Skip to main content

In Memoriam: Gert Boyle, Legendary ‘Tough Mother’ and Longtime Head of Columbia Sportswear, Has Passed at 95

gert-boyle-tough-mother-1
Image courtesy of Columbia Sportswear

Gertrude Lamfrom was born on March 6th, 1924, in the city of Augsburg, Germany. The first few years of her life were peaceful and comfortable, with money no issue as her family owned a thriving shirt factory. The issue was the fact that the Lamfroms were Jews. The factory was seized as the Nazis tightened their stranglehold on the nation, and the family fled the country in 1937. The Lamfroms settled in Portland, Oregon, not far from the Columbia river, namesake of the brand she and her family would establish and build into a titan of the performance apparel industry.

But Gert herself never really intended to run an empire of outerwear and outdoor gear. It was the untimely death of her husband, Joseph “Neal” Boyle, that thrust her into the role she would come to fill so perfectly. In 1938, Gert’s parents purchased a small millinery company which they named the Columbia Hat Company. Neal had taken over the company in 1964 after the death of his father-in-law, Gert’s dad Paul. Then, in 1970, Neal died suddenly at the age of 47.

Gert became president of the company now called Columbia Sportswear — they had begun producing apparel beyond hats in the early 1960s — and would remain in that role until 1988, and she served as head of the board from 1983 until her death on November 3, 2019. When Gert took over Columbia, with assistance from her son Timothy, who would take over as president of the company in 1988, annual sales were around $800,000 and the company was facing bankruptcy.

Thanks in large part to Gert’s guidance, Columbia enjoyed tremendous growth over the ensuing decades. By the late 1980s, the company saw annual sales near $20 million, and by the late 1990s, sales had passed $355 million each year. In 2018, Columbia, now a public company and parent of brands including Sorel and Mountain Hardware, saw sales of over $2.8 billion.

For many people, Columbia will always be associated with Gert thanks to the “Tough Mother” television commercials that began running in 1984. In the ads, a deadpan Gert puts her adult son Tim through all manner of trying feats as they test out their company’s products in the field. Not only did the highly successful ads propel sales growth, but they also cemented Gert’s reputation as a no-nonsense, tough love figure.

This persona was largely a bluff, as at heart Gert was a warm and loving person and a noted philanthropist. Alongside her legacy as the head of Columbia Sportswear, she will be remembered as a major supporter of the Special Olympics and a major donor to the Knight Cancer Institute. Gert Boyle was 95.

Steven John
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Steven John is a writer and journalist living just outside New York City, by way of 12 years in Los Angeles, by way of…
You’ll soon be able to fish year-round at Yellowstone National Park
It's great news for anglers at a time when the National Park Service is restricting recreational access.
Two men fly-fishing in a river.

Thanks to a boom in U.S. National Park visitation numbers, the National Park Service has been clamping down on park access for the last few years. Reservations and restricted entry times are fast becoming the norm at many of our best National Parks. So, it's great news when the NPS announces any type of expanded access, like Yellowstone's relaxed fishing guidelines beginning later this year.
Get the full details on Yellowstone National Park's expanded fishing guidelines

In an official news release published last week, the National Park Service announced that "beginning Nov. 1, 2024, Yellowstone National Park will expand fishing access by allowing for year-round fishing opportunities at two locations in the park." The catch, if you can call it that, is that this will only include two specific locations. The first is along the Madison River, specifically from the state border of Wyoming and Montana, downstream to the park boundary abutting the West Entrance near the town of West Yellowstone, Montana. The second is the Gardner River, beginning at Osprey Falls down to its confluence with the Yellowstone River near the park's North Entrance in Gardiner, Montana.

Read more
This rooftop tent kit will turn your van into a pop-top camper for about $12K
Transform your two-person rig into a legit, four-person, family-friendly chariot
Camper van outfitted with Super Pacific's CloudCap pop-up roof tent parked among a stand of trees.

Van life usually means sacrificing comfort and living space for maximum portability. There's no denying that it's tight packing most of the amenities of home into the back of a hollowed-out work van. So, anything you can do to make the space feel a little roomier feels like a luxury. Super Pacific's clever CloudCap does just that by converting the unused space on your camper van's roof into a legit two-person "bedroom" with a view.
The details on Super Pacific's CloudCap pop-up rooftop tent for camper vans

Super Pacific bills the  as "a private bunk house for the kids, a guest room for friends, or a panoramic Crow's Nest for you." Bottom line: It expands the living space of many two-person camper vans into four-person road-trip wagons. The simple kit includes the rooftop tent itself, plus all the instructions and mounting hardware you need to install it on the most popular Mercedes-Benz and Ford Transit vans on the road.

Read more
The most popular Grand Canyon trail reopens this week
Your favorite Grand Canyon trail is back in action
grand canyon national park bright angel trail view bright angel lodge

The Grand Canyon National Park has announced the much-anticipated reopening of Havasupai Gardens Campground, Bright Angel Trail, and Tonto Trail, set for April 15, 2024. This marks a celebratory moment for hiking enthusiasts and nature lovers, as one of the most renowned trails in the park becomes accessible once again after a temporary closure.

These closures began way back in December 2023 due to the Transcanyon Waterline project at the Grand Canyon National Park. This project involved extensive construction activities aimed at upgrading and replacing the water distribution lines in the park. The work included the replacement of water distribution lines throughout the Havasupai Gardens area and at the 1.5 and 3-mile rest houses, located along the Bright Angel Trail.

Read more