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Top hat

A top hat (also called a high hat, or, informally, a topper)[1][failed verification] is a tall, flat-crowned hat traditionally associated with formal wear in Western dress codes, meaning white tie, morning dress, or frock coat. Traditionally made of black silk or sometimes grey, the top hat emerged in Western fashion by the end of the 18th century. Although it declined by the time of the counterculture of the 1960s, it remains a formal fashion accessory. A collapsible variant of a top hat, developed in the 19th century, is known as an opera hat.

ca. 1910 top hat by Alfred Bertiel
European royalty ca. 1859
Austin Lane Crothers, 46th Governor of Maryland (1908–1912), wearing a top hat

Perhaps inspired by the early modern era capotain, higher-crowned dark felt hats with wide brims emerged as a country leisurewear fashion along with the Age of Revolution around the 1770s. Around the 1780s, the justaucorps was replaced by the previously casual frocks and dress coats. At the same time, the tricorne and bicorne hats were replaced by what became known as the top hat. By the 1790s, the directoire style dress coat with top hat was widely introduced as citywear for the upper and middle classes in all urban areas of the Western world. The justaucorps was replaced in all but the most formal court affairs. Around the turn of the 19th century, although for a few decades beaver hats were popular, black silk became the standard, sometimes varied by grey ones. While the dress coats were replaced by the frock coat from the 1840s as conventional formal daywear, top hats continued to be worn with frock coats as well as with what became known as formal evening wear white tie. Towards the end of the 19th century, whereas the white tie with black dress coat remained fixed, frock coats were gradually replaced by morning dress, along with top hats.

After World War I, the 1920s saw widespread introduction of semi-formal black tie and informal wear suits that were worn with less formal hats such as bowler hats, homburgs, boaters and fedoras respectively, in established society. After World War II, white tie, morning dress and frock coats along with their counterpart, the top hat, started to become confined to high society, politics and international diplomacy. The last United States presidential inauguration with top hat was the inauguration of John F. Kennedy in 1961. Following the counterculture of the 1960s, its use declined further along with the disuse also of daily informal hats by men.

Yet, along with traditional formal wear, the top hat continues to be applicable for the most formal occasions, including weddings and funerals, in addition to certain audiences, balls and horse racing events, such as the Royal Enclosure at Royal Ascot and the Queen's Stand of Epsom Derby. It also remains part of the formal dress of those occupying prominent positions in certain traditional British institutions, such as the Bank of England, certain City stock exchange officials, occasionally at the Law Courts and Lincoln's Inn, judges of the Chancery Division and King's Counsel, boy-choristers of King's College Choir, dressage horseback riders, and servants' or doormen's livery.

As part of traditional formal wear, in popular culture the top hat has sometimes been associated with the upper class, and used by satirists and social critics as a symbol of capitalism or the world of business, as with the Monopoly Man or Scrooge McDuck. The top hat also forms part of the traditional dress of Uncle Sam, a symbol of the United States, generally striped in red, white and blue. Furthermore, ever since the famous "Pulling a Rabbit out of a Hat" of Louis Comte in 1814, the top hat remains associated with hat tricks and stage magic costumes.

Name edit

The top hat is also known as a beaver hat or silk hat, in reference to its material, as well as casually as chimney pot hat or stove pipe hat.

History edit

 
Self portrait (ca. 1770) of Peter Falconet (1741–1791). One of the earliest depicted prototypes of what became the top hat. In early prototypes, a sash around the crown was closed by a buckle. This was later dropped, in the same way as shoe buckles for male pumps were replaced by bowties around the turn of the 19th century.
 
Carle Vernet's 1796 painting showing two decadent French "Incredibles" greeting each other, one with what appears to be a top hat.

According to fashion historians, the top hat may have descended directly from the sugarloaf hat;[2] otherwise it is difficult to establish provenance for its creation.[3] Gentlemen began to replace the tricorne with the top hat at the end of the 18th century; a painting by Charles Vernet of 1796, Un Incroyable, shows a French dandy (one of the Incroyables et Merveilleuses) with such a hat.[4] The first silk top hat in England is credited to George Dunnage, a hatter from Middlesex, in 1793.[5] The invention of the top hat is often erroneously credited to a haberdasher named John Hetherington.

Within 30 years top hats had become popular with all social classes, with even workmen wearing them. At that time those worn by members of the upper classes were usually made of felted beaver fur; the generic name "stuff hat" was applied to hats made from various non-fur felts. The hats became part of the uniforms worn by policemen and postmen (to give them the appearance of authority); since these people spent most of their time outdoors, their hats were topped with black oilcloth.[6]

19th century edit

Between the latter part of 18th century and the early part of the 19th century, felted beaver fur was slowly replaced by silk "hatter's plush", though the silk topper met with resistance from those who preferred the beaver hat.

The 1840s and the 1850s saw it reach its most extreme form, with ever-higher crowns and narrow brims. The stovepipe hat was a variety with mostly straight sides, while one with slightly convex sides was called the "chimney pot".[7] The style most commonly referred to as the stovepipe was popularized in the United States by Abraham Lincoln during his presidency; though it is postulated[by whom?] that he may never have called it stovepipe himself, but merely a silk hat or a plug hat. Lincoln often carried documents and letters inside the hat.[8] One of Lincoln's top hats is kept on display at the National Museum of American History in Washington, DC.[9]

During the 19th century, the top hat developed from a fashion into a symbol of urban respectability, and this was assured when Prince Albert started wearing them in 1850; the rise in popularity of the silk plush top hat possibly led to a decline in beaver hats, sharply reducing the size of the beaver trapping industry in North America, though it is also postulated[by whom?] that the beaver numbers were also reducing at the same time. Whether it directly affected or was coincidental to the decline of the beaver trade is debatable.

