The Invertère Coat Company Ltd was formed
in 1904 by Mr Harold Parkin and his two brothers. They began making coats above
a shop in the centre of Newton Abbot and the name "Invertere" (Latin
for "to turn about") was used to describe the Reversible coats they
had developed for the wealthy owners of the newly invented Motor Car.
The "Invertere Buildings" are
still standing proud in this Westcountry market town as a lasting testament to
a company which held various patents for methods of manufacturing reversible
coats that were so innovative in 1904 that they cannot be improved upon more
than 100 years later.
In 1948 the company was sold to a
Yorkshireman, Walter Sawtell, who bought new premises for the company and began
developing a larger product range for export, mainly into North
America . In 1966 the business was sold to Simpson of Piccadilly
Ltd and in 1968 was awarded "The Queens Award to Industry for Export
Achievement".
The Invertere factory was closed in 1986
and Harold Shaw, who had been Technical Director there, started a new business,
Westcountry Clothing Ltd, making the same Invertere coats under contract to
DAKS—Simpson.
Westcountry Clothing was sold to Moorbrook
Textiles in 1995 and shortly after this Moorbrook bought the Invertere Brand
from DAKS-Simpson. In May 2001 Graham and Peta Shaw bought Westcountry Clothing
from Moorbrook in a Management Buyout and continued to make invertere coats
under licence. In August 2003 Graham and Peta Shaw bought The Invertere Coat
Company from Moorbrook Textiles. Graham Shaw has been working for Invertere
since 1974 and his Father, Harold Shaw since 1948.
The Invertere Coat Company Ltd is still
wholly owned by the Shaw family. In 2012 the Invertere Coat Company Ltd granted
Imex Co., Ltd the worldwide licensee in order to expand the business.
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