Mark Elliott
New in Town
- Messages
- 12
Hats and American history go hand in hand. And while researching my new book (The Brim and the Crown), I wanted to give a shout out to some of the oldest hat shops in the US. They are:
1. (1883) HENRY THE HATTER (Detroit, MI) – The oldest hat retailer opened its doors in 1883, and the 128-year-old store (actually two locations now) is a local, and well-loved institution. What Henry Komrofsky founded so long ago has twice been named Hat Retailer of the Year, and continues to offer some of the best production fedoras by Baily, Borsalino, Biltmore, Selentino, Mayser, and Westerns by Stetson.
2. (1894) MEYER THE HATTER (New Orleans, LA) – Countless family-owned hat stores in New Orleans have come and gone; only one remains: Meyer the Hatter, located just outside the French Quarter. In 127 years of continuous operation, five generations of the family have worked here ... and some still are. For serious hat guys, this is a destination-store; a vintage shop whose staff really knows hats.
3. (1907) BATSAKES HAT SHOP (Cincinnati, OH) – One of the two oldest custom hat shops in the Midwest. It survived two world wars, a Depression, and several recessions. But six days a week, hatter and owner Gus Miller – age 89 in 2021 – is still there to open the downtown shop and turn on the steam for the day’s work. Batsakes was established by Gus’s relatives in 1907, and since then has made custom hats for generations of Cincinnati businessmen, and numerous music, film, political, and sports figures.
4. (1907) SHUDDE BROTHERS (Brookshire, TX) – What could John Wayne, Tom Mix, and ex-heavyweight champ George Foreman possibly have in common? At one time, they all bought Western hats from Shudde Bros Hatters, the oldest hat shop in Texas. Established in downtown Houston in 1907, the shop has since moved a few miles away, but is still an active family business. Neal Shudde, the founder’s grandson, has been shaping, restoring, and customizing Stetsons and Resistols for 49 years … and he’s still at it.
5. (1908) DELMONICO HATTERS (New Haven, CT) – Once upon a time, downtown New Haven had 27 hat stores … now, there’s just one: DelMonico Hatter. How did it survive wars, a Depression, several recessions, and historical changes in men’s fashion? The Internet. DelMonico’s third-generation owner, Ernest, recognized early on that online sales would be a game-changer. Now 85% of their sales is online … around the country, around the world. The shop has one of the largest hat inventories in the US, and their staff has a high hat IQ. Their website offers all the best name brands, as well as 13 pages of hats produced exclusively for DelMonico’s by hatters in Italy, Spain, France … even Stetson.
1. (1883) HENRY THE HATTER (Detroit, MI) – The oldest hat retailer opened its doors in 1883, and the 128-year-old store (actually two locations now) is a local, and well-loved institution. What Henry Komrofsky founded so long ago has twice been named Hat Retailer of the Year, and continues to offer some of the best production fedoras by Baily, Borsalino, Biltmore, Selentino, Mayser, and Westerns by Stetson.
2. (1894) MEYER THE HATTER (New Orleans, LA) – Countless family-owned hat stores in New Orleans have come and gone; only one remains: Meyer the Hatter, located just outside the French Quarter. In 127 years of continuous operation, five generations of the family have worked here ... and some still are. For serious hat guys, this is a destination-store; a vintage shop whose staff really knows hats.
3. (1907) BATSAKES HAT SHOP (Cincinnati, OH) – One of the two oldest custom hat shops in the Midwest. It survived two world wars, a Depression, and several recessions. But six days a week, hatter and owner Gus Miller – age 89 in 2021 – is still there to open the downtown shop and turn on the steam for the day’s work. Batsakes was established by Gus’s relatives in 1907, and since then has made custom hats for generations of Cincinnati businessmen, and numerous music, film, political, and sports figures.
4. (1907) SHUDDE BROTHERS (Brookshire, TX) – What could John Wayne, Tom Mix, and ex-heavyweight champ George Foreman possibly have in common? At one time, they all bought Western hats from Shudde Bros Hatters, the oldest hat shop in Texas. Established in downtown Houston in 1907, the shop has since moved a few miles away, but is still an active family business. Neal Shudde, the founder’s grandson, has been shaping, restoring, and customizing Stetsons and Resistols for 49 years … and he’s still at it.
5. (1908) DELMONICO HATTERS (New Haven, CT) – Once upon a time, downtown New Haven had 27 hat stores … now, there’s just one: DelMonico Hatter. How did it survive wars, a Depression, several recessions, and historical changes in men’s fashion? The Internet. DelMonico’s third-generation owner, Ernest, recognized early on that online sales would be a game-changer. Now 85% of their sales is online … around the country, around the world. The shop has one of the largest hat inventories in the US, and their staff has a high hat IQ. Their website offers all the best name brands, as well as 13 pages of hats produced exclusively for DelMonico’s by hatters in Italy, Spain, France … even Stetson.