James Laver once observed that an assemblage of "toppers" resembled factory chimneys and thus added to the mood of the industrial era. In England, post-Brummel dandies went in for flared crowns and swooping brims. Their counterparts in France, known as the "Incroyables", wore top hats of such outlandish dimensions that there was no room for them in overcrowded cloakrooms until the invention of the collapsible top hat.[10][11]

20th century edit

 
Illustration of a silk top hat in a 1915 U.S. advertisement.

Until World War I the top hat was maintained as a standard item of formal outdoor wear by upper-class males for both daytime and evening usage. Considerations of convenience and expense meant however that it was increasingly superseded by soft hats for ordinary wear. By the end of World War II, it had become a comparative rarity, though it continued to be worn regularly in certain roles. In Britain these included holders of various positions in the Bank of England and City stockbroking, and boys at some public schools. All the civilian members of the Japanese delegation who signed the Japanese Instrument of Surrender on 2 September 1945, wore top hats, reflecting common diplomatic practice at the time.[12]

The top hat persisted in politics and international diplomacy for many years. In the Soviet Union, there was debate as to whether its diplomats should follow the international conventions and wear a top hat. Instead a diplomatic uniform with peaked cap for formal occasions was adopted. Top hats were part of formal wear for U.S. presidential inaugurations for many years. President Dwight D. Eisenhower spurned the hat for his inauguration, but John F. Kennedy, who was accustomed to formal dress, brought it back for his in 1961. Nevertheless, Kennedy delivered his forceful inaugural address hatless, reinforcing the image of vigor he desired to project, and setting the tone for an active administration to follow.

His successor, Lyndon B. Johnson, did not wear a top hat for any part of his inauguration in 1965, and the hat has not been worn since for this purpose.[13]

In the United Kingdom, the post of Government Broker in the London Stock Exchange that required the wearing of a top hat in the streets of the City of London was abolished by the "Big Bang" reforms of October 1986.[14] In the British House of Commons, a rule requiring a Member of Parliament who wished to raise a point of order during a division, having to speak seated with a top hat on, was abolished in 1998. Spare top hats were kept in the chamber in case they were needed. The Modernisation Select Committee commented that "This particular practice has almost certainly brought the House into greater ridicule than almost any other".[15]

Although Eton College has long abandoned the top hat as part of its uniform, top hats are still worn by "Monitors" at Harrow School with their Sunday dress uniform.[16] They are worn by male members of the British Royal Family on State occasions as an alternative to military uniform, for instance, in the Carriage Procession at the Diamond Jubilee in 2012.[17] Top hats may also be worn at some horse racing meetings, notably The Derby[18] and Royal Ascot.[19] Top hats are worn at the Tynwald Day ceremony and a few other formal occasions in the Isle of Man.

In George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty Four, the top hat features prominently in the propaganda of the book's totalitarian regime: "These rich men were called capitalists. They were fat, ugly men with wicked faces [...] dressed in a long black coat which was called a frock coat, and a queer, shiny hat shaped like a stovepipe, which was called a top hat. This was the uniform of the capitalists, and no one else was allowed to wear it."[20]

21st century edit

The modern standard top hat is a hard, black silk hat, characteristically made of fur. The acceptable colors are much as they have traditionally been, with "white" hats (which are actually grey), a daytime racing color, worn at the less formal occasions demanding a top hat, such as Royal Ascot, or with a morning suit. In the U.S. top hats are worn widely in coaching, a driven horse discipline, as well as for formal riding to hounds.

The collapsible silk opera hat, or crush hat, is still worn on occasions, and black in color if worn with evening wear as part of white tie,[21] and is still made by a few companies, of the traditional materials of satin or grosgrain silk. The other alternative hat for eveningwear is the normal hard shell.[22]

In formal academic dress, the Finnish and Swedish doctoral hat is a variant of the top hat, and remains in use today.

American rock musician Tom Petty was known for wearing several types of top hats throughout his career and in his music videos such as "Don't Come Around Here No More". The British-American musician Slash has sported a top hat since he was in Guns N' Roses, a look that has become iconic for him.[23] Panic! at the Disco's Brendon Urie is also a frequent wearer of top hats. He has been known to wear them in previous live performances on their Nothing Rhymes with Circus tour and in the music videos, "The Ballad of Mona Lisa" and "I Write Sins Not Tragedies".

 
Punxsutawney Phil is held aloft on Groundhog Day by a tophat-wearing member of the Inner Circle

The members of the "Inner Circle" of the Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania Groundhog Club wear top hats on February 2 of every year when they perform the Groundhog Day ceremonies with Punxsutawney Phil.

Steampunk culture also incorporates the top hat into accepted headgear choices, though top hats worn in such a context are sometimes made of leather or similar materials and, now and then, even have simulated gears or other adornments secured to them.[citation needed]

A top hat, frequently colored red, white and blue, or with stars and stripes similar to those on the American flag, is part of the regular costume of Uncle Sam, a symbol of the United States.[24]

For satirists and political cartoonists, the top hat was a convenient symbol of the upper class, business and capitalism. A character wearing a top hat would be instantly recognized by the viewer as a member of the oligarchy.[citation needed] The character Rich Uncle Pennybags in the board game Monopoly wears a top hat. In addition, a top hat is one of the game's tokens, used by players to mark their position as they progress around the board.[citation needed]

Freemasonry edit

 
Masonic Worshipful Master Bill Edgerton wearing his traditional top hat[when?]

