“What makes you think you can take on a woman with five kids?”
Seattle’s James Gang was among the first to retail RUNNING magazine.
And then I became a store owner myself.
Remember one day I sold a single pair of shoe laces for eighty-one cents. Only sale of the day.
I’m telling you, retail can be hard. Real tough.
Laurel James is tougher.
With a great smile.
Laurel’s Laurels
Posted: 26 Nov 2015 12:28 AM PST
Seattle’s Super Jock ‘n Jill Celebrates Its 40th Anniversary
by Mark Cullen
Dubbed the “Godmother of Green Lake” by Seattle columnist Emmett Watson, Laurel James opened her legendary running store, Super Jock ‘n Jill, the day after Thanksgiving in 1975.
James was the single mother of five boys when she decided that the real estate and insurance licenses she held did not represent her future. “It wasn’t working at all,” said James. “This was the era of ‘Will the last person leaving Seattle please turn out the lights.’ ”
When her two oldest sons, Brent and Chet, went to college, her son Bryce came home one day in 1974 and asked if he could invite his new coach over for dinner.
Pat Tyson stayed for six years.
Tyson was the inspiration for James’ involvement with running, and he introduced her to his famous Oregon teammate and college roommate Steve Prefontaine. “Meeting Pre was like putting frosting on the cake,” she said. “I thought he was great and my Mom thought he was great, too.”
At 40, James had $10,000 and a dream. Stand-alone running stores were a novelty then; they were few and, quite literally, far between. But the running bug had bitten James.
“One reason I started Super Jock ‘n Jill was none of the sporting goods stores had a selection of good running shoes. All I had was a pair of Keds, and even track spikes were dated then.”
James opened “SJ+J” in a converted gas station near Seattle’s Green Lake where, ironically, Road Runner Sports now operates. This location, however, was her second choice. All along she had her eye on the Masonic Temple building where the store operates to this day, and after a two-and-a-half year wait, she occupied her dream location.
The fledgling business was a family enterprise, and all five sons helped clean years of dust out of the first facility. Chet is now the owner of Super Jock ‘n Jill and Brent – one of Nike’s early employees – has had a very successful career in shoe design. Allen was a ’92 and ’96 race walking Olympian. Says Chet, “My Mom gave birth to this; I adopted it.”
The store and the James home hosted prominent guests: Grete Waitz, Fred Lebow, Olympic and World champion Ernesto Canto and the Mexican race walking team, and none other than Arthur Lydiard.
The name of the store grew out of a trade show James attended in Phoenix. A friend had suggested The Jock Shop in honor of her energetic brood, but James flew home knowing that wasn’t quite right. “I came off the plane with Super Jock and four days later added Jill.”
This name generated threats of a lawsuit from the Jockey underwear company. Said James to their lawyer, “What makes you think you can take on a woman with five kids? What kind of press are you going to get out of that?”
Geography played a key role in the success of her enterprise. Green Lake became the go-to destination for Seattle’s running community as the 1970s running boom took off. James vowed that she would not start in a mall. “I don’t want looky-loos,” she recalled saying to herself. “I want clientele.”
Quick to recognize the opportunity, James organized timed runs around the lake, and an enterprising Seattle podiatrist, Bill Warnekros, sponsored Thursday evening clinics which drew grateful gimpy runners to the store for free advice.
Key to James’ success was her resourcefulness. “I remember one day a truck pulled up and they offloaded something like 577 pairs of Nikes – with a bill for $30,000. I didn’t have $30,000 and after three days, I called Nike’s credit manager, who really didn’t want me to have my own store. But their local rep, Al Miller, had faith that I’d make it.”
It was James’ irrefutable logic that carried the day. “I told the credit manager that he didn’t want these back, and that I didn’t want to pay a 15% surcharge if I did return them. I promised I’d send him a check every Friday.” In three months the bill was paid – and the shoes were sold. “It was 1979,” said James, “and it was one of the times we were hanging by a thread.”
Super Jock ‘n Jill was the first sponsor of the Seattle Marathon, and sponsorship made for some strange bedfellows in the early days. One underwriter of the Red Brick Road Half-Marathon was the lamb industry. “The night before the race we had a whole gang of people in my house making lamb sandwiches that we gave to the vendors the next day!”
It was James who conceived of the Olympia, WA, bid for the 1984 US Women’s Olympic Trials Marathon, and a point of pride for James is the trailblazing support she and her store gave women distance runners and running.
Olympia was up against heavyweights: New York (Fred Lebow and the New York Road Runners Club), Buffalo (which had already been awarded the US men’s marathon trials), Los Angeles (which had ‘84’s biggest meet of all), and Kansas City. Olympia pulled out all the stops, including having US Senator Slade Gorton narrate the presentation in person.
