Showing posts with label Stetson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stetson. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 25, 2023

John B. Stetson--The "Boss of the Plains"

by Jennifer Uhlarik

 

In my household, we have a plethora of hats. Most are my husband’s ball caps, though a few belong to my son. I’m not much of a baseball cap sort (though I do own one and wear it on occasion). Me…I’m far more of the cowboy hat sort! Doesn’t matter where we go, if they have cowboy hats, I find I have to stop and look, try them on, and ponder whether I need another. None of mine are particularly special—none are made by name brands or bought from specialty stores. In fact, most were picked up from the hat racks in souvenir shops while on vacation somewhere, but I love them nonetheless.

 

But for true cowboy hat connoisseurs, there’s one particular brand that has withstood the test of time—The Stetson. This brand goes all the way back to the 1860s and still endures today.

 

Eastern Roots to a Burgeoning Western Icon

John Batterson Stetson
 

One of twelve children, John Batterson Stetson was born in Orange, New Jersey in1830, the son of a hatter. John left school early in life so his father, Stephen, could teach John hat-making as he grew up. He worked in his father’s shop up until his health faltered, making it necessary for him to move west for better air quality.

 

John set off to Colorado, where he eventually tried his hand at prospecting. While on a hunting expedition with new friends, they discussed the merits of beaver felt vs. tanned hides in hat making, and to prove his point about beaver felt, John created a hat without having to tan a single hide. By hat standards of that day, it was a rather odd-looking piece of headwear with its tall crown and wide brim, his own take on the sombreros the Mexican vaqueros wore. Regardless of what other thought, John quickly grew to like it. The hat had a wonderful ability to shade him from the sun and keep the rain out of his eyes, plus could carry water for his horse if turned upside down. It became his hat of choice—and he later dubbed the style the “Boss of the Plains.”

 

Return To The East

 

In 1865, his health had improved enough that John could return East, so he set up a small hat repair shop in Philadelphia. However, word spread quickly about his skills, and he soon needed to expand his one-room shop into a larger space in the same neighborhood. He also moved from just repairing hats to manufacturing his own.

 

On the Manufacturing Floor of
the Stetson Hat Company

He was intent on turning out only the highest quality headwear at good prices, and he set out to do so with his employees’ welfare in mind. He began using traveling salesmen to sell his wares and soon saw his hats being sold in nearly every retail stores in Philadelphia. He also sent samples of his “Boss of the Plains” style hats to the Southwest, asking retailers who wished to carry the item to purchase a minimum of twelve. By 1869, he again needed more space, so bought twelve acres of land on the outskirts of the city to set up his new facilities. Eventually, his operation grew until his manufacturing headquarters consisted of several five and six-story brick buildings with sprinkler systems and other measures in place to ensure the safety of his factory workers. Such standards were unheard of at the time. Within twenty years, Stetson’s hats were known globally, and his company was turning out two million hats per year, in both the traditional western style and in dressier styles.

 

Stetson Gives Back

 

Dedicated to the success of his employees, their families, and those in the area around his twelve-acre site, Stetson set up a very generous apprenticeship program with high wages and plenty of employee perks, including a series of meeting rooms in his buildings where people could host civic, social, and religious gatherings. He also opened a clinic on the property to treat injuries and ailments—and charged just $1.00 for three months of treatment. For any who couldn’t afford that rate, service was provided for free. Only a few years later, the clinic became a full-fledged hospital that served the larger community. 

 

Stetson Hall @ Stetson Univ.
In the mid-1880s, John took a trip to Florida to visit his friend, Henry Deland, and
fell in love with the burgeoning town his friend was helping to build. For the next twenty years, Stetson wintered in Deland, Florida, where he built a mansion, became active in business, and was soon seen as a leader in the community. His friend, Mr. Deland had built the Deland Academy a few years before John’s visit, which started as a lecture room for a local church. However, once John Stetson came to town, he infused the simple meeting room with an endowment of cash, and it grew into a full-fledged college, offering instruction in music, business, and liberal arts courses of study. In 1889, the school was renamed John B. Stetson University, and in 1900, Stetson University’s College of Law opened its doors, the first official law school in the state of Florida.

 

A Continuing Legacy

 

John Stetson passed away in 1906, but for years afterward, his son G. Henry Stetson continued to run his father’s business, even expanding into women’s hats in the early to mid-1900s. It was only after World War II, as times changed and hats became less fashionable, that sales dropped to the point the younger Stetson had to rethink their business model. By the early 1970s, he closed the Philadelphia manufacturing operations, licensed the company’s styles to be manufactured by several other hat makers. He then set his sights on other items. Today, the Stetson brand is not only known for its iconic western and fashion hats, but also colognes for men and women, clothing, belts, handbags, footwear, eyewear, luggage, and even bourbon.

 

It's Your Turn: Have you heard of the Stetson brand, and if so, what item(s) do you know it from? Did you know this brand originated all the way back in the 1860s? PLEASE VISIT THE BLOG TO COMMENT ON THIS POST.