In Freemasonry, as practiced in North American lodges, top hats are often associated with the position of Worshipful Master as he is the only member allowed the privilege of wearing a head covering to signify his leadership within the lodge. However, the Master is not obliged to wear a top hat, and can wear whatever type of hat he deems appropriate for the occasion. This is because there are varying degrees of formality in different Lodges, from formal wear to everyday dress. It is also common for a Worshipful Master to receive top-hat-related trinkets and gifts on either the day of his installation or as a going away present.[25] In other countries, especially in certain systems in Germany, top hats are worn by all members of the lodge.

Judaism edit

In some synagogues, the president and honorary officers may wear a top hat on Shabbat or the great festivals. The custom of wearing a top hat, or tzylinder in the Yiddish language, originated in 19th-century England, replacing the wig and tricorn hat. The custom became widespread in Europe until The Holocaust. In some traditional Sephardi synagogues, members of the congregation may also wear top hats on special occasions.[26] The custom is said to have started at the Bevis Marks Synagogue in London on a hot day, when the Chazzan was preparing for a service and decided that it was too hot to wear his wig, throwing it out of the window in a fit of bad temper. He then found that his tricorn hat was too big, as it had been made to fit over the wig, and so wore his top hat instead.[27]

Description edit

 
In a cartoon by John Leech, from: The Comic History of Rome by Gilbert Abbott à Beckett, a top hat is placed in a deliberate anachronism on the head of the Ancient Roman reformer Tiberius Gracchus, in order to compare him to 19th-century British politicians.

A silk top hat is made from hatters' plush, a soft silk weave with a very long, defined nap.[28] This is rare now, because it has not been in general production since the 1950s, and it is thought that there are no looms capable of producing the traditional material any more; the last looms in Lyon were destroyed by the last owner, Nicholas Smith, after a violent breakup with his brother, Bobby Smith.[29] The standard covering is now fur plush or melusine as (the London hat merchant) Christys' calls it. A grey flat fur felt top hat is the popular alternative.

 
Grey top hat

It is common to see top hats in stiff wool felt and even soft wool though these are not considered on the same level as the silk or fur plush or grey felt varieties. The standard crown shape nowadays is the 'semi-bell crown'; 'full bell crowns' and 'stovepipe' shaped toppers are rarer.

Because of the rarity of vintage silk hats, and the expense of modern top hats, the vintage/antique market is very lively, with models in wearable condition typically hard to find; price often varies with size (larger sizes are typically more expensive) and condition.

Construction edit

In the past, top hats were made by blocking a single piece of wool or fur felt and then covering the shell with fur plush. Since the invention of silk plush a new method using gossamer was invented and used up to the present day though the older method is more common for toppers made today.

A town-weight silk top hat is made by first blocking two pieces of gossamer (or goss for short), which is made of a sheet of cheesecloth that has been coated with a shellac and ammonia solution and left to cure for 5 months on a wooden frame, on a wooden top hat block (which is made of several interconnecting pieces like a puzzle so the block can be removed from the shell, as the opening is narrower than tip of the crown) to form the shell. After the shell has rested for a week in the block, the block is removed and the brim (made of several layers of goss to give it strength) is attached to the crown. The shell is coated with a layer of shellac varnish and also left for a further week. The silk plush is then cut to the correct pattern. The top and side pieces are sewn together; the side piece having an open diagonal seam. It is then eased over the shell carefully and then ironed (the heat of the iron melting the shellac for the plush to stick to it). The upper brim is also covered with a piece of silk plush or with silk petersham (a ribbed silk). The underbrim is covered with merino cloth. After the hat has fully rested, the brim is curled and bound with silk grosgrain ribbon, and a hat band (either silk grosgrain with or without a bow, or a black wool mourning band without a bow) is installed. Finally, the lining and the leather sweatband are carefully hand-stitched in.[30]

The construction can vary; reinforced toppers sometimes called "country-weight" included greater layers of goss used to provide a strengthened hat that was traditionally suitable for riding and hunting, though it may not always conform to modern safety standards.

Opera hat edit

 
The collapsible Gibus

On May 5, 1812, a London hatter, Thomas Francis Dollman, patented a design for "an elastic round hat" supported by ribs and springs. His patent was described as:

An elastic round hat, which "may be made of beaver, silk, or other materials." "The top of the crown and about half an inch from the top" as well as "the brim and about an inch, the crown from the bottom" are stiffened in the ordinary manner. The rest of the hat "is left entirely without stiffening," and is kept in shape by ribs of any suitable material "fastened horizontally to the inside of the crown," and by an elastic steel spring from three to four inches long and nearly half an inch wide "sewed on each side of the crown in the inside in an upright position." Then packed up for travelling, "the double ribbon fastened under the band is to be pulled over the top of the crown to keep it in a small compass."[31]

