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Did cowboys really wear cowboy hats?

Conjuring the traditional image of Wild West cowboys and outlaws is easy.

Old West cowboys and outlaws preferred bowler hats.

U.S. History

C onjuring the traditional image of Wild West cowboys and outlaws is easy. Typically, they're shown in leather chaps, a vest, and denim pants, accompanied by boots, spurs, and holsters. Most importantly? There's a cowboy hat: a tall, wide-brimmed head-covering that's become synonymous with gun-slinging legends such as Billy the Kid, Buffalo Bill, or Hollywood's John Wayne. Yet surprisingly, many cowboys and outlaws in the Old West (around 1865 to 1900) actually preferred bowler hats. The casual counterpart to the more formal derby hat, the bowler was designed by London hatmakers and commissioned by English nobility. Domed and hardened by shellac, the felt cap was reliable and sturdy; according to some accounts, it was designed for gamekeepers who kept losing their top hats to low-hanging branches. 

A world away from lush English estates, the bowler became a natural choice for life in the American West: The hats didn't fly off in the wind, their durability withstood the elements, and they could be worn for almost any occasion. Favored by the likes of gambler and gunslinger Bat Masterson and the outlaws known as Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, the bowler hat maintained its hold on the Western frontier until the famous Stetson took over as the hat of choice. With a wider brim to help block the sun — and the boost Buffalo Bill Cody gave the hat after wearing it in his Wild West shows — the "Boss of the Plains" solidly replaced its British predecessor by the end of the 19th century, and became the hat commonly associated with the Old West today.

By the Numbers

Bowler hats produced by Lock & Co. during the height of the trend

70,000

Amount a cowboy paid for the first Stetson, according to legend

$5

Year Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show opened

1883

Average height (in inches) of a traditional bowler hat

5-7

Did you know?

The Stetson myth was called "one of the greatest hoaxes of all time."

The myth that Old West cowboys primarily wore Stetson hats was first debunked in 1957 by journalist Lucius Beebe, who examined thousands of photographs and discovered the prevalence of bowler hats on the Western frontier in the 19th century. He was then inspired to write "The Hat That Won the West," an op-ed for Salt Lake City's Deseret News that exposed the myth that the Stetson was always the most popular cowboy hat. He wrote that "a mass delusion" took hold of the American consciousness as a result of "faith and folk-legend," and even went so far as to call the Stetson myth "one of the greatest hoaxes of all time."

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