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Western, anyone?

Michael R.

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,889
Location
West Tennessee USA
Hat looks great! What do you guys use for stiffener? Most of my better hats seem to stiffen back up good with some steam.

You can use Scout Hat Stiffener , or let a Hatter do it . They buy the stuff by the gallon or more (I guess) . But Kevin from J&J Hat Center NYC says Extra Super Hold Hair Spray works , just don't use the kind that comes out in big spits , you want even misting . Don't get it on the sweat band though . Cover it . That might be for floppy dress hats though to tone them up .
 

Moviehats

One of the Regulars
Messages
205
Location
Fort Worth, Texas
You can use Scout Hat Stiffener , or let a Hatter do it . They buy the stuff by the gallon or more (I guess) . But Kevin from J&J Hat Center NYC says Extra Super Hold Hair Spray works , just don't use the kind that comes out in big spits , you want even misting . Don't get it on the sweat band though . Cover it . That might be for floppy dress hats though to tone them up .

I use to use spray starch on cheaper felt hats. Now I have a mixture of Shellac, alcohol, and stiffener that works really well.
 
I ran across this at a out-of-town flea market and regretted not getting it for $5.00, so my wife stopped by and picked it up today. Way too small for anyone in the family, but will look good on the wall at the farm. A bit rough with a loose ribbon, cracks in the sweat and a small hole that was stitched up. From what I can tell these hats were made between 1923 and 1951. Some were made for famous movie stars and recent auction values are based more on that provenance than the name of the hatter. Still, since that is about all the market there is out there, I (like so many sellers on eBay) choose to value this hat at $2000. :D

33883012745_46e984d1f3_z.jpg


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33883010965_2af0660f89_z.jpg


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33069489023_225820944d_z.jpg


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33069487283_29e0911d8a_z.jpg


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This one sold for $1,375:
https://entertainment.ha.com/itm/mo...am-boyd-cowboy-hat-circa-1950s/a/7134-89232.s

This one sold for $5,377.50:
https://entertainment.ha.com/itm/mo...-Inventory-BuyNowFromOwner-ThisAuction-120115

The story of Valentine the Hatter:

Valentine Patrick McMenamin, was a hat maker. Val was born in Philadelphia in 1882. His father died when Val was young, so Val began working in a factory that made army uniforms to help support the family (often coming home with blue hands and arms from the die used to color the fabric). From 1899 to 1903, Val was an apprentice for the John B. Stetson company to learn the “art, trade and mystery of felt hat finishing,” earning $2.00 per week. One of John’s most important possessions was the original indenture paper that Val signed at the beginning of his apprenticeship (the full text of which is below). Val carried this with him all his life, and when it passed onto John, he had it framed and hung it on his wall. I have a copy of this on the wall of my office at work, and read it periodically to remind myself of Val what life used to be like.

After his apprenticeship, Val worked for Stetson for several years, then decided to go west, getting himself a six shooter and traveling to Wallace, Idaho as a salesman for Singer sewing machines. John loved telling the story of how Wallace, being a mining town with mainly bars and bordellos, was not the best place to sell sewing machines, so Val became a miner. His first day on the job, an unsuspecting Val experienced a free-fall ride on the elevator down into the mine, an initiation ritual that any new miner was subjected to.

Val eventually moved to Tacoma, Washington, and started making hats again. It was there that he met his wife, Esther Marie Bockerman, and it was there that John was born on April 1, 1917. In 1924, the family moved to Los Angeles, where Val opened his own hat shop, Valentine the Hatter, which was a fixture near the intersection 9th and Hill Streets for 30 years.

Val sold his hats both through his hat shop and through an annual catalog (and by advertising in various western-oriented magazines). During the almost 30 years that Val had the shop, hats were as much a part of business attire as a coat and tie, so many of Val’s customers were business men. Periodically, for example, Carl F. Braun brought his executive team into the shop for new hats. In fact, the copy of Val’s indenture that I have hanging on my office wall is one of many copies that were made by Braun, who was fascinated by it when Val showed it to him one year.

Val also sold hats to western-oriented customers, such as country and western singers, rodeo performers, cowboys and cowboy actors (including Tom Mix, Hopalong Cassidy and Gene Autry). He also made private-label hats sold through other stores. One week when Addie was helping out in the shop, she got an order from a Beverly Hills boutique for a hat for Dale Evans, and another order from a store in Chicago for Roy Rogers.

