Great Depression.

Meyer's personal involvement with the fashion industries did not end upon his retirement. In 1939, he helped found the Central High School of the Needle Trades to prepare young minds and hands for careers in the fashion industry. The High School would expand to become the Fashion Institute of Technology in 1944." (bio by unknown author)

Found in 7 Collections and/or Records:

A. Beller & Co. sketch collection, 1914-1929

 Collection
Identifier: SC.146
Scope and Contents

This collection is comprised of A. Beller & Co. sketches for womenswear designs, 1914 - 1929

Dates: 1914-1929

George E. Linton scrapbook, August 1940

 Collection
Identifier: SC.514
Scope and Contents

This collection holds a small scrapbook containing mostly newspaper clippings along with magazine tear sheets and a note collected by George Linton of Linton Tweeds. A note on the front of the book states, "Fashion and style scrap book on efforts of New York City to take over the center of fashion and style following the demise of the French in June, 1940."

Dates: 1940 August

Papillon Ltd. scrapbook

 Collection
Identifier: SC.407
Scope and Contents

This collection holds newspaper clippings, press releases, photographs, dating 1970 -1974 that document press coverage of the new womenswear fashion design firm Papillon. The illustrator for some of the designs was FIT graduate Jennifer Jordan.

Dates: 1970-1974

Sidney Bernstein interview, 1985 February 5, 1985 February 5

 Item
Identifier: SC.FITA.3.20.4.9.12.7
Scope and Contents Vice President of the Educational Foundation for the Fashion Industries Sidney Bernstein discusses his childhood and educational development in New York City. The launch of his successful real estate career put him in proximity to myriad furriers in the city. Eventually this led him to become more and more involved with the fur industry. He discusses the origins of the Educational Foundation for the Fashion Industries and its work abroad at the Shenkar School in Israel. Bernstein initially...
Dates: 1985 February 5

Symposium records, 2018

 folder
Identifier: SC.FITA.3.10.1.2.32
Scope and Contents

Includes the papers and presentation delivered at the 2018 Symposium "Behind the Designer" on Saturday, May 12, 2018. The names of the presenters and the title of their presentations contained in this folder are: Jennifer Pronesti "Basket, Bones and Biomorphism: Beneath the Surface of Ralph Rucci's Process" ; Bethany Gingrich "The Temple of the Muses: Max Meyer and the New York Museum" ; Darnell Lisby "Azzedine Alaïa and Naomi Campbell: Like Father and Daughter" .

Dates: 2018

The Reminiscences of Theodore Fred Kuper, 1967 September 29 and 1969 August 15, 1967 September 29 and 1969 August 15

 Item
Identifier: SC.FITA.3.20.4.9.12.9
Scope and Contents Articles and interview of Theodore Fred Kuper about the origins of the Fashion Institute of Technology (New York, N.Y.), conducted by the Oral History Research Office of Columbia University in 1969. "These reminiscences of Theodore Fred Kuper refer to the creation and development of the Fashion Institute of Technology, a Community College of the City of New York under the program of the University of the State of New York, together with the creation of the Educational Foundation for the...
Dates: 1967 September 29 and 1969 August 15