Joao Encarnado
I'll Lock Up
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More drooling running...
A black clear nutria?
In a research of Timex Computers (do you remember the Timex-Sinclair computer line?), we found some people that worked there and they were able to killed some myths... would be someone who worked on Stetson be able to kill some myths too?
I agree. It seems to me that there is a myth that "clear" being attached to either Beaver or Nutria must mean un-dyed felt. It seems we've seen many examples that dispels this myth.
So, let's think about people's ages for a second, here...
So, Stetson stopped manufacturing in like 1970, right? If they had employees with 20 years experience at the company at that point, that would make those people at least 36-years-old in 1970. Today they would be around 80-years-old. So, if we just ruminate about ages, that would mean that there isn't anyone likely under 75 years of age who used to work for Stetson before they closed down.
Then we have to also realize that all the high quality Stetson stuff sort of was gone from Stetson by 1965. That would add five more years to those ages.
Then we have to imagine who would have been around long enough in 1965 to have seen the high quality Stetson offerings from the 1930s, 40s, and 50s.
This might find us realizing that anyone left alive to have been around in the days when hats were hats would be over 100-years-old today.
In conclusion, if we wanted to talk to actual employees of Stetson hats when Stetson hats were really Stetson hats... we are at least 40 years too late at starting the project.
I am afraid that will be the truth of the matter at this late date....but I've talked with only one man that actually worked for HCA near it's end.
Brad
Sadly, we are all looking for info way too late to get any of it from the horse's mouth, if you will.
Well I don't know. Hate to think that knowledge of a manufacture process "died" without being written or passed to others. Probably company records were dumped and not saved when manufacture stopped. I have "The Winchester Book" (Yes I have read it) and wished something like that would have been made with Stetson hat company. Seems to be impossible then.
Sadly, we are all looking for info way too late to get any of it from the horse's mouth, if you will.
One of the questions I'd be interested in asking those old employees is just when the heck the various stickers and size tags came into use.
I wonder if there were oral history projects done in Philadelphia during the 1960s or 1970s that might contain memories of Stetson factory workers.