Fun Fact about USN Dixie Cup: works as a bucket to bail out a life boat/small boat or catch rain water when in same. Flopped down over the ears it helps protect from tropical sun. In "bucket mode" it can be used to catch some air and act as a mini life preserver. Bright white color can be waved as a signal for rescue. I was a Machinist Mate and used mine as a "glove" when grabbing hot valve handles.Also used it to haul ice down to my engine room. Soaked in ice water and put on my head in bucket mode it help against heat stress in same engine room.
As a seaman (E3) USS Kitty Hawk (CV-63) in 1984, sent down to the engine room for the very essential and immediately needed tool, the 'BT punch', I could never have imagined how hot the engineering spaces were. Fortunately the BT's had mercy on my 18 year old, 135 pound 5 foot 8 inch skinny frame and gave me a minor punch in the arm and advised me to not let my shipmates know they gave me a break. I acted it up really well by holding my breath all the way back to my workstation, so my face would be red and I would still be sweating, and kept rubbing my left bicep in apparent pain. It worked, they all had a laugh at my, not actual expense, but they did not know that. I never told them that, I just let them think that they had gotten one over one me. I was actually familiar with the 'BT Punch' because my bootcamp company commander was an MMC and mentioned it at some point. When I got the order to go get one, I decided that I'd rather just go along with it than hide from it. The Navy does have their traditions, you will be respected more if you go along with them, so I went to the engine room to receive my BT Punch. Sorry, off subject there, I was only down there a couple times, so incredibly hot and humid!
@@richardduerr9983 I was on the USS Roanoke AOR-7 in 84. I was a strange one: actually loved being at sea in my hole (engineroom). Still think of the night views of the stars 1500 miles from the nearest light pollution: what the cavemen saw...
When I was in basic training, we were taught to use them as a floatation device. I always thought it was stupid because it didn't work well at all. I always assumed a big reason our caps were like that was because it is easier to fold and stow. Sailors don't have a lot of space to put things on a ship, so no one would want a big hat that took up a lot of space.
Many a Seaman Recruit in boot camp came out with a 'grinder reminder'; a sunburn across the middle of the forehead and pale skin above it. Bidding farewell to my Dixie cup was an emotional moment for me when I went through CPO initiation. One of great things about the Dixie Cup is the ability to fold it into quarters and stuff it in the back of your 13 button trousers so as not to have to carry it in your hands when indoors. And you could always take your spare cover with you on deck when pulling into a foreign port and tossing it down to a pretty girl. Then all you had to do was find the gal with a hat that had your name on it!
i was in the navy when to uniform change came around, we all hated the "dixie cup". it was very cheaply made (thanks China) and would fly into the water at the slightest breeze. I kept a stack of them in my locker for that very reason. :P
@@nickgov66 Umm...yeah, of course it is. I'm guessing your comment is in reference to some other part of the comment section as I can't see how it relates to these... :-/
I was in the US Navy from '77 to '81, and up until the last year, our dress hat was that white covered chief's hat, which was properly called a "combination cap." I was delighted to get the Dixie Cup on my head when they brought them back. For working uniform we wore navy blue ball caps, through that whole period.
I joined in '85, and remember something being said about the change in uniform...that the Dixie cup, dungarees, and chambray shirt were voted for overwhelmingly (and the crackerjack uniform). I was pleased that I didn't have to deal with a combination cap...I've always felt they're ugly.
@@TheEudaemonicPlague Oh yeah, I came in expecting uniforms like I saw in the old movies. Bell bottoms and jumpers. I ended up spending three and a half years in a double breasted suit on watch. I was so happy the crackerjacks came back, even though it was only months before my enlistment was up.
@@11C1P Yeah, that was Admiral Zumwalt. I had a full beard in 1978. He was trying to encourage enlistment and retention while civilians were, well, hippies. He even allowed African Americans to wear afros. The Navy gradually clawed that back. I was down to a mustache a year later. We didn't get to wear longer hair, though we could have it blocked in the back instead of tapered, which made it look fuller.
I was serving on board the USSGuam, LPpH-9, when Zumwalt came to power- and our legal officer got an order from the CNO office change ships refs to allow beards.
As someone who has spent a lot of time in the sun on the water, the sennet hat is probably the best hat for dealing with sunburn and ocean glare. Although the military has rarely cared about the well being of their crews.
I was in the Navy right as Admiral Zumwalt decided we were all going to look alike, officers and enlisted dress uni that is. I never got a sailor hat, which was the only reason I joined tbh...
The USCG wore the white topped banded “flat hat” with dress blues or whites from 1967 to 1976. The Dixie cup was used with the undress uniform and the dungarees.