Some sources have taken this to describe an early folding top hat,[32][33] although it is not explicitly stated whether Dollman's design was specifically for male or female headgear. Dollman's patent expired in 1825.[34] In France, around 1840, Antoine Gibus's design for a spring-loaded collapsible top-hat proved so popular that hats made to it became known as gibus.[10][35] They were also often called opera hats, owing to the common practice of storing them in their flattened state under one's seat at the opera. The characteristic snapping sound heard upon opening a gibus suggested a third name, the chapeau claque, from French: claque, meaning "slap".[36]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ Webster's II New College Dictionary. Houghton Mifflin Reference Books. 1995. p. 848. ISBN 0-395-96214-5.
  2. ^ Sewell, Charlotte (1983). Clothes in History. Wayland. Ltd.
  3. ^ Kilgour, Ruth Edwards (1954). A Pageant of Hats Ancient and Modern.
  4. ^ "Le Centenaire du Chapeau". La Mode Pratique (6): 66–7. 6 February 1897. (referenced in Tigersprung: Fashion in Modernity by Ulrich Lehmann)
  5. ^ "The First Silk Top Hat" (PDF). Ascot Top Hats Ltd News Release. 16 June 2009. (PDF) from the original on 8 March 2012. Retrieved 20 August 2009. (referenced in Ascot Top Hats)
  6. ^ Paterson, Michael; Peter Ackroyd (2007). Voices from Dickens' London. David & Charles. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-7153-2723-4.
  7. ^ Hoffmann, Frank W.; William G. Bailey (1994-07-07). Fashion & merchandising fads. Haworth Press. p. 260. ISBN 1-56023-031-2.
  8. ^ Benjamin P. Thomas (26 September 2008). Abraham Lincoln: A Biography. SIU Press. pp. 39–. ISBN 978-0-8093-2887-1. from the original on 28 February 2017. Retrieved 26 September 2016.
  9. ^ "Abraham Lincoln's top hat". Civilwar.si.edu. from the original on 2013-07-30. Retrieved 2014-03-03.
  10. ^ a b ""Gibus" Opera Hat". McCord Museum. from the original on 2013-11-03. Retrieved 2013-07-06.
  11. ^ Cunnington, C Willett and Phyllis (1959). Handbook of English Costume in the Nineteenth Century. Faber. p. 93.
  12. ^ "Reports of General MacArthur; MacArthur in Japan: The Occupation: Military Phase: Volume 1 Supplement: Chapter 2: Plate 12: MacArthur Takes the Surrender, 2 September 1945". history.army.mil. from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 2014-08-15.
  13. ^ Inaugural traditions 2011-02-09 at the Wayback Machine Accessed June 17, 2011
  14. ^ "1 September 2007 - Obituary: Sir Nigel Althaus (the last Government Broker)". The Independent. 2007-09-01. from the original on 15 February 2015. Retrieved 2014-03-03.
  15. ^ "Some Traditions and Customs of the House" (PDF). www.parliament.uk. House of Commons Information Office. July 2010. (PDF) from the original on 2010-06-12. (p. 8)
  16. ^
  17. ^ "Hats off for the Jubilee". CNN. 5 June 2012. Retrieved 2022-06-24.
  18. ^ . Derby.racingpost.com. Archived from the original on 2014-03-03. Retrieved 2014-03-03.
  19. ^ "Royal Ascot: Racegoers Guide Dress Code ". Ascot.co.uk. from the original on 2013-03-19. Retrieved 2014-03-03.
  20. ^ George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty Four, Part 1, Chapter 7
  21. ^ Croonborg, Frederick (1907). The Blue Book of Men's Tailoring. New York and Chicago: Croonborg Sartorial Co. ISBN 0-442-21763-3.
  22. ^ Apparel Arts. . Archived from the original on 2012-02-27.
  23. ^ "SLASH: 'An Intimate Portrait' Book Due In October". blabbermouth.net. Aug 28, 2012. from the original on August 29, 2012. Retrieved October 25, 2012. Over the past twenty-five years, Slash's cool stage presence, gloriously unkempt hair, iconic top hat, and soulful guitar virtuosity has been the epitome of contemporary hard rock.
  24. ^ "Uncle Sam's top hat". www.history.com.
  25. ^ "masonic-lodge-of-education.com". masonic-lodge-of-education.com. from the original on 2012-05-29. Retrieved 2012-06-06.
  26. ^ Apple, Raymond; Great Synagogue (Sydney, N. S. W. ). (2008). Raymond Apple, The Great Synagogue: A History of Sydney's Big Shule, University of New South Wales Press 2008, ISBN 978-086840-927-6 (p.144). UNSW Press. ISBN 9780868409276. Retrieved 2014-03-03.
  27. ^ "Top hats in shule – Ask the Rabbi". OzTorah. 2013-11-21. from the original on 2014-03-03. Retrieved 2014-03-03.
  28. ^ Oxford English Dictionary (1989). 2nd. Ed.
  29. ^ Storey, Nicholas, History of Men's Fashion. pp. 138, 139
  30. ^ Harmsworth's Universal Encyclopaedia (1920), Hat, p. 3049
  31. ^ Patents for inventions. Abridgments of specifications. Patent Office. 1874. an elastic round hat.
  32. ^ de Bono, Edward (1974). Eureka! An illustrated history of inventions from the wheel to the computer: a London Sunday Times encyclopedia. London: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. p. 88. ISBN 9780030126413.
  33. ^ Sichel, Marion (1978). The Regency. London: Batsford. pp. 24–25. ISBN 9780713403428.
  34. ^ Herbert, Luke (1827). The Register of Arts, and Journal of Patent Inventions, Volume 4. p. 64. from the original on 2017-02-28. Retrieved 2016-09-26.
  35. ^ . Villagehatshop.com. Archived from the original on 2009-12-02. Retrieved 2009-10-25.
  36. ^ . Lock Hatters. Archived from the original on 2015-09-07. Retrieved 2013-07-06.

