Aaron Hats
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Photos and all...http://www.snopes.com/history/american/jfkhat.htm
deanglen said:So when did the tricorn become extinct? Don't say it was third after the unicorn.
dean
nulty said:JFK would probably say that it was Time that killed the hat...
Fletch said:There was also the regulation that one must wear a cover - who wouldn't want to go without after that? At least sometimes, maybe all the time.
Edward said:I think this was very definitely a big factor.
That and their upbringing in urban ghettos like Hell's Kitchen or South Boston, where the only serious cultural influences were the church, the saloon, and the arena of manly combat.Edward said:I resent that Irish gangster remark of Kennedy's[...]I guess he was referring to the hyphenated "Irish"-American gangsters (Irish because their grandmother ate a potato once or something).
...then again, every industry was in decline in the thirties. One suspects hats were singled out because someone in the trade had good public relations sense.The hat industry was in decline in the thirties
scotrace said:Still more of this hogwash:
John F Kennedy: The Cool Factor.
Among other things, Kennedy banished hats for men, even disposing of the top hat for his inauguration speech.
Not so. He wore or carried one all day, as did everyone else, and there are hundreds of photographs to prove it.
Another incorrect bit:
J.F.K. went to the trouble of having much of it [his wardrobe] made by a tailor in London,
Not after about 1960, when he switched to New York tailors for obvious reasons.
It gets my goat when authors who should know better (they're writing for TIME, after all) just tap out whatever comes into their heads as fact, without the most cursory research.
I sent Ms. Betts a note.
jamespowers said:Your problem is that you are reading Time and expect truth.
Regards,
J
Fletch said:That and their upbringing in urban ghettos like Hell's Kitchen or South Boston, where the only serious cultural influences were the church, the saloon, and the arena of manly combat.
Fredo said:Thought the JFK myth is the most popular, my research (based on stories told by old timers and other hat afficiandos) indicates that men's hats such as the Fedora began declining as a result of WWII. So many American young men went off to war and for five years they did not wear hats unless it was a helmet or regulation military caps/slanted side fold up hat (not sure of the name). When they returned, many did not return to the old ways. I am not trying to say WWII single handly ended the era of the fedora but in my opinion it began the change. By the time JFK forgot his top hat for the inauguration, the barbarians we already settled within the gates.