They should have kept the old uniform as there really was no need to change to the 'Bender Blues' of today that makes Coasties look like hotel doormen. I comment as having been in the CG during the uniform transition period. There were a lot of unhappy people because of the uniform change. The service was always scrapping for funds but the decision was made to go with the Blues that required millions spent on the new uniforms and millions spent on converting locker space aboard cutters to accommodate. A stupid waste of money quite like 'camo' uniforms aboard Navy ships.
We would fold our Dixie Cups in a way that would almost turn them into mini bicorns. A good example is how Jack Nicholson wore his in "The Last Detail. Others would roll the rim down along the edges.
I was in the usn, still have my Dixie cup. I was told the reason for the Dixie cup was in the sun and tropics you coul fold the brim down and it would keep the sun off your face and neck with out being bulky or wide.
USN under CNO Elmo Zulmwalt rescinded the cracker jack uniform in the early to mid 1970's. I spent my entire enlistment in a suit with an officer style cap. I got out in late 79. Not long after they reverted to the cracker jack
My Uncle Billy was in the Navy. He served as a radio man on board the USS Joseph Strauss (DDG-16). A job that no longer exists on a ship that no longer exists. Unfortunately, he passed away from lung cancer in August 2022.
The touching the pom pom tradition is so normal that French sailors really don't mind it at all. Also yes, I'm pretty sure they win the hearts of many ladies. Seen it often while in Port. 😊
sailor cap is an emergency flotation device which when turned inside out, gripped tightly and held under the body it contained a bubble of air which aided in keeping head above the water line
After reading through many of the comments, I was surprised to note that no one mentioned the other nickname for the "Dixie Cup". That being the "Dog Dish". I have fond memories of that hat. But have to admit a very strong sense of pride on my last day wearing that as I went through CPO initiation!
The US Navy cap is basically a rain hat with a brim that can be turned up or down. You can see the brim turned down quite often in WW2-era training films.
Interesting information. My Dad was a Sea Bee during WW2. He had several of the Dixie cup hats and a flat top, Donald Duck, hat. We kids wore the Dixie cup hats outside in the summers to keep the sun off our heads. There were several kids in our neighborhood who did also.
I have no clue how many dixie cups I still have. Every time we had a uniform inspection, I bought a new one. I wore an eight point every day, so a dixie cup was a dress uniform only thing. It was cheap enough to grab a new one that it was not worth taking a hit on a cap that wasn't clean enough.
Le mot BACHI est un terme argotique et populaire, connu et utilisé par les marins . Le nom officiel est BONNET. Merci pour ces vidéos toujours très interessantes.
I went in the U.S. Navy in 1976 and we wore ball caps. Starting in 1980 they started bringing them back when they reissued the 'Cracker Jack' uniform. I personally hated the Dixie Cup because on my ship we had to wear them even 'underway'. The slightest wind and the Dixie Cup was in the ocean! I lost so many that I can't even remember! During the years of the ball cap, I still had the same one I was issued in boot camp until we switched back. Hated that damn Dixie Cup!
I always thought the Dixie cup was kind of silly looking, and I do recall a lot of sailors saying they could blow off on a ship. I think the Teller hats look sharper. My father was in WWII, and wore the Dixie cup on shipboard duty, but always wore the Teller hat when on leave or as a walking out uniform. Again, the Germans would wear the overseas hat on U-boats or on board ship...hard to see them blow off. The problem with Zumwalt's making sailors were the officer's uniform is uniforms like that are difficult to fold away and store on a ship. As for the griping on this thread about wearing the Dixie cup the right way, leave Foyer alone. I noted in WWII navy magazines, they were always berating sailors to not to wear the hat pushed back or cocked, but square on the head...which shows how many sailors said to hell with the regs when they left ship. These videos by Foyer are really addictive.
I always found the navy’s uniforms to look goofy. The US army has done an awful job trying to distance itself from Europe and its fashion in the 20th century. The US has always been (up until now) a European land, why give up cooler uniform styles? I remember they did away with the Washington DC presidential police unit whom had kickass white and gold uniforms with visor caps and all, mainly because it was “too stylish” like wtf
The Phoenician cap looked like a knitted conical hat with the point falling either to the side or forward. A similar hat was worn by some soldiers of ancient countries.
Apparently it was a custom for sailors to trade ribbons - I've seen collections of ribbons with many different ship names on them. These were private collections donated to maritime museums.
One memory I have is of the institutional obtuseness that can prevail in the military. In Navy bootcamp we were in formation waiting for our company's turn in the chowhall. It was pouring rain, but we were not allowed to break down the brim of our white hats to protect us in at least some small degree from the rain. Instead we had to stand there with our hats collecting rain water, that then seeped down inside our uniforms. We were soaked from the inside out, which effectively rendered our rain slickers useless. We would have been deemed "out of uniform" had we dropped our hat brims.
