Genealogy isn’t just a list of names and dates. To really study genealogy and understand how our ancestors lived, we need to study the social and cultural aspects of the time period too, including what clothing fashions were in style.
Clothing fashions, of course, were not
necessarily the same in rural areas as they were in metropolitan areas. My
great-grandmother was born in 1877 in Crittenden County, Kentucky and married
when she was just 18 years old. Between 1896 and 1917, she had twelve children.
She led a full life - full of hard work, rearing a family and attending church
on Sunday. I’m sure high fashion was not high on the priority list in her life,
or in the lives of most of her neighbors.
That wasn’t the case, though, for young ladies
who lived in the larger city of Henderson, Kentucky. In 1908, "Merry
Widow" hats arrived and were all the rage.
The Henderson
Daily Gleaner reported on 5 April 1908 that "Scores of
pretty young girls and blushing widows were seen on the streets yesterday
bedecked with ‘Merry Widow’ hats in screaming colors. The new hats are really
things of beauty, especially when worn by the young maidens, and within a few
days it will be difficult for two women to pass each other on a sidewalk of
reasonable width, for the ‘Merry Widow’ hats are the broadest that ever shaded
a pretty face."
Three days later it was reported in Paducah,
Kentucky that the deacons of the First Baptist Church proposed to bar the
"Merry Widow" hats and passed a resolution compelling women to remove
them in church.
The Gleaner wasn’t
finished with news of those hats as it was reported later that month that
"Merry Widow" hats massed in a solid bank in the foremost rows of St.
John’s Catholic Church in St. Louis, Missouri prevented a panic among the
worshipers at Easter service by hiding from the congregation a dangerous blaze
on the altar, which was extinguished by the priest and altar boys. Paper
flowers were ignited by candles on the altar and while the fire burned
fiercely, those in the church remained with bowed heads in prayer, the flames
blocked by the wide-spreading Easter creations resting atop the heads of the
ladies who were sitting under the sanctuary rail, where they could not see the
fire.
"Merry Widow" hats weren’t in fashion
very long, but they were a lively topic of conversation while they lasted.
Originally published 26 October 2007. Published again 6 April 2022, http://wkygenealogy.blogspot.com/
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