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Show Us Your Vintage Hat Store

Messages
10,952
That's true, and although the name Snook is unusual only a schoolboy memory can snigger at the reminisce of a teacher, name of Snook, whose hat went flying assisted by a well aimed cricket ball. Half an inch lower and Mr. Snook might have been in the back of an ambulance!

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I have just realised that this was taken when they had their Christmas window display. Well at least you know one of the gifts that Santa brought Tina.
Snook got snookered by a snooker ball in his Snook.
 

GHT

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,350
Location
New Forest
That's amazing Randy, great story though. That Snooks hat shop that I posted is in Dorchester and just outside of that town is a delightful small hamlet with just about the most unfortunate name imaginable.
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The name, derived from Old English, dates back over a 1000 years, it means ‘farmstead on the stream used as an open sewer.'
 

Rmccamey

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,666
Location
Central Texas
Ouch! That would not play well here and would certainly be the butt of every joke (pun intended)!

Sometimes you just have to tell it like it is. This place is about 20 miles south of me. The company has since moved and the sign is down but there are still lots of pictures on the internet. It used to be quite common as a tourist photo op and was often used as a marker stop for car and motorcycle rally's.

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That's amazing Randy, great story though. That Snooks hat shop that I posted is in Dorchester and just outside of that town is a delightful small hamlet with just about the most unfortunate name imaginable.
View attachment 586453

The name, derived from Old English, dates back over a 1000 years, it means ‘farmstead on the stream used as an open sewer.'
 
Stetson 3X LD from Mac Nab's in Ukiah, California.

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2015: Mac Nab’s Menswear, located in the sweet center of downtown Ukiah, has been around for 75 years now. That’s a long time in retail.

In the case of Mac Nab’s the roots stretch back even further and deeper. It was once called the Toggery, a name bound to ring a bell with locals because anyone who has been around the block (literally) knows the Toggery name remains on exterior walls (north-facing and east-facing) in the 200 block of North State. The faded paint remains, along with advice that Honest Tea is the Best Policy, and encouragement to go ahead and enjoy yourself a nice White Owl cigar.

It was located next to the Forest Club, which explains the black-and-white tile that still reads “Mac Nab’s” in the old store entryway.

Even today you can talk with old timers who remember the Toggery’s narrow, cramped building with sawdust floors and old potbellied, as “cozy” and filled with memories.

Memories? The Toggery was the go-to shopping destination for Christmas shopping by “professional” ladies wishing to bestow favored clients with, inevitably, a necktie as a holiday gift. Store employees thus enjoyed those gifts all year long as they smirked and rolled their eyes when lawyers, doctors and bankers were spotted around town wearing distinctive neckties that could have come only from the Toggery, and only from a select few buyers.

Mac Nab’s first tailor (he doubled as a salesman) was Mort Eilers, a name that sounds even older than 75 years. Mort worked with John Hambly MacNab in the original shop.

At the time, the 1940s were morphing into the 1950s, which is when Mac Nab’s was the sole local outlet for Levi jeans and other Levi products. Those jeans sold big back then and even today 501 shrink-to-fits remain among the store’s best sellers.

Then came the 1960s, when high schoolers like Sandy Mac Nab and younger brother Bill started working in their dad’s clothing store. Sandy said it wasn’t exactly his dream come true, but it beat most other options.

“What I always wanted when I was a kid was to be a race car driver,” he said. “In elementary school we had to write down what we wanted to be when we grew up and I put down ‘stock car driver.” The problem was I needed money to buy a car and I didn’t want to work at a gas station.”
Hello, Mac Nab’s Menswear.

Sandy said he started out stocking shelves and trying to make himself useful. One day his dad told him to go out on the floor and do sales work. “But what do I do?” Sandy asked. He remembers being anxious about the assignment.
His dad told him to greet the customers, ask them if there was anything he could help them find, and assist with whatever it was they were looking for. In short, find out what they want and help get them get it.

Pretty basic salesmanship, right? But at Mac Nab’s personal service has always been emphasized, although occasionally the simple concept gets stretched.

