Stetson Hat

views updated Jun 11 2018

Stetson Hat

Background

The Stetson hat, named after its inventor, John B. Stetson, is synonymous with the more generic cowboy hat. A symbol of Western pride and bravado, this modified sombrero, with its large crown and wide brim, has graced the heads of America's most treasured Western heroes, from old-time favorites like actor John Wayne, Clayton Moore as the Lone Ranger, and country singer Gene Autry, to modern-day popular artists like Garth Brooks and Larry Hagman as J.R. Ewing on the television series Dallas. (J.R.'s hat is now displayed in the Smithsonian National Museum of American History's contemporary Americana exhibit.) The Stetson hat is not just a male fashion statement, either. Prominent country singers from Dale Evans to Trisha Yearwood, spurred on by legendary female maverick Annie Oakley, have proven that females can carry off this most essential Western look, too.

The Stetson Hat Company was established in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1865 when John B. Stetson decided to mass-produce the modified sombrero he had fashioned for himself out of necessity during a lengthy Western expedition. Stetson's "Boss of the Plains" model, with its high, creased crown and wide, molded brim, became the prototype for all other cowboy hat designs. Now located in St. Joseph, Missouri, the Stetson hat factory there and its second factory in Galveston, Texas, continue to turn out the "Boss of the Plains," along with over 100 variations for men and women.

History

John B. Stetson was born in 1830 in Orange, New Jersey, the 12th of 13 children born to Stephen Stetson, a hatmaker. As a youth, the younger Stetson worked in the hatmaking business with his father until he was diagnosed with tuberculosis and his doctor predicted he would have only a short time to live. Given this dire prognosis, Stetson left the hatmaking business to explore the American West, afraid this would be his only chance to see it. He eventually settled in St. Joseph, Missouri, a trading post where expeditions to Pike's Peak and similar western destinations were outfitted.

In the 1860s, unable to enlist to serve in the Civil War due to his poor health, Stetson set off on a Pike's Peak expedition himself and found himself becoming healthier throughout the course of the journey. When his party was unable to find suitable shelter, Stetson and the others fashioned makeshift cover by sewing together the skins of the muskrat, rabbit, beaver, and coyote they had shot for food. Given their rustic environs, the men had no means of tanning the hides, however.

Then, Stetson suggested that he make cloth for tents using the felting process he had learned in his father's hatmaking business. He shaved the fur from some of the skins and fashioned a hunter's bow from a section of a hickory sapling and a throng from one of the skins. Stetson agitated the fur with the bow, keeping it in a small cloud in the air and eventually allowing it to fall to the ground and naturally distribute itself over a small area. As the fur fell to the ground, Stetson blew a fine spray of water from his mouth through the fur, creating a mat that could be lifted from the ground and rolled. Stetson then dipped the sheet of matted fur into a pot of boiling water. As the sheet began to shrink, he manipulated it with his hands, rapidly and repeatedly dipping it in hot water and eventually forming a small, soft blanket. By repeating this process, Stetson and the other members of his party created enough of this water-repellent material to construct a tent. This same method is employed in felt-making today, although the fur is raised to the air by a fan and the water is sprayed mechanically.

To shield himself from the daytime sun, wind, and rain, Stetson also fashioned a hat from the felt. The high, indented crown and wide brim were modeled after the Mexican sombrero. According to legend, the other members of Stetson's party ridiculed him for wearing the hat until a passing bullwhacker from Mexico one day offered Stetson a five dollar gold piece for his invention.

After mining gold at Pike's Peak for a year, Stetson traveled to Philadelphia in 1865 and set up a small hatmaking business with $100 for the purchase of tools and fur. After designing several unsuccessful models, Stetson again created his modified sombrero with a 4 in (10 cm) crown and a 4 in (10 cm) brim and, when he was unable to sell Easterners on the innovation, began to market his product, grandly dubbed the "Boss of the Plains," in the Southwest, where it took off almost immediately. By the time Stetson died in 1906, his business was a booming success, and the company that bears his name still turns out a wide variety of Western hats at its St. Joseph and Galveston factories. Today, the Western hat is nearly as popular in the eastern United States, not to mention internationally, as it is in the American West.

