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Vans shoes co-founder dead at 90 – Paul Van Doren remembered as beloved ‘entrepreneur and innovator’

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THE co-founder of the skateboarding sneaker brand Vans had died aged 90, the company confirmed on Friday.

Paul Van Doren, who co-founded the California-based company with his brother Jim in 1966, passed away just days after publishing his memoir.

Paul Van Doren passed away just days after publishing his memoir

Vans announced Van Doren’s passing in a post to Twitter this afternoon. His cause of death is not yet known.

“It is with a heavy heart that Vans announces the passing of our co-founder, Paul Van Doren. Paul was not just an entrepreneur; he was an innovator,” the company wrote.

“The Van Doren Rubber Company was the culmination of a lifetime of experimentation and hard work in the shoe industry.

“Paul’s bold experiments in product design, distribution and marketing, along with his knack for numbers and efficiency turned a family shoe business into a globally recognized brand,” the post continued.

“We send our love and strength to the Van Doren family and the countless Vans Family members who have brought Paul’s legacy to life.”

BARNES AND NOBLE
Van Doren’s death comes a week after the release of his memoir, ‘Authentic’. He is pictured above at a book event on April 27[/caption]

Paul and Jim Van Doren founded Vans in 1966, along with business partners Gordon Lee and Serge Delia.

The company was originally called The Van Doren Rubber Co. and began selling its shoes out of a warehouse in Anaheim.

The slogan on the first shoebox was “Canvas Shoes for the Entire Family” and pairs were priced between $2.29 – $4.49.

The brand grew steadily across the 1970s, finding favor with surfers and skateboarders, and had around 70 stores open by the close of the decade.

The business was eventually sold to current owner VF Corp. in 2004 for $396 million, however, the family still holds roles in Vans today.

Paul’s son Steve Van Doren is Vans’ vice president of events and promotions; his granddaughter Kristy Van Doren is senior director of marketing for the North Americas; granddaughter Jenny Battiest is merchandising manager for the Americas, and daughter Cheryl Van Doren is vice president of human resources.

Vans
The brand grew steadily across the 1970s, finding favor with surfers and skateboarders, and had around 70 stores open by the close of the decade[/caption]
Getty
The family still holds rolls in Vans today. Pictured is Paul’s son Steve Van Doren, Vans’ vice president of events and promotions[/caption]

During his time spearheading the now-globally recognized brand, Van Doren liked to say that he was building a people company, not a shoe company, WWD reported.

“I didn’t give a damn about the résumé, what I did care about was the person. If the person was right, the résumé would be OK. If the person was not, probably the résumé would show that he’s wonderful,” he recently told the outlet.

“The hardest thing in this industry is to sort between the guy who gives a s**t and the guy who really gives a s**t.”

Van Doren also shared an anecdote from when Vans opened its first retail store inside its original Anaheim factory and he forgot to put cash in the register.

“It was so stupid,” he told the outlet, adding he had to rely on the honor system because he couldn’t make change.

“We sold something like 22 pairs of shoes that first day, and the remarkable thing is every single person came back and paid. Treat people like you would want to be treated.”

Vans
Vans’ first store in Anaheim is pictured above[/caption]

Van Doren’s death comes a week after the release of his memoir, ‘Authentic’.

In the book, the footwear pioneer revealed how Vans’ famed checkerboard design came to be.

Customization was always a signature for the brand, Van Doren said, with the company making custom styles to match women’s dresses and school sports team colors from the off-set.

Sometimes they’d sell customers two different colored shoes, or even just one shoe.

“The best teachers in the art of retail are the customers themselves,” Van Doren wrote in his book.

The inspiration behind Vans’ checkerboard motif came from students at Huntington Beach High School, whom Van Doren said he’d noticed “were drawing checkerboards on the rubber strip of the shoe.”

“[So] then we printed them on the rubber, and then the canvas,” he told WWD.

“That’s how that came about, just following the customers how they were leading us.”

Alamy
The company was originally called The Van Doren Rubber Co. and began selling its shoes out of a warehouse in Anaheim[/caption]

Van Doren retired from the company in 1980, and his younger brother Jimmy took over the reins.

However, after just four years, the company’s ill-advised venture into the athletic shoe market racked up debts exceeding $12 million and Vans filed for bankruptcy.

Van Doren was forced out of retirement and re-assumed the role of president.

The company then agreed to a bankruptcy settlement that saw Vans pay 25 cents on every dollar owed.

“With success comes reputation, with hardship comes character,” Van Doren wrote in his book.

With Van Doren in command, the company managed to clear its debts within four years. He then retired for a second – and final – time in 1988.

Vans’ fortunes quickly turned around, and the company ended up sponsoring the Warped music tour in 1995, taking it to new heights.

Van Doren’s granddaughter, Kirsty Van Doren-Batson, also confirmed his death with a tribute posted to Instagram.

“My grandpa Van Doren passed away this afternoon,” she wrote. “He was an amazing man and had accomplished a lot. I will miss him tremendously, but I know he’s in a better place. I love you grandpa!!!”

In a statement on Friday, Orange County Supervisor Katrina Foley mourned Van Doren’s passing.

“My team and I are sending our thoughts to the Van Doren family, and the Vans family.

“James and Paul Van Doren helped bring creativity and ingenuity to this now iconic company. RIP, and your legacy will endure.”

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