dress shoes leather mens Museum Brown Cap Toe Oxford Dress Shoe 6 UK / 7 US
SKU: 95106761681
dress shoes leather mens

dress shoes leather mens Museum Brown Cap Toe Oxford Dress Shoe 6 UK / 7 US

Sale price$25.31 Regular price$28.12
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Size: 4

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Description

dress shoes leather mens Museum Brown Cap Toe Oxford Dress Shoe 6 UK / 7 USBrown Museum calfskin is the understated version of the Ilcea finish a hand painted antiqued brown that shifts between chestnut and walnut across the upper, with a depth no standard calf carries. Applied by hand, one pair at a time, at the Ilcea Conceria in Italy. On a flat photograph it reads as a rich brown; in person, it moves. The Richard is a cap toe oxford on the City last: closed lacing, one clean seam across the toe, a generous round toe and a

Brown Museum calfskin is the understated version of the Ilcea finish — a hand-painted antiqued brown that shifts between chestnut and walnut across the upper, with a depth no standard calf carries. Applied by hand, one pair at a time, at the Ilcea Conceria in Italy. On a flat photograph it reads as a rich brown; in person, it moves.

The Richard is a cap toe oxford on the City last: closed lacing, one clean seam across the toe, a generous round toe and a fit built for long wear. Goodyear welted by our artisans, finished with the fiddleback beveled-waist leather sole — a hand-beveled waist that distinguishes the construction from anything assembled to a price.

For the man who wants the formal shoe in the colour that works with everything — and wants the leather to do something that mass-produced brown can't. The Museum brown Richard is the cap toe for the long career, not just the occasion.

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SKU: 95106761681

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Joe S
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 4
ITS GOOD OIL
Size: 5 Quarts
OVERALL NOT BAD BUT USING IT TO SEASON A CAST IRON WILL CREATE A BIT TOO DARK OF A SHEEN. WISH THE MANUFACTURER MENTIONED THAT
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Reviewed in the United States on April 8, 2025
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patricia
New York, US
★★★★★ 5
buenos
Size: 5 Quarts
Siempre compro de este aceite y es buenisimo me gusta
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Reviewed in the United States on May 5, 2026
B
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Booktroll
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 5
Well researched, disturbing, engaging.
Format: Paperback
I was amazed at how indepth and involved this history was. Very interesting, engaging and also very disturbing.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 1, 2026
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S. tamburin
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 4
Good For History Lovers
I doubt anyone who does not want to read a true historical book with a lot of facts but not as exciting as a non-fiction novel will enjoy this. I liked it because I learned a lot of things about New York that I was really surprised to read. Seems my beloved New York had a pretty bloody, violent history towards slaves and Catholics and some others the leaders and people did not like. I didn't realize the punishments of the day were just as bad, if not worse, than those of the Salem Witch hunt days. Beware, some of the content may turn your stomach.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 17, 2014
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Rocco Dormarunno
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 5
Search for Scapegoats
Format: Hardcover
Jill Lepore's "New York Burning: Liberty, Slavery, and Conspiracy in Eighteenth-Century Manhattan" is a valuable and admirable examination of one of the darkest episodes in New York's history: the so-called slave rebellion of 1741 and the brutal vengeance that was extracted. Professor Lepore's painstaking research confronts the reader with a terrible conclusion: even the most respectable of people in society will consent to the deaths of human beings, based on even the tiniest shreds of evidence. Focusing primarily on the actions of Daniel Horsmanden, the City's Recorder, Lepore provides the reader with a background on the attitudes of New York's whites toward their slaves. She makes clear that Gotham was neither the first nor only city to have witnessed slave uprisings. (It had suffered a similar uprising a couple of decades earlier.) But the events of 1741 were unique for several reasons: --the shifting finger-pointing at various groups; --the inconsistency of Mary Burton's testimony, which essentially was the case against several slaves;and --Horsmanden's bizarre behavior toward Mary Burton. Admittedly, I've only superficially studied this dark time in New York's history, so I was shocked to learn that there were actually several "conspiracies": the Negro Plot, Hughson's Plot, the Spanish Plot, the Roman Plot, etc. Each plot was hatched depending on who confessed to what. Worst of all, the white population of New York--fueled by racism, xenophobia, paranoia, and, not the least of all, bloodlust--went right along with it. And, with the exception of an intriguing anonymous letter from Massachussetts, it seems the rest of the colonies went along with it, too. While Horsmanden is just short of villified in this book, he is not alone in his culpability. Professor Lapore's "New York Burning" will disturb many readers. The accounts of the slaves and the few whites burning, hanging, begging, and praying are graphic and heartbreaking. Still, this in an incredibly important book for anyone interested in the history of our nation and/or the all-too-tragic fragility of race relations in America. For this, Professor Lapore deserves our appreciation
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Reviewed in the United States on June 8, 2006

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