Take the time a youngster came into the store and spotted Kris Kristofferson, the famous folk singing rock star, standing near the counter. The starry-eyed kid followed Kris all around the shop, pestering him with questions. Ultimately Kristofferson, who actually bore an even more striking resemblance to MacNab sales clerk Gerry de Treville, gave the little guy an autograph. If asked, Gerry probably would have sung “Me and Bobby McGee” for him. Yes indeed, it’s all about keeping the customer satisfied at Mac Nab’s.

Bill Mac Nab (younger brother of Sandy) joined the store in the 1970s following his college days in Chico. He’s the organization’s buyer, bookkeeper, brains and brawn, say colleagues. Bill gets the “problem” customers, perhaps because of his charming and persuasive manner, or perhaps because of his bear-like physique.

Meanwhile the years continued to roll. It takes some time to run up 75 of them.
Robert MacDougall, who as a kid grew up next door to the Mac Nab family on Cresta Drive, was working in the woods as a logger back in the 1980s. Looking for a little extra cash, Robert hired on to work a Mac Nab’s Summer Sidewalk Sale. The following Christmas season he worked a few weeks at the shop to earn extra holiday cash. Impressed, store owner John Mac Nab offered him a full-time job.

Robert thought long and hard about the joys and rewards of setting chokers, running chainsaws, and staggering up and down timber-strewn mountains around Comptche. After much soul-searching and misgivings, he made his decision, and he’s been standing next to the big brass cash register ever since. Now, deep into his fourth decade at the store, Robert remains the rookie in the Mac Nab lineup.

The store, at 111 North State Street, stands directly across from the courthouse, in a building that is more than a hundred years old (the red brick south wall collapsed in the ’06 earthquake, if that’s any indication of vintage). It doesn’t have sawdust floors and there’s no old stove to warm the winter days, but “cozy” still sounds about right in describing the somewhat cramped and decidedly old-school store. Back then folks said Mac Nab’s enveloped patrons in the comforting smell of leather and pipe tobacco.

Today it’s less evocative of leather and pipe tobacco aromas from yesteryear, but it retains the feel of a bygone era. Racks and stacks of men’s clothing line the walls and crowd the aisles. The cash register is a huge brassy metal contraption built in 1904, fully functional and in use six days a week. It weighs more than your car’s engine; to move it three feet would take three people, a handtruck and maybe a permit from the city.

But the lure of Mac Nab’s is in the clothing. It isn’t the place to look if you are in the market for haphazard piles of cheap t-shirts, white socks wrapped in packs of a dozen, or plaid “shorts” that terminate six inches from the floor. It doesn’t stock much in the way of gangsta-style apparel. No bling.

Not that they’ve never made a mistake in predicting fashions: Mac Nab’s was among the shops in the ‘70s where discerning gentlemen could purchase a leisure suit (powder blue, lime green and turquoise were among the popular flavors) just like Billy Carter wore. You had to hurry to get one though, because after about a year Mac Nab’s discontinued them. At least they never stocked disco outfits or platform shoes.

And who knows what clothing trends will erupt in the future? MacNab’s will no doubt take a measured approach and hesitate before jumping on a rolling bandwagon.

Pondering the future, Sandy Mac Nab said it won’t be easy. He, Bill, Robert and everyone else knows the city of Ukiah continues to make life difficult for small businesses when it invites big box stores to town. The retail field ain’t level, but the small shops are forced to compete against the megastores as if it is.

MacNab’s has had a proud run in getting to 75 years. How does it look, long-term?

“We’re just hoping to make it to 76,” said Sandy.

https://www.ukiahdailyjournal.com/2015/06/05/mac-nabs-at-75/


The Toggery circa 1920: (ignore the arrow)

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Toggery building sign nowadays. The Mac Nab's 84th year.

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Mac Nab's in the 1950s -- the 111 N. State location (on the right near the Florsheim sign).

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A closer look:

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2015: Bill and Sandy Mac Nab.

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2018: The Toggery building location (200 block of N. State) entrance tiles.

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2021:

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The Mallory Ten from Markman's Department Store in New London, Wisconsin.

