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Show us their hats!

RickP

One Too Many
Messages
1,070
Last year when I was clearing out Dads house up in Knoxville, tn, I found a couple of his hats in the bottom of a box full of boots and an old VCR on top. ( pretty much crushed) Nothing fancy..Just a couple of Cavendars Western Wear store hats. Got them cleaned and un-crushed. One was a nondescript straw thing, and the other was this Master Hatters of Texas half acre silverbelly hat with a 4-1/8" wide brim. ( Somehow I never noticed just how big his hats were lol) Its was a 6-7/8 and has been carefully worked out to a 7-1/4. Did some trimming and reshaping into something akin to a "Justified" hat with a 2-1/2" brim. Now it actually gets used once in a while. Long tern plan is to someday do some pouncing to thin it out and lighten it up a bit

Yesterday I was going through some boxes and actually found a picture of him in the hat. Miss ya Dad....thanks for the hat!

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Rmccamey

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,935
Location
Central Texas
Some great personal history.

Last year when I was clearing out Dads house up in Knoxville, tn, I found a couple of his hats in the bottom of a box full of boots and an old VCR on top. ( pretty much crushed) Nothing fancy..Just a couple of Cavendars Western Wear store hats. Got them cleaned and un-crushed. One was a nondescript straw thing, and the other was this Master Hatters of Texas half acre silverbelly hat with a 4-1/8" wide brim. ( Somehow I never noticed just how big his hats were lol) Its was a 6-7/8 and has been carefully worked out to a 7-1/4. Did some trimming and reshaping into something akin to a "Justified" hat with a 2-1/2" brim. Now it actually gets used once in a while. Long tern plan is to someday do some pouncing to thin it out and lighten it up a bit

Yesterday I was going through some boxes and actually found a picture of him in the hat. Miss ya Dad....thanks for the hat!

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AbbaDatDeHat

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,870
Last year when I was clearing out Dads house up in Knoxville, tn, I found a couple of his hats in the bottom of a box full of boots and an old VCR on top. ( pretty much crushed) Nothing fancy..Just a couple of Cavendars Western Wear store hats. Got them cleaned and un-crushed. One was a nondescript straw thing, and the other was this Master Hatters of Texas half acre silverbelly hat with a 4-1/8" wide brim. ( Somehow I never noticed just how big his hats were lol) Its was a 6-7/8 and has been carefully worked out to a 7-1/4. Did some trimming and reshaping into something akin to a "Justified" hat with a 2-1/2" brim. Now it actually gets used once in a while. Long tern plan is to someday do some pouncing to thin it out and lighten it up a bit

Yesterday I was going through some boxes and actually found a picture of him in the hat. Miss ya Dad....thanks for the hat!

View attachment 650344 View attachment 650346

View attachment 650368
Looks like Pops is wearing a Marine Corps lapel pin?
Between the two-blocked tie and his expression he’s kinda got that look.
You took after Pops?
B
 

RickP

One Too Many
Messages
1,070
Looks like Pops is wearing a Marine Corps lapel pin?
Between the two-blocked tie and his expression he’s kinda got that look.
You took after Pops?
B
My Dad was Army... ( the Redstone Missile Program that put up the first satellite) That pin is either a Masonic or a Lions Club thing. My Marine adventure was taking after Dads cousin in Ragland Al. He was a Para Marine at the start of ww2, survived the Makin Island and Chosul Island raids, Pelieu, Tarawa, , Guadacanal, and made it 13 days on Iwo Jima before he has a run in with an artillery shell. He drove over to Parris island for my Boot Camp graduation in 74 ( after one of my Drill Instructors chatted him up abut about the Old Corps, he was my best friend lol). He was definately an Old Corps Marine... He made Corporal once and PFC two times lol. Really inspiring guy.

His Son wrote a book about him years later. Love the cocky side tilt on his cover!. One of my Knox Hats came from Ragland Al, and Im pretty sure it was his

One of his quotes that always stuck with me was " Never be afraid to fail.... just be sure you fail gracefully and get back up"





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AbbaDatDeHat

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,870
My Dad was Army... ( the Redstone Missile Program that put up the first satellite) That pin is either a Masonic or a Lions Club thing. My Marine adventure was taking after Dads cousin in Ragland Al. He was a Para Marine at the start of ww2, survived the Makin Island and Chosul Island raids, Pelieu, Tarawa, , Guadacanal, and made it 13 days on Iwo Jima before he has a run in with an artillery shell. He drove over to Parris island for my Boot Camp graduation in 74 ( after one of my Drill Instructors chatted him up abut about the Old Corps, he was my best friend lol). He was definately an Old Corps Marine... He made Corporal once and PFC two times lol. Really inspiring guy.

His Son wrote a book about him years later. Love the cocky side tilt on his cover!. One of my Knox Hats came from Ragland Al, and Im pretty sure it was his

One of his quotes that always stuck with me was " Never be afraid to fail.... just be sure you fail gracefully and get back up"





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View attachment 654427
Great history and thanks.
George hit em all. Quite a warrior.
Wasn’t hard to make Pfc twice in the old days. Not lol
B
 
Messages
18,583
Location
Nederland
Cristiano Lobbia was a famous Italian patriot, he joined the 1848 insurrections against the Austro-Hungarians
He took part in the “Thousands” undertaking where he distinguish himself for his qualities. He was elected deputy and he was praised for his bellicose spirit. His most famous battle, the “Tobacco monopoly scandal”, revealed a system of bribes of which he had the actual proof. He was attacked with a stick. His opponents said he made it all up and he was accused of simulation of offence.
Lobbia entered the Parliament with the bowler that he was wearing the evening of the aggression which was showing a hollow in the middle due to the strike of the stick.
A Florentine hatter started producing a hat in the Lobbia’s style giving origin to the famous headdress for the Italians. What the rest of the world knows as a homburg is still called a Lobbia in Italy.
He was fully acquitted and rehabilitated but all these sorrows led to his early death a few months later at the age of only fifty-two.

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