Speaking of the earlier-pattern hat, here is my great grandfather in the Sangamon County "Honor Book" printed after the First World War. I presume that photo was taken a lot closer to 1900 than 1919 when the book was published.
The Boy Scout thing comes out of the Boer War. Canadian cavalry there wore them (they brought them from Montana peak cowboy hats worn on the great plains and still worn by the RCMP) and they were seen by Baden-Powell while serving in that conflict. I'm less certain how New Zealanders came to...
I had the opportunity to see the GMO perform back in college and didn't take it. I've been kicking myself ever since. They don't appear to be coming anywhere near me, however.
I'm an occasional pipe smoker, so I don't really keep tabs on such things, but a friend just told me that Benjamin Hartwell Evening Stroll, one of my favorites, is being discontinued. Anyone know about this?
That's what I was thinking of when I mentioned a "whoopie cap." Thanks for the explanation, I thought you would probably know. Any idea when those giveaways started?
Unrelated note. Does anyone know the history of these gas-and-oil side caps? Were they a uniform item? A promotional giveaway? They seem to have kind of taken over for whoopie caps (cut down felt hats like Jughead wears) between the late '30s and the 1950s.
The old farmhouse where I grew up (and where my mother still lives) had that style of lock on every original door. I found they all worked with a generic skeleton key. They seemed more akin to a privacy lock than anything for real security, as anybody with any key could open them.
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