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Some of these are harder than others to research. From what I gather Markman's started in 1952 so this hat could be from the first couple of years for this store.

Markman's could have an earlier history, but I cannot locate any info on it.

In 1952 Markman's moved into the former location of Vandree's Dry Goods at 225 W. North Water St (a building built in 1893) and Vandree's moved to 207 W. North Water St.

This is the only photo I can find of Markman's. This is the 225 location in the early 1960s.

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In 1994 the Wolf River Theatrical Troupe purchased the building at 225 and Markman's moved to 207 W. North Water St. -- again replacing what was then called Vandree's Department Store.

The 225 location was demolished in 2015.

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Photos of the 207 location (built in 1881) seem to have a gap of over 100 years -- at least in my searches. This is the building that Vandree's moved into in 1952 after remodeling the store front from three units to one. It had been a single store front in the past as well. This photo is from 1910 - 1918 (the years that Archibald and Zillmer occupied the building).

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This photo (with the building on the right) is from the same era. Hart, Schaffner & Marx Clothing incorporated in 1911.

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Gary Markman sold the 207 location to Jeff and Kelly Rickert in January of 2014. I'm not sure if Markman's as a business ended that year or if it may have been earlier.

The building is still standing.

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DiamondJimLA

New in Town
Messages
27
Location
SoCal
I intended to put this in the thread with general vintage photos but couldn't find it, but this still seems appropriate as it is a hat store! This is the original location of a local SoCal chain of restaurants, famous for their hot pastrami sandwiches (which they may claim they invented). Pic from 1951, this location is still there (I've eaten there, although yesterday I had lunch at another location).

I see one guy wearing a hat, but more importantly, the restaurant is called "The Hat". Recommended!
The Hat.jpg
 
1920s Stetson Select Quality from The Hirschheimer Bros. Co. in Canton, Ohio.

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1874 - 1928

Louis and Isaac Hirschheimer arrived in Canton, Ohio from Germany in 1867 and soon started a business that would remain at the same location from 1874 until 1928. Isaac passed in June of 1926 and Louis in January of 1927. Isaac's son Milton was president of the company at the end of the run.

The address was changed in 1896 with a renumbering starting at 100 (going from No. 8 - 10, to No. 106 to 110).

1878:

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1907
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1910s: To the right of the bank.

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1915: (on left with the flag)

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The font used on the sweatband was used in advertising from mid-1915 (after a fire and total remodelling) until mid-1922.

1922:

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1927

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1928. Sold to Walkers.

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The location is an empty lot now.
 

Mighty44

One Too Many
Messages
1,742
1920s Stetson Select Quality from The Hirschheimer Bros. Co. in Canton, Ohio.

View attachment 608675

View attachment 608676

1874 - 1928

Louis and Isaac Hirschheimer arrived in Canton, Ohio from Germany in 1867 and soon started a business that would remain at the same location from 1874 until 1928. Isaac passed in June of 1926 and Louis in January of 1927. Isaac's son Milton was president of the company at the end of the run.

The address was changed in 1896 with a renumbering starting at 100 (going from No. 8 - 10, to No. 106 to 110).

1878:

View attachment 608682

1907
View attachment 608683

1910s: To the right of the bank.

View attachment 608684

1915: (on left with the flag)

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View attachment 608685

The font used on the sweatband was used in advertising from mid-1915 (after a fire and total remodelling) until mid-1922.

1922:

View attachment 608687

1927

View attachment 608688

1928. Sold to Walkers.

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The location is an empty lot now.
Thank you again, Bob! As always, such enjoyable research and images. Almost always leaves me wishing there could be some way to revitalize downtown areas across the country and preserve the old architecture but those days are gone. More hat stores? ;)

Cheers,

David
 
Thank you again, Bob! As always, such enjoyable research and images. Almost always leaves me wishing there could be some way to revitalize downtown areas across the country and preserve the old architecture but those days are gone. More hat stores? ;)

Cheers,

David

Thanks David! I wish there was a hat store in every downtown — or anywhere in town.
 

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