Raw Materials

The primary component of the Stetson hat is felt, which is fashioned from a variety of fur, preferably beaver, rabbit, and wild hare. Hot water is also integral to the felting process. Dyes are used to achieve a variety of felt colors (the original color of the felt depends on the color of the original fur). Powder is used to soften the felt. Leather is another component of the process, used to form the interior sweatband of the hat. Attaching the sweatband may require glue. Two-ply or two-cord band is used to create the ribbon that encircles the outside of the crown where it meets the brim, and thread is used to stitch the ribbon. Small metal eyelets are also typically used for venting.

Design

For the style-conscious, three of the most important considerations in purchasing a Stetson hat are the slope of the crown, the roll of the brim, and the number and arrangement of the creases, or pinches, in the crown, which are viewed as giving each Stetson its distinctive character. The pinch can be prefabricated or chosen by the consumer and blocked by the hatter. Cowboy hats may also be adorned with feathers, embroidery, silver accessories, and the like. The appeal of the Stetson hat for many is that, when fitted in cowboy boots and a Stetson, the wearer appears at least 6 in (15 cm) taller.

The Manufacturing
Process

Carroting, cutting, and sorting

  • 1 Typically beaver, rabbit, and wild hare pelts are used. They are cleaned to remove grease and other impurities.
  • 2 An acid solution is applied to the fur which prepares it for the felting process. This procedure is known as carroting.
  • 3 The skins are then fed through a cutting machine, fur side down, and the skin is cut from the fur.
  • 4 The fur is then sorted by feeding it through blowing and picking machines.
  • 5 Next, the fur is bagged in 5 lb (2.27 kg) increments and baled for shipment to the rough body plant.

Felt mixing and initial shaping

  • 6 First, the fur must be weighed out and the three types combined to the company's specifications for the appropriate mix.
  • 7 The fur is cleaned and then placed in a giant bin and mixed into a fine blend.
  • 8 Next, the fur is forwarded into a feeder, where it is broken down into an even softer blend.
  • 9 From the feeder, the fur is forwarded into a blowing machine and, upon exit from the machine, bad fibers are manually removed from the mix.
  • 10 Next, the mixture is placed on a conveyer, which presses the mixture out into long sheets.
  • 11 These sheets are then blown onto a large dome-shaped prototype, known as a former dome, which sets the initial body of the hat. The dome spins around rapidly for approximately 30 seconds, gathering the fur much in the same way a spinner wraps cotton candy.
  • 12 The former dome is placed in hot water for 35 seconds to mold the fur fibers into place.

Felting and dyeing

  • 13 Through a series of applications of hot water, pressure, and rolling, known as "starting" and "stumping," the dome-shaped figure is dipped in hot water and twisted.
  • 14 The hat is then placed in a hardening machine four times. Over the course of these two steps, the hat begins to shrink from its original size of almost 2 ft (61 cm).
  • 15 The hat bodies are then dyed with various pigments to create a range of colors.

Initial blocking and pouncing

  • 16 Blocking, or shaping, is performed by a three-person team. First, a tipper stretches the crown of the hat. Next, a brimmer forms the band-line and brim. A blocker then sets the shape of the hat and applies a stiffening substance.
  • 17 The hat is then turned inside out and hung to dry overnight.
  • 18 The next day, the hat is sandpapered to remove any surface hair that was not eliminated in the blowing process. This procedure is known as pouncing and the overall operation is technically known as the back-shop.
  • 19 The two-ply or two-cord band is stitched around the outer bottom of the crown of the hat, where it meets the brim.

Western blocking and finishing

  • 20 The hat is steamed and an appropriately sized wooden block is pressed in the crown for shaping.
  • 21 The crown of the hat is then ironed and the brim is plated.
  • 22 The hat is then placed on a crown-pouncing machine, which uses very fine sand paper to remove any excess fur and finish the hat.
  • 23 Powder is applied to make the hat softer and the color richer (this step is eliminated for dark-colored hats).
  • 24 The hat is again placed in the pouncing machine.
  • 25 The shape of the brim is set and dry heat is applied. The brim is then pressed to maintain its shape.

