coonskin hat is a hat made of raccoon leather and fur. The original coonskin hat consists of all raccoons including the head and tail. Beginning as the original Native American head cover, the scalp hat became associated with the American and Canadian borders of the 18th and 19th centuries, and was popular among boys in the United States, Canada, Britain and Australia in the 1950s.
Video Coonskin cap
Origin
Coonskin hat was originally a traditional American original article of clothing. When Europe began to colonize the territory of Tennessee and Kentucky, the colonists began to wear it as a hunting hat.
The coonskin hat eventually became part of iconic images associated with American frontiersmen like Daniel Boone and Davy Crockett. Boone did not really wear a coonskin hat, which he did not like, and instead wore a hat, but the Meriwether Lewis explorer wore a coonskin hat during Lewis and Clark Expedition. Joseph L. Meek wore a coonskin hat in the mountains.
The story of actor Noah Ludlow who introduced the popular song "The Hunters of Kentucky" while wearing a coonskin hat proved to be a clone in Ludlow's autobiography. Ludlow recounts that the early performance of 1822:
As the evening comedy ended, I wore a deer skin pant and hunting pants, which I borrowed from a river man, and with moccasins on my legs and an old hat on my head, and a rifle on my shoulders, I presented myself in before the audience. "
Maps Coonskin cap
The popularity of the 20th century
Estes Kefauver
Politians Estes Kefauver of Tennessee adopted coonskin hat as a private trademark during the successful 1948 campaign for election to the United States Senate. Tennessee political boss E. H. Crump has published an advertisement accusing Kefauver of being a raccoon Communist puppet. In response, Kefauver wore a coonskin hat during a speech in Memphis, proclaiming: "I may be a pet, but I am not a pet dog Boss Crump." He continued to use his coinskin hat as a trademark throughout his political career, which included a failed campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1952 and 1956, a failed campaign for Vice Presidency as Adlai Stevenson's marriage partner in 1956, and successful Senatorial re-election. campaigns in 1954 and 1960.
mode 1950
In the 20th century, the iconic association was largely due to the Disneyland Disneyland television program and the first three episodes of "Davy Crockett" starring Fess Parker, which aired from December 1954 to February 1955. In the episode, once again making Crockett one of the most popular men in the country, the border hero is depicted wearing a scalp hat. The show spawned several sequels of Disneyland Davy Crockett as well as other similar performances and movies, with many of them featuring Parker as the lead actor. Parker went on to star in the Daniel Boone television series (1964-1970), again wearing a coonskin hat.
The new popularity of Crockett started fashion among boys across the United States as well as the craze of Davy Crockett in England. Lid viewes marketed to boys are usually simplified; usually faux fur caps coated with fox fur with raccoon tail attached. Variations are marketed to young girls as Polly Crockett hats. It resembles a boy's hat style, including a long tail, but is made of white fur (an imitation or perhaps a rabbit). At the peak of fashion, the coonskin hat is sold for 5,000 caps a day. In the late 1950s, the popularity of Crockett faded and the mode slowly died. These gestures are remembered by many cultural references, such as wearing a scalp hat as part of The Junior Woodchucks uniform in Disney's Donald Duck comic. Novelist Thomas Pynchon refers both hats and modes in his novel V., in which he calls the hat "a dense Freud hermaphrodite symbol".
Other uses
Coonskin's hat is a powerful cultural symbol that continues to be seen in movies, television, and other contexts in the last decades of the 20th century.
- In the ABC-TV series of 1964 the Addams Family , Uncle Fester occasionally wore a black sheepskin cap with a white strip running in the center of the crown and tail, indicating that it was made from skunks.
- The 1983 film A Christmas Story, which features various American childhood cultural artifacts from the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s, depicts a boy wearing a hat coonskin.
- The Simpsons describes Jebediah Springfield, founder of early Springfield fiction in the early 19th century, with a coonskin hat.
- Florida politician Lawton Chiles wore a coonskin hat while celebrating the 1994 gubernatorial election win over Republican Jeb Bush, recalling a campaign statement in which Chiles had predicted victory by saying "long he coon goes right before the light of day." The Great Brain series featuring Parley Benson, someone wearing a coonskin hat.
- In Walt Disney's story, Junior Woodchucks Huey, Dewey, and Louie Duck are also wearing sheepskin hats.
- In the cartoon of American History Hysteria! , Kip Ling, black-haired girl, Froggo and Aka Pelly are seen wearing a coonskin hat when they sing a song about Philo Farnsworth. Toast has been seen wearing one on the bus with Kid Chorus.
- The ferb of the American cartoon Phineas and Ferb is seen wearing a coonskin hat when he sees the log with Phineas (episode: She's the Major)
- Senator Jack S. Phogbound from the comic strip Li'l Abner wearing a coonskin hat
- Sam Shakusky. the main character of the 2012 movie Wes Anderson Moonrise Kingdom , often seen wearing a coonskin hat. The film was created in 1965 and incorporated many elements of youth culture in the 1950s and 1960s.
- In the famous Disney channel of Gravity Falls cartoons, various characters can be seen wearing coonskin hats in series, especially Pacifica Northwest in the episode "Irrational Treasure".
- One Tennessee Volunteers mascot, Davy Crockett, wears a coonskin hat for his costume. This inspired some Tennessee sports fans to wear it during the game.
See also
- Ushanka
References
External links
- Coonskin Hat
- Elevation Craze. 1957 Wales
Source of the article : Wikipedia