Beaver Fur Top Hat

Object/Artifact

-

Pejepscot History Center

Name/Title

Beaver Fur Top Hat

Entry/Object ID

1981.67.1

Description

A black beaver fur top hat. It has a black grosgrain ribbon headband and hem along the outer edge of the brim. The underside of the brim has a cloth liner. The sides of the brim are turned up and the front and back dip down. It has a wide tan leather sweatband on the inside. The lining on the sides of the crown is paper, but silk on the top. "Phil P. Getchell / THE HATTER / Lewiston, Me." is printed on the inside top of the crown.

Collection

Lorene Kitchin

Lexicon

Search Terms

Phil Getchell (hatter), Hat, Beaver hats, Clothing and dress - Hats, men's, Beavers

Exhibitions

Exhibition

Adaptation and Resistance: Indigenous History of the Pejepscot Region

Notes

Along with land, Europeans exploited natural resources. The European market for beaver pelts, which were used in fashionable clothing and accessories like this hat, drove settlement, exploration, and trade in what is now Maine beginning in the seventeenth century. The increased harvest of beavers greatly altered trade alliances, ecological functions, and land ownership. To survive in a world with European technology, Abenaki sought effective ways and technologies to protect their own people and land. They attempted to harvest as many beavers as possible to engage in trade with Europeans. A beaver fur top hat with a black ribbon band and hem along the brim. The hat was manufactured in Lewiston, Maine.