Sweatband

  • 26 Excess plastic wire, known as polyreed, is cut off the leather sweat-band to make it lay flat.
  • 27 The band is hand-fitted inside the hat.
  • 28 Any excess leather is cut off.
  • 29 The band is stitched and then tacked or glued.
  • 30 The hat is cleaned, brushed, and steamed.
  • 31 The final cutting of the brim is executed.

Creasing and miscellaneous details

  • 32 A bow is stitched to the outer two-ply or two-cord hatband.
  • 33 The hat is hand-creased.
  • 34 A satin name pad is pressed and steamed inside the crown.
  • 35 If eyelets are required, they are placed in the crown at this point.
  • 36 A cleaning instructions tag is glued to the crown.

Quality Control

Stetson hats are subject to many stages of inspection to check that the finish, shape, body, and feel are appropriate and to identify any flaws. One major factor in determining the price of a Stetson hat is the quality of the felt, demarcated by the number of "x"s that appear on the sweatband. Factors contributing to the quality of the felt include the fur and skin types, the living environment of the animal from which the fur was culled (wild, domestic, or season), the age of the fur, and its color.

The Future

Western hats are considered as stylish today as they were when they were invented. The Stetson Hat Company and many others are continually developing new variations on the style of this product and exploring different materials such as straw and leather.

Where to Learn More

Books

Reynolds, William and Ritch Rand. The Cowboy Hat Book. Gibbs Smith, 1995.

Other

Biltmore Hats. "The Story of the Cowboy Hat." http://www.in.on.ca/~biltmore/story.html(July 9, 1997).

KristinPalm

EPONYM

views updated May 29 2018

EPONYM.
1. A personal NAME from which a WORD has been derived: John B. Stetson, the 19c US hatter after whom the stetson hat was named.

2. The person whose name is so used: The Roman emperor Constantine, who gave his name to Constantinople.

3. The word so derived: stetson, Constantinople. The process of eponymy results in many forms: (1) Such simple eponyms as atlas, which became popular after the 16c Flemish cartographer Gerardus Mercator put the figure of the titan Atlas on the cover of a book of maps. (2) COMPOUNDS and ATTRIBUTIVE constructions such as loganberry after the 19c US lawyer James H. Logan, and Turing machine after the 20c British mathematician Alan Turing. (3) Possessives such as Parkinson's Law after the 20c British economist C. Northcote Parkinson, and the Islets of Langerhans after the 19c German pathologist Paul Langerhans. (4) DERIVATIVES such as Bowdlerize and gardenia, after the 18c English expurgator of Shakespeare, Thomas Bowdler, and the 19c Scottish-American physician Alexander Garden. (5) CLIPPINGS, such as dunce from the middle name and first element of the last name of the learned 13c Scottish friar and theologian John Duns Scotus, whose rivals called him a fool. (6) BLENDS such as gerrymander, after the US politician Elbridge Gerry (b. 1744), whose redrawn map of the voting districts of Massachusetts in 1812 was said to look like a salamander, and was then declared a gerrymander. The word became a verb soon after. See -ONYM, WORD-FORMATION.

eponym

views updated May 17 2018

ep·o·nym / ˈepəˌnim/ • n. a person after whom a discovery, invention, place, etc., is named or thought to be named. ∎  a name or noun formed in such a way.DERIVATIVES: e·pon·y·my / əˈpänəmē/ n.

Stetson Hat

views updated May 21 2018

Stetson Hat

When Philadelphia hat maker John B. Stetson went west in 1859 to cure his tuberculosis, he worked the Gold Rush at Pike's Peak, Colorado, where he designed a hat for working in the hot sun. Stetson returned to Philadelphia to mass-produce the "Boss of the Plains" hat, made of tan felt with a wide brim and high crown. Worn by Presidents, Buffalo Bill, and the Texas Rangers, the hat became a symbol of the West. Stetson felt hats continued to be popular into the 1990s.

—S. Naomi Finkelstein

Further Reading:

Stetson Hat Company, The Stetson Century 1865-1965. St. Louis, Stetson Hat Company, 1965.

eponym

views updated May 11 2018

eponym (ep-ŏ-nim) n. a disease, structure, or species named after a particular person, usually the person who first discovered or described it.
eponymous (i-pon-i-mŭs) adj.

About this article

John Batterson Stetson

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