Further reading

  • Steinberg, Neil, Hatless Jack: The President, the Fedora and the Death of the Hat, 2005, Granta Books

External links edit

  • britishpathe.com, vintage footage of how silk top hats are made by Patey.
  • Guide to Buying a Top Hat by Charles Rupert Tsua

other, uses, disambiguation, also, called, high, informally, topper, failed, verification, tall, flat, crowned, traditionally, associated, with, formal, wear, western, dress, codes, meaning, white, morning, dress, frock, coat, traditionally, made, black, silk,. For other uses see Top hat disambiguation A top hat also called a high hat or informally a topper 1 failed verification is a tall flat crowned hat traditionally associated with formal wear in Western dress codes meaning white tie morning dress or frock coat Traditionally made of black silk or sometimes grey the top hat emerged in Western fashion by the end of the 18th century Although it declined by the time of the counterculture of the 1960s it remains a formal fashion accessory A collapsible variant of a top hat developed in the 19th century is known as an opera hat ca 1910 top hat by Alfred BertielEuropean royalty ca 1859Austin Lane Crothers 46th Governor of Maryland 1908 1912 wearing a top hatPerhaps inspired by the early modern era capotain higher crowned dark felt hats with wide brims emerged as a country leisurewear fashion along with the Age of Revolution around the 1770s Around the 1780s the justaucorps was replaced by the previously casual frocks and dress coats At the same time the tricorne and bicorne hats were replaced by what became known as the top hat By the 1790s the directoire style dress coat with top hat was widely introduced as citywear for the upper and middle classes in all urban areas of the Western world The justaucorps was replaced in all but the most formal court affairs Around the turn of the 19th century although for a few decades beaver hats were popular black silk became the standard sometimes varied by grey ones While the dress coats were replaced by the frock coat from the 1840s as conventional formal daywear top hats continued to be worn with frock coats as well as with what became known as formal evening wear white tie Towards the end of the 19th century whereas the white tie with black dress coat remained fixed frock coats were gradually replaced by morning dress along with top hats After World War I the 1920s saw widespread introduction of semi formal black tie and informal wear suits that were worn with less formal hats such as bowler hats homburgs boaters and fedoras respectively in established society After World War II white tie morning dress and frock coats along with their counterpart the top hat started to become confined to high society politics and international diplomacy The last United States presidential inauguration with top hat was the inauguration of John F Kennedy in 1961 Following the counterculture of the 1960s its use declined further along with the disuse also of daily informal hats by men Yet along with traditional formal wear the top hat continues to be applicable for the most formal occasions including weddings and funerals in addition to certain audiences balls and horse racing events such as the Royal Enclosure at Royal Ascot and the Queen s Stand of Epsom Derby It also remains part of the formal dress of those occupying prominent positions in certain traditional British institutions such as the Bank of England certain City stock exchange officials occasionally at the Law Courts and Lincoln s Inn judges of the Chancery Division and King s Counsel boy choristers of King s College Choir dressage horseback riders and servants or doormen s livery As part of traditional formal wear in popular culture the top hat has sometimes been associated with the upper class and used by satirists and social critics as a symbol of capitalism or the world of business as with the Monopoly Man or Scrooge McDuck The top hat also forms part of the traditional dress of Uncle Sam a symbol of the United States generally striped in red white and blue Furthermore ever since the famous Pulling a Rabbit out of a Hat of Louis Comte in 1814 the top hat remains associated with hat tricks and stage magic costumes Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 19th century 2 2 20th century 2 3 21st century 2 3 1 Freemasonry 2 3 2 Judaism 3 Description 3 1 Construction 4 Opera hat 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksName editThe top hat is also known as a beaver hat or silk hat in reference to its material as well as casually as chimney pot hat or stove pipe hat History edit nbsp Self portrait ca 1770 of Peter Falconet 1741 1791 One of the earliest depicted prototypes of what became the top hat In early prototypes a sash around the crown was closed by a buckle This was later dropped in the same way as shoe buckles for male pumps were replaced by bowties around the turn of the 19th century nbsp Carle Vernet s 1796 painting showing two decadent French Incredibles greeting each other one with what appears to be a top hat According to fashion historians the top hat may have descended directly from the sugarloaf hat 2 otherwise it is difficult to establish provenance for its creation 3 Gentlemen began to replace the tricorne with the top hat at the end of the 18th century a painting by Charles Vernet of 1796 Un Incroyable shows a French dandy one of the Incroyables et Merveilleuses with such a hat 4 The first silk top hat in England is credited to George Dunnage a hatter from Middlesex in 1793 5 The invention of the top hat is often erroneously credited to a haberdasher named John Hetherington Within 30 years top hats had become popular with all social classes with even workmen wearing them At that time those worn by members of the upper classes were usually made of felted beaver fur the generic name stuff hat was applied to hats made from various non fur felts The hats became part of the uniforms worn by policemen and postmen to give them the appearance of authority since these people spent most of their time outdoors their hats were topped with black oilcloth 6 19th century edit Between the latter part of 18th century and the early part of the 19th century felted beaver fur was slowly replaced by silk hatter s plush though the silk topper met with resistance from those who preferred the beaver hat The 1840s and the 1850s saw it reach its most extreme form with ever higher crowns and narrow brims The stovepipe hat was a variety with mostly straight sides while one with slightly convex