The hat Val was most proud of was the white hat that Gary Cooper wore in the film Saratoga Trunk. John called me excitedly a few years ago when he found pictures on the internet of Gary Cooper in the hat, and more remarkably a picture of Picasso wearing what John believed was that hat and pointing a six shooter, both gifts to him from Gary Cooper. After telling me this, he said that he was lucky to have lived into the age of the internet where such pictures could be easily found.

In my last visit with John, he told me a number of stories about his life, and about Val and Esther. He pointed to one of the hats he had been wearing since probably the 1940s and told me that he was always amazed that Val could take a pair of scissors and trim precisely one fourth of an inch off the brim of any hat without any type of measuring device.

John wore Val’s hats throughout his life, as evidenced by their appearance in many of our family photos. In one of the photos in the photo gallery, John is wearing a hat (and a suit) while at the beach digging in the sand with my brother. Val’s hats were an integral part of John’s life (and for all the McMenamins).

Val's Indenture "Contract"

The following is the full text of Val’s indenture document. My favorite parts are that he couldn’t get married, “play at cards, dice or any other unlawful game,” and that he couldn’t “haunt ale houses, taverns or play houses” while he was an apprentice. And, of course, he was paid $2.00 per week (“when working”). Imagine such an emplyoment contract today.

This Indenture Witnesseth, that Valentine McMenamin, Born Mar 13th AD 1882 by and with the consent of Mrs. Catherine McMenamin His Mother, hath put himself and by these presents doth voluntarily and of his own free will and accord, put himself Apprentice to THE JOHN B. STETSON COMPANY of Philadelphia, to learn the art, trade and mystery of Felt Hat Finishing, and after the manner of an Apprentice to serve the said JOHN B. STETSON COMPANY for and during, and to the full end and term of his Apprenticeship, which will be the 8th day of December AD 1903 next ensuing.

The said Masters reserving the right to terminate this agreement, if said Apprentice shall refuse to obey their proper commands, or shall be found physically unable to attend to his work. During all which time the said Apprentice doth covenant and promise that he will serve his Masters faithfully, keep their secrets and obey their lawful commands ; that he will do them no damage himself, not see it done by others without giving them notice thereof ; that he will not waste their goods, nor lend them unlawfully ; that he will not contract matrimony within the said term ; that he will not play at cards, dice, or any other unlawful game, whereby his masters may be injured ; that he will neither buy nor sell, with his own goods or the goods of others, without license from his Masters ; and that he will not absent himself day or night from his Masters’ service without their leave, nor haunt ale houses, taverns, or play houses, but in all things behave himself as a faithful Apprentice ought to do during the said term. He shall conform to and abide by all rules and regulations now in force, and hereafter adopted by his Masters for the government of their Apprentices. And the said Masters on their part do covenant and promise, that they will use the upmost of their endeavors to teach, or cause to be taught or instructed, the said Apprentice in the art, trade and mystery of Felt Hat Finishing, and he shall receive as compensation, when working, two dollars ($2.00) per week.

It appearing upon satisfactory proof furnished to said JOHN B. STETSON COMPANT that said minor has been properly educated in reading, writing and arithmetic, so as to render further schooling unnecessary.

And for the true performance of all and singular the covenants and agreements aforesaid, the said parties bind themselves each unto the other firmly by these presents.

I Witness Whereof, the said JOHN B. STETSON COMPOANY has hereunto affixed its Corporate seal, and individual parties set their hands and seals, done interchangeably. Dated the 28th day of December in the year of our Lord One thousand eight hundred and ninety nine.

The document was “sealed and delivered in the presence of” two witnesses, and signed by the President and Secretary of the company and by Val and his mother.
 

Michael R.

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,889
Location
West Tennessee USA
Wow ! Timothy is that you ? haha . Looks great to me , love the colors . Great info Bob , John Ford and Hoppy ? Whoa , surely a museum or something paid that . Indentured servitude ? $2 a week ? 1890 or not , JB was tight . Seems like semi-slavery , I guess it was . $2 back then might have been like $200 or $2000 , now . Man the things your wife does for you Bob , you must be doing something right . Mrs Hufford I see your picture under "Especially Rare Wife" in the dictionary , almost extinct , endangered species , for sure . That would be cool displayed though .
 

