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A new pin on my Campdraft

Edward

Bartender
Messages
25,074
Location
London, UK
RBH said:
Another NRA from the Great Depression, one of the programs introduced by President FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT aimed at ending the Depression by stimulating the economy and putting people back to work

NRA: The National Recovery Administration was set up under the National Industrial Recovery Act. Its aim was to stabilize production and prices through government regulation of wages and working conditions. The symbol of the NRA campaign was a Blue Eagle thunderbird. Employers who signed NRA agreements were allowed to display the Blue Eagle at their businesses. Many business people opposed the effort as representing excessive government regulation.

<a href="http://imageshack.us"><img src="http://img401.imageshack.us/img401/1756/nraxc2.png" border="0" alt="NRA"/></a>

RBH -> Thanks, interesting reading. Funny how some things never change - it sounds to me like a lot of the arguments that were played out then are pretty much identical to those that were advanced when the minimum wage was introduced in the UK a few years ago.

Deanglen-> It definitely would. It'd also be interesting to see a range of photos of other workers as well, see what the trends were in hats. Is it just coincidence, for instance, here that while all three white workers are wearing fedora types, the black gentleman is wearing a Gatsby-type cap? It seems a reasonable probability to me that back in those days, different fashions could prevail among different racial groups as a result of the level of segregation that was still very much evident then. Of course, given the very small number of men in that picture, it could also be total coincidence. Nowadays, of course, they'd all likely be in hardhats and matching corporate overalls. It's interesting to see those old photos of how folks used to dress for manual labour. A lot of our modern safety gear just wasn't available then, which affects it, but I'm sure there was still an element of care taken to their appearance - they all four have made the effort to wear a tidy hat, and their shirts are reasonably neatly tucked in. Not many present-day labourers seem to take that much care with hteir appearance. Which I can understand, a construction site is not the place where many of us would think much about sartorial elegance, but it does seem to me something of a change.
 

HamletJSD

A-List Customer
Messages
472
Location
Birmingham, AL
RBH said:
I love it Dean!
Now that is what I would call 'work' fedoras.

I have always wondered about pics such as this ...
I mean, just shooting pool or bowling in the AC and I am sweating ... did they do something different to make their hats cooler/safer from sweat or did they just sweat in them 'till they were ruined and buy another?
 

The Outlaw Kyle

One of the Regulars
Messages
102
Location
West Michigan
The pin looks great on that hat RBH. Fits well with the campdraft I think. I kind of see the CD as a "town and country" sort. The thin ribbon says "I can ride a horse" but the bound edges says "but now I own the ranch.."
 

RBH

Bartender
gd13.gif


Civilian Conservation Corps. (Circa 1933)

Dean here is another of Mr Roosevelt's New deal programs.
 

RBH

Bartender
HamletJSD said:
I have always wondered about pics such as this ...
I mean, just shooting pool or bowling in the AC and I am sweating ... did they do something different to make their hats cooler/safer from sweat or did they just sweat in them 'till they were ruined and buy another?

From the looks of the CCC photo, the men wore the hats till they were wore out.
 

J.T.Marcus

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,354
Location
Mineola, Texas
HamletJSD said:
I have always wondered about pics such as this ...
I mean, just shooting pool or bowling in the AC and I am sweating ... did they do something different to make their hats cooler/safer from sweat or did they just sweat in them 'till they were ruined and buy another?

They wore them till they were dirty, then they took them to just about any dry cleaner for a routine cleaning.
 

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