sides was called the chimney pot 7 The style most commonly referred to as the stovepipe was popularized in the United States by Abraham Lincoln during his presidency though it is postulated by whom that he may never have called it stovepipe himself but merely a silk hat or a plug hat Lincoln often carried documents and letters inside the hat 8 One of Lincoln s top hats is kept on display at the National Museum of American History in Washington DC 9 nbsp Isambard Kingdom Brunel William Harrison John Scott Russell and others at the launching of the SS Great Eastern London 1857 nbsp Abraham Lincoln middle in his distinctive stovepipe silk hat at Antietam 1862 nbsp In this popular print of the 1848 Five Days of Milan the Italian city s uprising against Austrian rule several combatants are shown wearing top hats During the 19th century the top hat developed from a fashion into a symbol of urban respectability and this was assured when Prince Albert started wearing them in 1850 the rise in popularity of the silk plush top hat possibly led to a decline in beaver hats sharply reducing the size of the beaver trapping industry in North America though it is also postulated by whom that the beaver numbers were also reducing at the same time Whether it directly affected or was coincidental to the decline of the beaver trade is debatable James Laver once observed that an assemblage of toppers resembled factory chimneys and thus added to the mood of the industrial era In England post Brummel dandies went in for flared crowns and swooping brims Their counterparts in France known as the Incroyables wore top hats of such outlandish dimensions that there was no room for them in overcrowded cloakrooms until the invention of the collapsible top hat 10 11 20th century edit nbsp Illustration of a silk top hat in a 1915 U S advertisement Until World War I the top hat was maintained as a standard item of formal outdoor wear by upper class males for both daytime and evening usage Considerations of convenience and expense meant however that it was increasingly superseded by soft hats for ordinary wear By the end of World War II it had become a comparative rarity though it continued to be worn regularly in certain roles In Britain these included holders of various positions in the Bank of England and City stockbroking and boys at some public schools All the civilian members of the Japanese delegation who signed the Japanese Instrument of Surrender on 2 September 1945 wore top hats reflecting common diplomatic practice at the time 12 The top hat persisted in politics and international diplomacy for many years In the Soviet Union there was debate as to whether its diplomats should follow the international conventions and wear a top hat Instead a diplomatic uniform with peaked cap for formal occasions was adopted Top hats were part of formal wear for U S presidential inaugurations for many years President Dwight D Eisenhower spurned the hat for his inauguration but John F Kennedy who was accustomed to formal dress brought it back for his in 1961 Nevertheless Kennedy delivered his forceful inaugural address hatless reinforcing the image of vigor he desired to project and setting the tone for an active administration to follow His successor Lyndon B Johnson did not wear a top hat for any part of his inauguration in 1965 and the hat has not been worn since for this purpose 13 In the United Kingdom the post of Government Broker in the London Stock Exchange that required the wearing of a top hat in the streets of the City of London was abolished by the Big Bang reforms of October 1986 14 In the British House of Commons a rule requiring a Member of Parliament who wished to raise a point of order during a division having to speak seated with a top hat on was abolished in 1998 Spare top hats were kept in the chamber in case they were needed The Modernisation Select Committee commented that This particular practice has almost certainly brought the House into greater ridicule than almost any other 15 Although Eton College has long abandoned the top hat as part of its uniform top hats are still worn by Monitors at Harrow School with their Sunday dress uniform 16 They are worn by male members of the British Royal Family on State occasions as an alternative to military uniform for instance in the Carriage Procession at the Diamond Jubilee in 2012 17 Top hats may also be worn at some horse racing meetings notably The Derby 18 and Royal Ascot 19 Top hats are worn at the Tynwald Day ceremony and a few other formal occasions in the Isle of Man In George Orwell s Nineteen Eighty Four the top hat features prominently in the propaganda of the book s totalitarian regime These rich men were called capitalists They were fat ugly men with wicked faces dressed in a long black coat which was called a frock coat and a queer shiny hat shaped like a stovepipe which was called a top hat This was the uniform of the capitalists and no one else was allowed to wear it 20 nbsp Winston Churchill in a frock coat with grey top hat nbsp The inauguration of John F Kennedy as seen from behind Most men have their hats off however a few top hats can be distinguished some by the shininess of the hat s flat crown nbsp Edward Beckett 5th Baron Grimthorpe and others at Royal Ascot 201221st century edit The modern standard top hat is a hard black silk hat characteristically made of fur The acceptable colors are much as they have traditionally been with white hats which are actually grey a daytime racing color worn at the less formal occasions demanding a top hat such as Royal Ascot or with a morning suit In the U S top hats are worn widely in coaching a driven horse discipline as well as for formal riding to hounds The collapsible silk opera hat or crush hat is still worn on occasions and black in color if worn with evening wear as part of white tie 21 and is still made by a few companies of the traditional materials of satin or grosgrain silk The other alternative hat for eveningwear is the normal hard shell 22 In formal academic dress the Finnish and Swedish doctoral hat is a variant of the top hat and remains in use today American rock musician Tom Petty was known for wearing several types of top hats throughout his career and in his music videos such as Don t Come Around Here No More The British American musician Slash has sported a top hat since he was in Guns N Roses a look that has become iconic for him 23 Panic at the Disco s Brendon Urie is also a frequent wearer of top hats He has been known to wear them in previous live