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Possibly Butler's Mirror pattern
Possibly Butler's Mirror pattern
Possibly Butler's Mirror pattern

Possibly Butler's Mirror pattern

Object NameHat Pin
MediumBlack iridized carnival glass and metal
Dimensions8 × 1 5/8 × 1 5/8 in. (20.3 × 4.1 × 4.1 cm)
ClassificationsJewelry, Eyeware and Watches
Credit LineGift of Margaret Shay, member of #809 Yesterday’s Heritage. In the Iowa Quester Glass Collection, Brunnier Art Museum, University Museums, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa.
Object numberUM2015.168
Status
Not on view
Label TextThe War On Hat Pins While they may look unassuming or purely decorative, hat pins were used for both fashion as well as protection in the Victorian Era. By 1880, the size of women’s hats was increasingly larger and larger and bonnets with strings became less popular. To keep these statement pieces secured to ladies’ heads, women would use hat pins, a thin metal stick usually with decoration on one end. Ranging from two to twelve inches long, hat pins were made for every occasion and every budget. At the Farm House Museum, the collection of hat pins come in a variety of styles and sizes. From the very practical and simple with a single pearl on the end, to painted flowers and intricate metal with semiprecious gemstones, these hat pins were made to match the woman’s outfit and occasion. They were an extension of jewelry women would wear. There is even one in the collection designed to look like a golf club! The popularization of hat pins also led decorative art manufacturers to create unique and ornamental hatpin holders in ceramic and glass to sit atop a women’s dresser. For many women though, hat pins were not merely a fashion statement. Around this time period, women were pushing for equal rights, especially when it came to suffrage. More and more women were out in public without the protection of their brothers, husbands or fathers. As women have always found a way to “make do” with what they had, hat pins began to be used as a way for women to protect themselves against unwanted male pursuance or attack. The use of hat pins as protection became so popular that self-defense articles in women’s magazines began detailing the best way to use them. Newspapers published stories of women using hat pins to fight back against their assailants. In 1909, the Seattle Star newspaper published a piece stating that the Oregon state legislature passed a law limiting the size of hat pins to ten inches. This fashionable statement of the time was now being considered a threat to public safety. Also in 1909 a bill was introduced in both the Illinois and the Arkansas legislature limiting the length of pins to 9 inches. As a result, women had to cut hair pins to a shorter length if they wanted to wear them in public. By the late 1920s, women’s hair became shorter and hat designs began to evolve as such that hatpins were no longer needed. Throughout history, underprivileged groups have found ways to use everyday objects to fight for their equality. In the early 1900s, women found a way to defend themselves in style using hat pins. By Sonya Harwood, Farm House Museum intern ('20 Anthropology)
Orange Tree pattern
Object Name: Hat Pin Holder
Fenton Glass Co.
1907-1920
Object number: UM2015.170
Object Name: Coffee Server, Creamer, Sugar caddie
Object number: 92.549abc
Hat Pin
Object Name: Hat Pin
Object number: UM2015.169
Hat Pin Holder
Object Name: Hat Pin Holder
Object number: um96.167
Hat Pin or Pin Holder
Object Name: Hat Pin or Pin Holder
1895-1905
Object number: UM2021.177
Hat pins
Object Name: Hat pins
Object number: um96.185a-e
Hat Pin
Object Name: Hat Pin
Object number: 92.478
Fostoria Glass Co. No. 1913 Flemish pattern
Object Name: Toothpick Holder
Fostoria Glass Company
1913
Object number: UM2013.703
Bowl
Object Name: Bowl
Object number: 74.32.202
Flask
Object Name: Flask
c. 1935
Object number: UM2002.64
Lavaliere or Pin
Object Name: Lavaliere or Pin
c. 1870
Object number: UM2000.109
Berlin pattern
Object Name: Cake Plate / Cake Stand
Gebruder Von Streit Glass Works
1910-1919
Object number: UM2005.342