Monthly Archives: April 2022

SOUTHERN JEWELRY NEWS

Bowman Jewelers: Not so difficult

By Wanda Freeman

It’s easy to understand why Bowman Jewelers might forget its own birthday: It doesn’t look its age. When customers visit the retailer in Johnson City, Tenn., they see a storefront chosen in 1999 for its mallinfused high traffic – not the establishment that started in a barbershop 95 years ago.

“I just kind of realized it was 95,” says Linda Bowman O’Dell, third generation co-owner of the store with her brother, Rob Bowman. For this quarter at least, she’s concentrating on noting the milestone with special ads and promotions pushing awareness of the store’s longevity.

“We’re saving the huge celebration for our 100th year.”

And huge it will be – O’Dell believes the store is not just the oldest jeweler, but the oldest retailer in the area.

The jeweler’s story began when O’Dell’s grandfather, Robert W. Bowman – a German immigrant and the youngest in his family – went to watchmaking school. It was the early 1900s, and wristwatches were a new thing replacing pocket watches. He traveled to Pennsylvania to become a certifi ed horologist before joining other family members in and around eastern Tennessee.

In 1927, Bowman began his business by renting a space for his bench in the back of a downtown barber shop. Two years later he opened his own store and employed four other watchmakers.

His wife, Janelle Bowman, who always had a passion for gemstones, nudged him to add jewelry.

“My grandmother talked him into putting a couple of jewelry cases in, and they started selling pearls and birthstone jewelry. She really couldn’t participate in the business at the time with six children at home,” O’Dell says.

But in 1945, Robert died at age 48, and Janelle took over the business. A great aunt came to live with them and help with the house and children.

“It was quite rare in the 1940s for a woman to take over a business like that,” O’Dell says. “She stayed active and ran the business and didn’t retire until around 1997, when she was about 86 years old.”

Two of Janelle and Robert’s children – James J. Bowman and Robert W. Bowman Jr., Rob and Linda’s father – became involved in the 1950s. One was a watchmaker and the other a jeweler.

“We were downtown for about 75 years, and we owned a building on Fountain Square that we rented in the 1960s and purchased in the 1980s.”

As economic realities changed, the store moved several times in pursuit of higher traffi c. Downtown businesses declined as malls proliferated beginning in the 1970s, and in 1999 Bowman Jewelers moved to a shopping strip in North Johnson City.

The store’s youthful facade belies the retailer’s enduring reputation. Bowman Jewelers has supported and bonded with Eastern Tennessee State University since the 1940s and is the area’s only Independent Jewelers Organization (IJO) member store.

Rob (Robert W. Bowman III) is an IJO Master Jeweler, gemologist, and craftsman. Linda is a GIA Gemologist and diamond grader and store manager.

As the store’s buyer, O’Dell has been traveling to Antwerp, Belgium, for some 20 years in connection with IJO. The rewards were quickly apparent.

“We can buy directly from the cutters. … It gives more of an advantage to our small store competing with the big-box stores,” she says. “It started off as just a fun trip, and we made friends and lasting relationships.”

Her connections came in handy during the COVID shutdown, such as when O’Dell had a client seeking a fi ve-carat emerald-cut diamond while stores and suppliers everywhere were closed.

“We were able to reach out and engage with suppliers during one of the most diffi cult times in retail history,” she recalls.

Linda Bowman O’Dell examining diamonds in Antwerp.

O’Dell earned a nickname in Antwerp – a good-humored one that she thinks might not be exclusive to her – La Diffi cile.

“One of my friends was teasing me, saying I’m diffi cult and hard to deal with, but I think it’s just another word for ‘picky,’” she says.

The name is captured in an amusing commercial fi lmed in Antwerp by IJO, with one of O’Dell’s favorite suppliers expressing mock distress over the need to please his diffi cult – or picky – customer.

O’Dell leverages her buying trips with commercials offering clients a way to become part of the selection process.

“We take special orders a few weeks ahead,” she says. Clients make an appointment at the store, where O’Dell shows them sample stones to get an idea of their desires and budgets. They then pay a deposit allowing her to shop for something equal or better.

Tech-savvy customers can even shop virtually.

“We can send videos to phones, and call each other when our clocks meet up, they’re not asleep and we’re not asleep,” she says.

When considering what sets Bowman Jewelers apart, O’Dell sees a combination of factors.

There’s the history of a mature business that has stood witness to trends like the comeback of yellow gold in all types of jewelry.

“I keep telling people, don’t scrap your yellow gold, it’s coming back!”

There are the referrals, like the one that brought in a new customer from New York who decided to wait on a purchase until he could see O’Dell.

There is the clever advertising that allows “Bowman engagement couples” to appear on billboards, social media, and TV ads capturing their proposal moments.

But O’Dell’s favorite part of being a jeweler is the relationships built over her nearly 40 years in the business.

“Over the years, people are like best friends. You know when they’ve been sick or celebrating an anniversary. You send them fl owers; you check in on them. Even if they are not necessarily as active a customer as they once were, you still care about them. You make a point of keeping in touch. I’m still friends with customers who saw my daughter as a baby during the fi rst few years, in the store or in a stroller downtown. …

“It is our loyal customers who have kept us here in business 95 years and counting.”