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Boss of the Plains

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Style of western hat
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Boss of the Plains hat

TheBoss of the Plains was a lightweight all-weatherhat designed in 1865 byJohn B. Stetson for the demands of theAmerican West. It was intended to be durable,waterproof and elegant.[1] The term "Stetson" eventually became all-but-interchangeable with what later became known as thecowboy hat due to later style-designs based on how the rounded-crown would deform from regular use.

Design

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TheDodge City Peace Commission in 1883, some wearing a Boss of the Plains

The Boss was designed with a high crown to provide insulation on the top of the head, and a wide stiff brim to provide shelter from both sun and precipitation for the face, neck and shoulders. The original fur-felt hat was waterproof and shed rain. Overall, the hat was durable and lightweight.[2] On the underside, the hat included a sweatband, a lining to protect the hat,[3] and, as a memorial to earlier designs, a bow on its sweatband, which had the practical purpose of helping distinguish the front from the back. The original designs were natural in color with four-inch crowns and brims; a plain strap was used for the band.[4]

For years Stetson worried about the waterproofing and finally decided to make his hat ofbeaver felt.[5] It took about 42 beaverbelly pelts to produce a high-quality hat.[6] One story tells of a cowboy crossing a long dry stretch of prairie. Hiscanteen sprang a leak. He saved the drinking water by carrying it in his Stetson.[7] Stetson featured advertising of a cowboy watering his horse with water carried in the crown. The wearer could also use the brim to direct water to a person's mouth. A high-quality hat in good condition was also viewed in some places as a status symbol.[8]

Customization and change

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An Apache man wearing a "Boss of the Plains" Stetson

The straight-sided, round cornered, flat brimmed original Boss of the Plains design dominated for about twenty years.[9] Most 19th-century photographs show the hat without an intentional crease, and most hats were kept open crown.[10] However, through use, abuse, and customization by individual wearers, hats were modified from their original appearance. In particular, the crown would become dented, at first inadvertently, then by deliberate choice of individual owners. The brim was often rolled or curved and ornamentation was sometimes added. Often, these creases and brim shapes began to reflect where a particular hat owner lived or worked, and in some cases, evencowboys on individual ranches could be identified by the crease in their hat.[11]

Thus, the manufactured styles also began to change. The first popular modification was a long crease sloping from the high back down towards the front, called the "Carlsbad crease" after a style used by wearers inCarlsbad, New Mexico. Another design, derived from the pointed top of the Mexicansombrero, worked its way north and became known as the "Montana peak", which had four dents, originally derived from being handled on top with four fingers.

Popularization

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Main article:Cowboy hat
Movie starTom Mix with a Stetson

Entertainers who promoted cowboy and western culture in the late 19th and early 20th centuries popularized Stetson designs.Buffalo Bill had custom hats with very wide brims made for hisWild West shows, with later designs created forHollywood including theTom Mix style"ten-gallon" hats used inWestern films.

Over time, the working cowboy hat of theranch cowboy, as modified by popular entertainers androdeo competitors, became an essential part of the cowboy image. At times, various politicians, celebrities and law enforcement units adopted descendants of the Boss of the Plains hat to strengthen their association with the culture and values of theOld West.[12] The Boss of the Plains-inspired design that became the modern cowboy hat has retained its basic features in construction and design since the first one in 1865, demonstrating the degree to which form succeeded in following function.[13]

Robert Baden-Powell learned of the practicality of the Boss of the Plains hat through his association withFrederick Russell Burnham during theSecond Matabele War of 1896–97, and he popularized thecampaign hat or "lemon squeezer" style (i.e. flat brim with four dents at 12, 3, 6 and 9 o'clock) during theSiege of Mafeking in theSecond Anglo-Boer War. When Baden-Powell established the South African Constabulary in 1900, he chose the Boss of the Plains as their uniform headgear. Popular culture has it that, on receiving the first shipment of hats from theStetson company, the handbill identified them as 'hats, B-P style', which was misconstrued as an allusion to Baden-Powell's initials. Baden-Powell later adopted the campaign hat for use by theBoy Scouts.

In popular culture

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American authorLaurie Winn Carlson wroteBoss of the Plains: The Hat That Won the West, which tells the history behind this hat.

See also

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Footnotes

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  1. ^Flanagan, Mike (1999).The Complete Idiot's Guide to the Old West. p. 239.ISBN 0-02-862945-0.
  2. ^Cowboys & the Trappings of the Old West by William Manns. p. 22ISBN 0-939549-13-1
  3. ^Wolff Edwin D.Why We Do It (1929)ISBN 0-8369-1006-0
  4. ^Snyder, Jeffrey B. (1997)Stetson Hats and the John B. Stetson Company 1865–1970. p. 50ISBN 0-7643-0211-6
  5. ^Chamber's journal, Published by Orr and Smith, 1952, p. 200, Original from the University of Michigan
  6. ^"Angus World is Official cattle magazine of the Canadian Angus Association".www.angusworld.ca. Archived fromthe original on February 4, 2007.
  7. ^Flemmons, Jerry,Curmudgeon in corduroy: the best of Jerry Flemmons' Texas, p. 96ISBN 0-87565-217-4
  8. ^Blevins, WinfredDictionary of the American West: over 5,000 terms and expressions from Aarigaa! to Zopilote (2001) p. 370ISBN 1-57061-304-4
  9. ^Snyder, Jeffrey B. (1997)Stetson Hats and the John B. Stetson Company 1865–1970 1997ISBN 0-7643-0211-6 p. 73
  10. ^"In search of the real cowboy hat",Cowboy Chronicle, April 2004
  11. ^Blevins, Winfred.Dictionary of the American West: over 5,000 terms and expressions from Aarigaa! to Zopilote (2001) p. 371ISBN 1-57061-304-4
  12. ^Snyder, Jeffrey B. (1997)Stetson Hats and the John B. Stetson Company 1865–1970 1997 p. 5ISBN 0-7643-0211-6
  13. ^Reynolds, William and Rich Rand (1995)The Cowboy Hat book. p. 8ISBN 0-87905-656-8

References

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External links

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Look upcowboy hat orsombrero, orhat in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
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