Rick Blaine
My Mail is Forwarded Here
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- 3,958
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- Saskatoon, SK CANADA
I think I can see faint vestiges of a Montana Peak there.
The hat is Canadian. The "Brockville" on the sweatband refers to Brockville, Ontario. The Brockville Stetson plant was acquired by Stetson in 1930 and was demolished in 1973. There is a photo of it on this page. I *think* the badge depicts the king's crown, which puts it before 1952, but I shouldn't think very much before. The sweatband looks 1940s to my eye. If you look at the remnants of the crease, you'll see that it's done the Canadian way, 45 degrees off how American campaign hats are creased.
Yeah, me too neither, precious little info out there on this org. [huh]Now as far as who the National Troopers were, I'm afraid I can't help you. There are a few mentions of them on the internet if you do a google search, but it seems mostly people with things like this trying to figure out the same sort of question.
Given the British coat of arms this could still be a pre-1970s Canadian dress hat from before the integration of the Canadian armed forces. Many Canadian regiments had their start as local branches of the British Armed Forces for defending the Canadian colonies against the US. It's entirely likely that they kept their original badge even after becoming a part of the new Canadian Army in 1940. There's a South African "highlanders" regiment in Cape Town that wears kilts and plays bagpipes despite not having any actual British born Scots in it for more than 100 years.Aside from the Brockville reference, I have a hard time seeing a Canadian connection with this hat. The badge is the British coat of arms, not the Canadian. The enamelled badge looks fairly modern.
Perhaps it is some kind of civilian, paramilitary organization. Definitely not Canadian Forces or, prior to that, the Canadian Army nor any Canadian police service.
Given the British coat of arms this could still be a pre-1970s Canadian dress hat from before the integration of the Canadian armed forces. Many Canadian regiments had their start as local branches of the British Armed Forces for defending the Canadian colonies against the US. It's entirely likely that they kept their original badge even after becoming a part of the new Canadian Army in 1940. There's a South African "highlanders" regiment in Cape Town that wears kilts and plays bagpipes despite not having any actual British born Scots in it for more than 100 years.
My guess is that the Canadian Corps of National Troopers was a police organization like the US marshals or an infantry Gendarmerie in the same way that the North West Mounted Police (now called RCMP) were a cavalry Gendarmerie.
Edit: I don't think that's the British Coat of Arms. It's very similar, but the crown at the top is wrong. It's also not the English Coat of Arms (same as the British, but with the same crown as this badge) because the English coat of arms doesn't have a small lion on the crown. I think the badge on the Nat. Trooper hat badge was derived from the English coat of arms, probably because the unit's colonel-in-chief was from the royal family of England.
:e
THANKS!
And an abundant welcome to you, my friend. A former Canuckastainian?
Again I'd have to say it looks to be a genuine Canadian Stetson and was probably a RCMP campaign hat but there's BIG questions as to the badging attached to it. You did not say if you owned this hat and if so, what provenance was supplied?
What is a Canuckastainian? My family is Cannadiene from Quebec and I've heard of Canadians from the English speaking Provinces but never THAT phrase
I've collected Canadian militaria for over 40 years. Canadian army units don't use the British coat of arms...and certainly haven't since the Victorian era. There is, however, a great fondness for the maple leaf as a badge.
Although there certainly was a Canadian Corps of Guides...a distinguished unit, certainly...I've never heard of a Canadian Corps of National Troopers. The crown, coincidently, is fine...it's just not the current crown. Again...I'd lean toward some sort of civilian unit.
The RCMP connection with the hat itself is entirely plausible. The leather hat band is certainly very similar to the RCMP hats and I believe that Stetson did, indeed, supply the Mounties at one point. There are Mountie collectors that would certainly know more about that than me.
It's the badge that is a big question mark...the hat itself looks good.
No-one knows everything and I could be in error, but that's the way it looks to me.
rick,
My cousins up in Montreal would not like that one for sure !! But then they won't speak English, ( they can) only French and figure Canada ends at the western border of Quebec
Thanks...in all my years of collecting, I've only seen two Boer War slouch hats on the market: a South Africa Constabulary hat and this one. I missed the first one (a lot of Canadians served in the SAC). Boer War stuff is rarer than hens teeth up here.
Thanks for the welcome! I'm a little bit of a military historian so I know how to guess at the story of things given a few clues, but I don't really know much about 1800-1950 and the commonwealth isn't really my area of expertise. I'm just a southern boy from Alabama, USA, with a black belt in Google Fu and a little too much time on my hands.:eeek: :eeek: :eeek: :eeek: :eeek: :eeek: :eeek: :eeek: :eeek: :eusa_clap
THANKS!
And an abundant welcome to you, my friend. A former Canuckastainian?