Michael A

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,287
I ran across this at a out-of-town flea market and regretted not getting it for $5.00, so my wife stopped by and picked it up today. Way too small for anyone in the family, but will look good on the wall at the farm. A bit rough with a loose ribbon, cracks in the sweat and a small hole that was stitched up. From what I can tell these hats were made between 1923 and 1951. Some were made for famous movie stars and recent auction values are based more on that provenance than the name of the hatter. Still, since that is about all the market there is out there, I (like so many sellers on eBay) choose to value this hat at $2000. :D

33883012745_46e984d1f3_z.jpg


33883011755_fd47740666_z.jpg


33883010965_2af0660f89_z.jpg


33069486913_023bf3a55c_z.jpg


33069489023_225820944d_z.jpg


33069488133_340f6f7611_z.jpg


33069487283_29e0911d8a_z.jpg


33726338192_3da621592e.jpg


33745018876_a58d0e7be4_z.jpg


This one sold for $1,375:
https://entertainment.ha.com/itm/mo...am-boyd-cowboy-hat-circa-1950s/a/7134-89232.s

This one sold for $5,377.50:
https://entertainment.ha.com/itm/mo...-Inventory-BuyNowFromOwner-ThisAuction-120115

The story of Valentine the Hatter:

Valentine Patrick McMenamin, was a hat maker. Val was born in Philadelphia in 1882. His father died when Val was young, so Val began working in a factory that made army uniforms to help support the family (often coming home with blue hands and arms from the die used to color the fabric). From 1899 to 1903, Val was an apprentice for the John B. Stetson company to learn the “art, trade and mystery of felt hat finishing,” earning $2.00 per week. One of John’s most important possessions was the original indenture paper that Val signed at the beginning of his apprenticeship (the full text of which is below). Val carried this with him all his life, and when it passed onto John, he had it framed and hung it on his wall. I have a copy of this on the wall of my office at work, and read it periodically to remind myself of Val what life used to be like.

After his apprenticeship, Val worked for Stetson for several years, then decided to go west, getting himself a six shooter and traveling to Wallace, Idaho as a salesman for Singer sewing machines. John loved telling the story of how Wallace, being a mining town with mainly bars and bordellos, was not the best place to sell sewing machines, so Val became a miner. His first day on the job, an unsuspecting Val experienced a free-fall ride on the elevator down into the mine, an initiation ritual that any new miner was subjected to.

Val eventually moved to Tacoma, Washington, and started making hats again. It was there that he met his wife, Esther Marie Bockerman, and it was there that John was born on April 1, 1917. In 1924, the family moved to Los Angeles, where Val opened his own hat shop, Valentine the Hatter, which was a fixture near the intersection 9th and Hill Streets for 30 years.

Val sold his hats both through his hat shop and through an annual catalog (and by advertising in various western-oriented magazines). During the almost 30 years that Val had the shop, hats were as much a part of business attire as a coat and tie, so many of Val’s customers were business men. Periodically, for example, Carl F. Braun brought his executive team into the shop for new hats. In fact, the copy of Val’s indenture that I have hanging on my office wall is one of many copies that were made by Braun, who was fascinated by it when Val showed it to him one year.

Val also sold hats to western-oriented customers, such as country and western singers, rodeo performers, cowboys and cowboy actors (including Tom Mix, Hopalong Cassidy and Gene Autry). He also made private-label hats sold through other stores. One week when Addie was helping out in the shop, she got an order from a Beverly Hills boutique for a hat for Dale Evans, and another order from a store in Chicago for Roy Rogers.

The hat Val was most proud of was the white hat that Gary Cooper wore in the film Saratoga Trunk. John called me excitedly a few years ago when he found pictures on the internet of Gary Cooper in the hat, and more remarkably a picture of Picasso wearing what John believed was that hat and pointing a six shooter, both gifts to him from Gary Cooper. After telling me this, he said that he was lucky to have lived into the age of the internet where such pictures could be easily found.

In my last visit with John, he told me a number of stories about his life, and about Val and Esther. He pointed to one of the hats he had been wearing since probably the 1940s and told me that he was always amazed that Val could take a pair of scissors and trim precisely one fourth of an inch off the brim of any hat without any type of measuring device.