Olympia’s win is considered one of the most colossal upsets in bid history. No surprise, given the determined driving force behind it.
James, who in August turned twice the age of the store, views Super Jock ‘n Jill as a neighborhood store – with a very expansive neighborhood.
The store’s success has always been about the personal relationships it generates. In its early days it was “a great hangout place,” said James, a place where lifelong friendships were formed. “There was no other place to go to find this sense of a running community.”
For 40 years, a store forged from family has given Seattle’s running community its home.
Find more of Mark Cullen’s work here. http://www.trackerati.com/2015/11/laurels-laurels.html
The Godmother of Greenlake
by Brent James
“Mom made everything a bit of an adventure and that was an amazing concept for us.”
The Sports business in the 1970’s included nearly zero women, if you rounded up. Laurel James, a single parent of five boys, always had big ideas and took the leap. With encouragement from Steve Prefontaine, my mother created one of the first running shoe specialty stores in America out of an abandoned gas station located at Green Lake, near the University of Washington. She had perfect timing, the Running Boom of the 70’s was just starting and Green Lake had a very reasonable circumference of three miles, becoming the epicenter of running in Seattle.
About the gas station. It was filthy and had been storage space for a long time. We had no money really and so lots of elbow grease and hours of scrubbing and scraping. We just nailed 2x4s and 4x4s together, cut some plywood and that was our displays, shelving and storage rack. We didn’t even bother to paint the wood. For sure, it had a very 70’s hand-crafted vibe.
Laurel was perfectly suited for this adventure. Personable, charismatic, full of energy, not to mention the free labor pool with her brood of bros. Of course, there were several bumps in the road but her tenacity and courage willed it to become successful and an icon in a city full of Iconic retailers – REI, Nordstroms, Starbucks, and later Costco, Amazon. Giants all.
Laurel never flinched. She opened the store on November 1975, and immediately decided to sponsor the Seattle Marathon which always ran on the Saturday after Thanksgiving. Super Jock ‘n’ Jill accelerated the growth and popularity of running in the Pacific Northwest. She was instrumental in creating the most popular races in the Northwest region. the store helped put on over 100 events a year in the late 70’s and early 80’s. Most of which required you to pick up your race number at the store; think foot traffic generator. Many of those events exist today.
If it was good for running, it was good for business. We were growing the sport.
In the beginning, FOR YEARS, Laurel on Wednesdays would go stand next to the running path at Green Lake with a stop watch. There would be a handful of runners (all guys) waiting for her to say, “Go!” This simple act grew until several hundreds might show up for an informal race. Word of foot made Super Jock ‘n’ Jill’s success. She also bought the very bright extended panel van with a crazy stripes and the logo large on the back rear panel and it had two sunroofs. THIS became the pace car for most races with a large digital clock mounted to the back and someone standing thru the sunroof yelling out splits. What was brilliant is, of course, as soon as the race was over, the van became a store. This may sound so expected but remember she was at the very beginning of an industry just being formed.
One of the biggest gambles Laurel made came when she learned that Nike was fazing out the Red Waffle Trainers. That’s the shoe that put Nike on the map. Mom bought the rest of the inventory. Bought it all. Super Jock ‘n’ Jill was the only place you could get the original waffle shoe. To be clear we had them for a while but we got requests from all over the country and in the end that one deal put the store on the map. REMEMBER there was no internet. It was fascinating and Nike HQ customer service would send us customers who wanted the Red Waffles. Laurel really financially stretched herself to make this happen but it ended up being a great move.
Laurel was pure running geek retailer.
We knew we could trust her to look out for the Nike brand, such as it was back in the day.
And she nurtured her son Brent to do the same. Great honest retail partners!
And fun to be around.
Nelson Farris, aka Employee #2
“I’ll never forget being the kid stocking the bathtub every year at the Trail’s End Marathon with every runner’s favorite beverage. Mind you, I was twelve to fourteen years old. Our room was near the finish line and all the top runners ended up coming into our room. It was crazy, all these young guys hanging out in this older woman’s room with her kid.” – Allen James.
“Best story I’ve ever read on the Pioneer. She made running important and not just in Washington. Her spirit was the foundation, her tenacity the fuel and her success the fire, which continues to burn hot. All respect to her and her family and humble appreciation for the James’ family’s friendship.” – Tom Raynor
Many such notes. All credit must go to Mark Cullen for his “seminal” article and Allen and Brent James for their input. Most of all, Laurel. That light is bright.