 

 

 


Award-winning, best-selling novelist Jennifer Uhlarik has loved the western genre since she read her first Louis L’Amour novel. She penned her first western while earning a writing degree from University of Tampa. Jennifer lives near Tampa with her husband, son, and furbabies. www.jenniferuhlarik.com

 

 




Love’s Fortress by Jennifer Uhlarik

 

A Friendship From the Past Brings Closure to Dani’s Fractured Family

 

When Dani Sango’s art forger father passes away, Dani inherits his home. There, she finds a book of Native American drawings, which leads her to seek museum curator Brad Osgood’s help to decipher the ledger art. Why would her father have this book? Is it another forgery?

 

Brad Osgood longs to provide his four-year-old niece, Brynn, the safe home she desperately deserves. The last thing he needs is more drama, especially from a forger’s daughter. But when the two meet “accidentally” at St. Augustine’s 350-year-old Spanish fort, he can’t refuse the intriguing woman.

 

Broken Bow is among seventy-three Plains Indians transported to Florida in 1875 for incarceration at ancient Fort Marion. Sally Jo Harris and Luke Worthing dream of serving on a foreign mission field, but when the Indians reach St. Augustine, God changes their plans. However, when Sally Jo’s friendship with Broken Bow leads to false accusations, it could cost them their lives.

 

Can Dani discover how Broken Bow and Sally Jo’s story ends and how it impacted her father’s life?

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

"The Boss of the Plains" - The Stetson

The Boss of the Plains
by Pam Hillman

I’ve always heard that the first thing a cowboy puts on when he rolls out of his blankets is his hat, followed immediately by his boots. After reading about the care John B. Stetson took to create a hat that demanded that kind of respect, I now believe it.

Stetson learned the hat trade from his father. In a time when being a hatter wasn’t considered a respectable trade, Stetson took his trade seriously. He wanted to make a durable, high quality hat best suited for the rugged west, the  cowboy, and the plainsmen who flooded west in the 1800s.

In 1865, Stetson headed west, and in a small rented facility, with his tools and barely enough money to purchase the fur he needed, he made his first hat that would eventually become known as the famous “Boss of the Plains”. The Boss became synonymous with hard-working, rough-housing, loyal cow punchers the world over, but especially in the American West.

At first glance, the “Boss of the Plains” doesn't look like what we think of as the traditional cowboy hat. But that was the beauty of the design. Men could shape it however they wanted to. Picture a cowboy grabbing that hat over and over with three fingers. Eventually, the crown and the brim would crease in exactly the way the cowboy wanted it to.

The high crown provided insulation and a bit of air-space for ventilation for the top of the head. The wide brim offered protection from the harsh sun, rain, wind. But probably the most innovative part of the Boss was that it was made from the underbelly of 42 beaver pelts and was extremely durable, lightweight, and waterproof.

While I haven’t tested a Stetson myself, I’ve seen movies and read books that made me wonder how someone could continue to ride in the deluge of hours and hours of rain and not get soaked through. According to history, some Stetsons were so waterproof, they could be used as buckets, and at least one story tells of a cowboy whose canteen sprung a leak, and he used his Stetson to carry water across the desert. And while I’ve never seen someone offering water to another person out of a hat, I’ve seen it many times in movies. I might have scoffed at that before I discovered how watertight these hats were.

The Dodge City Peace Commission, some wearing The Boss

Not only could the Boss double as a bucket, the wide brim served as an umbrella against rain and shaded the eyes against the relentless sun. The brim could be tented to provide a drinking cup as needed, or pulled down and tied over the ears to protect against frost-bite.

It was the bellows that fanned many a campfire into existence and, in reverse, was also the bucket that carried the water to douse the fire when breaking camp. The hat was doffed at pretty ladies, and swatted against a pokey horse’s flank to escape a raiding war party.

Rolled up, it became a pillow at night, or the extra bit of padding to ease a sore shoulder or aching back. Waved over the head, it was easily spotted from long distances. In a shoot-out, it was hoisted on a stick to draw fire to scout out the location of the enemy. And it was removed and held over the heart when saying goodbye to another cowboy as the final prayer was said over his grave.

It’s no wonder that a cow puncher forked over as much as two to six months’ wages on his hat. And not surprising that he’d defend such a purchase with his life and his Colt 45!

Want more? Check out this cool video: The Making of a Stetson Hat



Pam Hillman was born and raised on a dairy farm in Mississippi and spent her teenage years perched on the seat of a tractor raking hay. In those days, her daddy couldn’t afford two cab tractors with air conditioning and a radio, so Pam drove the Allis Chalmers 110. Even when her daddy asked her if she wanted to bale hay, she told him she didn’t mind raking. Raking hay doesn’t take much thought so Pam spent her time working on her tan and making up stories in her head.  

The Evergreen Bride (Barbour Publishing) 
Available October 20th as ebook only and in The White Christmas Brides Collection, exclusively at Walmart. Cover coming soon!

www.pamhillman.com




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