performances on their Nothing Rhymes with Circus tour and in the music videos The Ballad of Mona Lisa and I Write Sins Not Tragedies nbsp Punxsutawney Phil is held aloft on Groundhog Day by a tophat wearing member of the Inner CircleThe members of the Inner Circle of the Punxsutawney Pennsylvania Groundhog Club wear top hats on February 2 of every year when they perform the Groundhog Day ceremonies with Punxsutawney Phil Steampunk culture also incorporates the top hat into accepted headgear choices though top hats worn in such a context are sometimes made of leather or similar materials and now and then even have simulated gears or other adornments secured to them citation needed A top hat frequently colored red white and blue or with stars and stripes similar to those on the American flag is part of the regular costume of Uncle Sam a symbol of the United States 24 For satirists and political cartoonists the top hat was a convenient symbol of the upper class business and capitalism A character wearing a top hat would be instantly recognized by the viewer as a member of the oligarchy citation needed The character Rich Uncle Pennybags in the board game Monopoly wears a top hat In addition a top hat is one of the game s tokens used by players to mark their position as they progress around the board citation needed Freemasonry edit nbsp Masonic Worshipful Master Bill Edgerton wearing his traditional top hat when In Freemasonry as practiced in North American lodges top hats are often associated with the position of Worshipful Master as he is the only member allowed the privilege of wearing a head covering to signify his leadership within the lodge However the Master is not obliged to wear a top hat and can wear whatever type of hat he deems appropriate for the occasion This is because there are varying degrees of formality in different Lodges from formal wear to everyday dress It is also common for a Worshipful Master to receive top hat related trinkets and gifts on either the day of his installation or as a going away present 25 In other countries especially in certain systems in Germany top hats are worn by all members of the lodge Judaism edit In some synagogues the president and honorary officers may wear a top hat on Shabbat or the great festivals The custom of wearing a top hat or tzylinder in the Yiddish language originated in 19th century England replacing the wig and tricorn hat The custom became widespread in Europe until The Holocaust In some traditional Sephardi synagogues members of the congregation may also wear top hats on special occasions 26 The custom is said to have started at the Bevis Marks Synagogue in London on a hot day when the Chazzan was preparing for a service and decided that it was too hot to wear his wig throwing it out of the window in a fit of bad temper He then found that his tricorn hat was too big as it had been made to fit over the wig and so wore his top hat instead 27 Description edit nbsp In a cartoon by John Leech from The Comic History of Rome by Gilbert Abbott a Beckett a top hat is placed in a deliberate anachronism on the head of the Ancient Roman reformer Tiberius Gracchus in order to compare him to 19th century British politicians A silk top hat is made from hatters plush a soft silk weave with a very long defined nap 28 This is rare now because it has not been in general production since the 1950s and it is thought that there are no looms capable of producing the traditional material any more the last looms in Lyon were destroyed by the last owner Nicholas Smith after a violent breakup with his brother Bobby Smith 29 The standard covering is now fur plush or melusine as the London hat merchant Christys calls it A grey flat fur felt top hat is the popular alternative nbsp Grey top hatIt is common to see top hats in stiff wool felt and even soft wool though these are not considered on the same level as the silk or fur plush or grey felt varieties The standard crown shape nowadays is the semi bell crown full bell crowns and stovepipe shaped toppers are rarer Because of the rarity of vintage silk hats and the expense of modern top hats the vintage antique market is very lively with models in wearable condition typically hard to find price often varies with size larger sizes are typically more expensive and condition Construction edit In the past top hats were made by blocking a single piece of wool or fur felt and then covering the shell with fur plush Since the invention of silk plush a new method using gossamer was invented and used up to the present day though the older method is more common for toppers made today A town weight silk top hat is made by first blocking two pieces of gossamer or goss for short which is made of a sheet of cheesecloth that has been coated with a shellac and ammonia solution and left to cure for 5 months on a wooden frame on a wooden top hat block which is made of several interconnecting pieces like a puzzle so the block can be removed from the shell as the opening is narrower than tip of the crown to form the shell After the shell has rested for a week in the block the block is removed and the brim made of several layers of goss to give it strength is attached to the crown The shell is coated with a layer of shellac varnish and also left for a further week The silk plush is then cut to the correct pattern The top and side pieces are sewn together the side piece having an open diagonal seam It is then eased over the shell carefully and then ironed the heat of the iron melting the shellac for the plush to stick to it The upper brim is also covered with a piece of silk plush or with silk petersham a ribbed silk The underbrim is covered with merino cloth After the hat has fully rested the brim is curled and bound with silk grosgrain ribbon and a hat band either silk grosgrain with or without a bow or a black wool mourning band without a bow is installed Finally the lining and the leather sweatband are carefully hand stitched in 30 The construction can vary reinforced toppers sometimes called country weight included greater layers of goss used to provide a strengthened hat that was traditionally suitable for riding and hunting though it may not always conform to modern safety standards Opera hat editMain article Opera hat nbsp The collapsible GibusOn May 5 1812 a London hatter Thomas Francis Dollman patented a design for an elastic round hat supported by ribs and springs His patent was described as An elastic round hat which may be made of beaver silk or other materials The top of the crown and