Red Hat Society treated to heady luncheon presentation
by Reid Armstrong - Sky-Hi News
How Fort Collins resident Colleen Estes Cassell came to
own more than 500 hats is a tale of serendipity.
The hats themselves tell the story of women in Colorado,
from the 1860s through today. And, Cassell weaves her own
family's seven-generation Colorado history through the
decades of hats, starting with humorous accounts of her
great-great grandmother, Patsy Estes, who traveled across
the country on wagon train with her husband.
“It didn't matter what your life was like,” Cassell told a
group of Grand County women at a Red Hat Society luncheon on
June 23. “You wore a hat every day and you needed a new one
every season.” |

"Hat Lady" Colleen Estes Cassel, June
23 |
From the practical prairie hats of the 1860s and the bonnets made
for stage coach and train travel in the 1870s, to the bird feather
hats of the 1880s that eventually led to the founding of the Audubon
Society, hats continued to evolve as the roles of women changed.
“If you had only one hat, it was black,” Cassell said, noting that
with large families and a high mortality rate among children, there
was almost always a funeral to attend.
Hat styles changed again when women earned the right to vote in the
1920s and started cropping their hair and their hemlines, and they
changed again in the '30s when Hollywood movies began influencing
American culture. During World War II in the 1940s, the lack of
fabrics and materials forced hats to be smaller and more intricate.
Big hats had their last hurrah in the early 1960s and later that
decade, Jackie Kennedy memorialized the pillbox and Audrey Hepburn
lent fame to hats with tall crowns.
Cassell blames the decline of hats on the Catholic Church and
hairspray.
Beehive hair styles in the '60s and '70s and big bang hairdos of the
1980s made hats impractical, she said.
Then, in 1983, the Catholic Church lifted its requirement for hats
during service, the final need for hats all but disappeared.
Today hats are paraded out for special events, like the Kentucky
Derby and high society gatherings in New York City. But, the days of
hats as an everyday practicality are gone forever, Cassell said.
“I don't think we'll ever get back to wearing hats like we did.”
Cassell came upon her collection of hats quite by accident. Having
studied theater in college, she was relegated to the costume
department as soon as her professors learned she could sew. There
she became versed in period styles.
When she started having children, she filled a steady demand for
costumes between Halloween and school plays. She also started making
costumes for a local theater troop and, before long, she found
herself in the costume rental business in Littleton.
When she eventually sold the business, she kept the hats. The
collection has grown over the years as people donate more millenary
history.
“I always say yes when people ask if I want their hats,” she said.
After joining a local “questers” antique club, she began using the
hats to do a presentation on the history of women in Colorado and
has since been traveling the state giving her presentation to
students and clubs.
Some 65 people attended the Wednesday luncheon at the Church of the
Eternal Hills. Ninth-graders from Wooddale Church in Minnesota
served lunch and tea, which included finger sandwiches and spring
salad prepared by the women of the club. For dessert, the club's
“queen” Joan Vonder Heiden made scones and chocolate covered
strawberries. Betty Williams made chocolate “hats,” and Jeanne Anne
MacDonald made hat cookies.
Barb Warnell cut the doilies for the dessert plates. Sandy Geiser
and Betty Jo Chadwick made the centerpieces, which were given away
as prizes at the end of the event. Nancy Speery organized the
luncheon, which was open to the public. Proceeds were donated to the
church and Grand County Characters.
— Reid Armstrong can be reached at 970-887-3334 ext. 19610 or
rarmstrong@skyhidailynews.com.