John wore Val’s hats throughout his life, as evidenced by their appearance in many of our family photos. In one of the photos in the photo gallery, John is wearing a hat (and a suit) while at the beach digging in the sand with my brother. Val’s hats were an integral part of John’s life (and for all the McMenamins).

Val's Indenture "Contract"

The following is the full text of Val’s indenture document. My favorite parts are that he couldn’t get married, “play at cards, dice or any other unlawful game,” and that he couldn’t “haunt ale houses, taverns or play houses” while he was an apprentice. And, of course, he was paid $2.00 per week (“when working”). Imagine such an emplyoment contract today.

This Indenture Witnesseth, that Valentine McMenamin, Born Mar 13th AD 1882 by and with the consent of Mrs. Catherine McMenamin His Mother, hath put himself and by these presents doth voluntarily and of his own free will and accord, put himself Apprentice to THE JOHN B. STETSON COMPANY of Philadelphia, to learn the art, trade and mystery of Felt Hat Finishing, and after the manner of an Apprentice to serve the said JOHN B. STETSON COMPANY for and during, and to the full end and term of his Apprenticeship, which will be the 8th day of December AD 1903 next ensuing.

The said Masters reserving the right to terminate this agreement, if said Apprentice shall refuse to obey their proper commands, or shall be found physically unable to attend to his work. During all which time the said Apprentice doth covenant and promise that he will serve his Masters faithfully, keep their secrets and obey their lawful commands ; that he will do them no damage himself, not see it done by others without giving them notice thereof ; that he will not waste their goods, nor lend them unlawfully ; that he will not contract matrimony within the said term ; that he will not play at cards, dice, or any other unlawful game, whereby his masters may be injured ; that he will neither buy nor sell, with his own goods or the goods of others, without license from his Masters ; and that he will not absent himself day or night from his Masters’ service without their leave, nor haunt ale houses, taverns, or play houses, but in all things behave himself as a faithful Apprentice ought to do during the said term. He shall conform to and abide by all rules and regulations now in force, and hereafter adopted by his Masters for the government of their Apprentices. And the said Masters on their part do covenant and promise, that they will use the upmost of their endeavors to teach, or cause to be taught or instructed, the said Apprentice in the art, trade and mystery of Felt Hat Finishing, and he shall receive as compensation, when working, two dollars ($2.00) per week.

It appearing upon satisfactory proof furnished to said JOHN B. STETSON COMPANT that said minor has been properly educated in reading, writing and arithmetic, so as to render further schooling unnecessary.

And for the true performance of all and singular the covenants and agreements aforesaid, the said parties bind themselves each unto the other firmly by these presents.

I Witness Whereof, the said JOHN B. STETSON COMPOANY has hereunto affixed its Corporate seal, and individual parties set their hands and seals, done interchangeably. Dated the 28th day of December in the year of our Lord One thousand eight hundred and ninety nine.

The document was “sealed and delivered in the presence of” two witnesses, and signed by the President and Secretary of the company and by Val and his mother.
Nice hat and story Bob. Very interesting.

Michael
 

RJR

Messages
10,620
Location
Iowa
Some yrs ago now I found this travel case at the Outlet store marked down to about the same price as a hat can sells for. The only thing wrong with it was it had a small cut on one side to the leather-like covering. At an MSRP of $3199.00 for the hat, the case was obviously empty!

d17cad637b.jpg

d17cb524b5.jpg
Nice find.
 

Michael R.

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,889
Location
West Tennessee USA
Some yrs ago now I found this travel case at the Outlet store marked down to about the same price as a hat can sells for. The only thing wrong with it was it had a small cut on one side to the leather-like covering. At an MSRP of $3199.00 for the hat, the case was obviously empty!

d17cad637b.jpg

d17cb524b5.jpg

Nice find.

Too bad you didn't find the Stetson Millennium 500X in there , too . Still AWESOME !
... I think that's a writing error beginning a sentence with the word too , and ending with it , also . BUT I'm not being graded , so ... .
 
Last edited:
Messages
18,214
Wow, that has to be a rare bird! What are the odds?

The case is covered inside & out with (imitation?) alligator. There is an extra spacer ring but I'm not exactly sure how it is supposed to be used. It will fit around the outside of the main hat ring. Keys still on the hang tag.

How did you come by the hat?

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