about half an inch from the top as well as the brim and about an inch the crown from the bottom are stiffened in the ordinary manner The rest of the hat is left entirely without stiffening and is kept in shape by ribs of any suitable material fastened horizontally to the inside of the crown and by an elastic steel spring from three to four inches long and nearly half an inch wide sewed on each side of the crown in the inside in an upright position Then packed up for travelling the double ribbon fastened under the band is to be pulled over the top of the crown to keep it in a small compass 31 Some sources have taken this to describe an early folding top hat 32 33 although it is not explicitly stated whether Dollman s design was specifically for male or female headgear Dollman s patent expired in 1825 34 In France around 1840 Antoine Gibus s design for a spring loaded collapsible top hat proved so popular that hats made to it became known as gibus 10 35 They were also often called opera hats owing to the common practice of storing them in their flattened state under one s seat at the opera The characteristic snapping sound heard upon opening a gibus suggested a third name the chapeau claque from French claque meaning slap 36 Gallery edit nbsp Top hats in the 1840s Swedish Fashion plate from 1847 nbsp Ants Piip the first Head of State and the fifth Prime Minister of Estonia wearing a top hat 1923 nbsp Mustafa Kemal Ataturk wearing a top hat and white tie 1925 nbsp Brazilian President Washington Luis wearing morning dress and a top hat during a military ceremony late 1920s early 1930s nbsp Contemporary hip hop musician T Pain wearing a blue and white striped top hat at the Video Music Awards in 2008 nbsp A stage magician using a top hat as a prop nbsp Hat box nbsp A customer wearing a top hat in Paul Hoeniger s depiction of Berlin s Cafe Josty 1890See also edit nbsp Fashion portalGat hat List of headgear Shako a tall cylindrical military capReferences editNotes Webster s II New College Dictionary Houghton Mifflin Reference Books 1995 p 848 ISBN 0 395 96214 5 Sewell Charlotte 1983 Clothes in History Wayland Ltd Kilgour Ruth Edwards 1954 A Pageant of Hats Ancient and Modern Le Centenaire du Chapeau La Mode Pratique 6 66 7 6 February 1897 referenced in Tigersprung Fashion in Modernity by Ulrich Lehmann The First Silk Top Hat PDF Ascot Top Hats Ltd News Release 16 June 2009 Archived PDF from the original on 8 March 2012 Retrieved 20 August 2009 referenced in Ascot Top Hats Paterson Michael Peter Ackroyd 2007 Voices from Dickens London David amp Charles p 45 ISBN 978 0 7153 2723 4 Hoffmann Frank W William G Bailey 1994 07 07 Fashion amp merchandising fads Haworth Press p 260 ISBN 1 56023 031 2 Benjamin P Thomas 26 September 2008 Abraham Lincoln A Biography SIU Press pp 39 ISBN 978 0 8093 2887 1 Archived from the original on 28 February 2017 Retrieved 26 September 2016 Abraham Lincoln s top hat Civilwar si edu Archived from the original on 2013 07 30 Retrieved 2014 03 03 a b Gibus Opera Hat McCord Museum Archived from the original on 2013 11 03 Retrieved 2013 07 06 Cunnington C Willett and Phyllis 1959 Handbook of English Costume in the Nineteenth Century Faber p 93 Reports of General MacArthur MacArthur in Japan The Occupation Military Phase Volume 1 Supplement Chapter 2 Plate 12 MacArthur Takes the Surrender 2 September 1945 history army mil Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 2014 08 15 Inaugural traditions Archived 2011 02 09 at the Wayback Machine Accessed June 17 2011 1 September 2007 Obituary Sir Nigel Althaus the last Government Broker The Independent 2007 09 01 Archived from the original on 15 February 2015 Retrieved 2014 03 03 Some Traditions and Customs of the House PDF www parliament uk House of Commons Information Office July 2010 Archived PDF from the original on 2010 06 12 p 8 Harrow School Uniform Hats off for the Jubilee CNN 5 June 2012 Retrieved 2022 06 24 The Racing Post Epsom Derby Dress Code Derby racingpost com Archived from the original on 2014 03 03 Retrieved 2014 03 03 Royal Ascot Racegoers Guide Dress Code Ascot co uk Archived from the original on 2013 03 19 Retrieved 2014 03 03 George Orwell Nineteen Eighty Four Part 1 Chapter 7 Croonborg Frederick 1907 The Blue Book of Men s Tailoring New York and Chicago Croonborg Sartorial Co ISBN 0 442 21763 3 Apparel Arts Top Hat Etiquette Archived from the original on 2012 02 27 SLASH An Intimate Portrait Book Due In October blabbermouth net Aug 28 2012 Archived from the original on August 29 2012 Retrieved October 25 2012 Over the past twenty five years Slash s cool stage presence gloriously unkempt hair iconic top hat and soulful guitar virtuosity has been the epitome of contemporary hard rock Uncle Sam s top hat www history com masonic lodge of education com masonic lodge of education com Archived from the original on 2012 05 29 Retrieved 2012 06 06 Apple Raymond Great Synagogue Sydney N S W 2008 Raymond Apple The Great Synagogue A History of Sydney s Big Shule University of New South Wales Press 2008 ISBN 978 086840 927 6 p 144 UNSW Press ISBN 9780868409276 Retrieved 2014 03 03 Top hats in shule Ask the Rabbi OzTorah 2013 11 21 Archived from the original on 2014 03 03 Retrieved 2014 03 03 Oxford English Dictionary 1989 2nd Ed Storey Nicholas History of Men s Fashion pp 138 139 Harmsworth s Universal Encyclopaedia 1920 Hat p 3049 Patents for inventions Abridgments of specifications Patent Office 1874 an elastic round hat de Bono Edward 1974 Eureka An illustrated history of inventions from the wheel to the computer a London Sunday Times encyclopedia London Holt Rinehart and Winston p 88 ISBN 9780030126413 Sichel Marion 1978 The Regency London Batsford pp 24 25 ISBN 9780713403428 Herbert Luke 1827 The Register of Arts and Journal of Patent Inventions Volume 4 p 64 Archived from the original on 2017 02 28 Retrieved 2016 09 26 Hat Glossary G Villagehatshop com Archived from the original on 2009 12 02 Retrieved 2009 10 25 History of Hats Lock Hatters Archived from the original on 2015 09 07 Retrieved 2013 07 06 Further reading Steinberg Neil Hatless Jack The President the Fedora and the Death of the Hat 2005 Granta BooksExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Top hats britishpathe com vintage footage of how silk top hats are made by Patey Guide to Buying a Top Hat by Charles Rupert Tsua Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Top hat amp oldid 1192970363, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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