At least you got to keep your covers on;. BT in the Air Force, we had to keep our covers off while waiting for chow, got double pnuem 8:58 pneumonia from that.
Encore une excellente planche ! Chapeau 🎩 . Il y a un petit problème avec le son, ta pièce a de la reverbe, malgré l'aménagement, elle pénètre ton micro-cravate (c'est souvent le cas) et est exacerbée lors de ton traitement audio. Essaie avec un micro supercardioïde, bien pointé vers toi, ça devrait bien t'aider.
My dad was issued the Donald Duck cap in the 1950s, but never wore it. Was always the Dixie cup which he liked because it could be unfolded and worn out in the sun. One I thought was kind of cool was the lesser known ww2 blue Dixie cup.
I was in the navy myself and the uniform still fits me, after 35 years and I still cut a good figure in it and the women praise the way it looks. The English model is also called a pig hat (affectionately). In Germany it is the plate cap ( tellermütze ).
Yeah , i was issued crackerjacks in 73 but about 76 zumwalt turned us all into officers , also our dress whites were cotton , no piping , crackerjacks had piping they were made of wool
Je sais, j'attends la contribution d'une amie mais qui a eu d'autres choses qui l'ont empêché de le faire, ça va venir mais je ne sais pas exactement quand. Le reste est fini donc dès que j'ai ce segment je la mets en ligne
My father was in the RN during World War II. You could be issued with a hat, or - as soon as you got some money - you went and bought one privately, which was bigger and more imposing than the one they issued you. Not sure why they were allowed to do that. But they also did the same with their bellbottoms. The privately tailored ones had much bigger - what do you call them - leg openings. They were both supposed to be chick magnets I think.
Some navy hats and caps had different insignia or different coloured pom poms to help marine snipers in the rigging differentiate fried from foes in on board battles when sailors boarded enemy ships to engage in close quarter fighting.
The dixie cup hat and even moreso the European navy caps seem like they offer little protection against the sun. As I'd think lots of naval personnel served on deck especially around the time that these hats originated, I'm surprised navies didn't choose a hat with a wide brim.
Because the ships lines in the age of sail would get in the way. When navy ships became ironclads the need for a broad brim became pointless because they were inside the ship 90% of the time. Also wind would blow off a broad brim hat.
I never liked the dixie cup. Felt that after the bureaucrats had gotten rid of the combo cap for E-6 and below that the bill-less cap was a more suitable replacement. It made you look less like Popeye and more like a professional sailor. Unfortunately, they didn't invite me into that particular conversation. And I'm still wondering about their thought process for having sailors at sea wearing blue and gray NWUs, when *white and international orange might be a better choice for someone thrown overboard.* Jus' sayin'...
Great information. FYI, you mite wanna get some sound-absorbing material such as wall tapastries or carpet. You echo and it detracts from understanding what you say. Best of Luck, Mate!
I noticed your inclusion of the state flag of Missouri in your decor. The official dimensions of this flag are 11x19, which are the same as the flag of Greece. I know this because my late ex-husband was born in Patras, and he loved studying vexillology. If you've already been to Missouri, please come back---I'd love to see someone who's probably a distant cousin.....
How is it that you look "plausible" with any hat you review? 😃 I'd look like a total dweeb in 98% of your hats. Very interesting content in your videos.
The uniform change in the 1970’s was an unbelievably stupid decision. My dress uniform’s the crackerjack could be folded and put into a sea bag, the other branches of the military called them duffel bags. When taken out they didn’t need to be pressed before an inspection. Not so with the new one! Not to mention they didn’t change the lockers in the birthing compartments, there was no where to hang them. On leave at the airport I had someone just a few years younger than me, ask what branch of the military I was in? Was I pissed off ? That term doesn’t come close to how I felt.
Fun fact: In 2021, the Indonesian Navy changed its sailor hat style from the dixie cup style to a style resembling those worn by sailors from communist countries (but without the ribbon). Rumor has it that the change was due to mockery of the dixie cup style, which resembled Popeye's hat.
White dixie cups were worn as fatigue wear in Polish navy before ww2, after the war they vanished. Pretty weird to see this piece of kit so far from its New World place of origin
First of all I want to say that I really enjoy the knowledge and the subject is very fascinating. Unfortunately, I have a problem with the recitation of the material - it seems, as if you are reading from what is written on the page in front of you. I think if the material can be presented in another way, it would be better. sorry if i hurt you Thanks for everything keep up the good work
Oddly enough when armies started getting rid of Shorter shakos & Kepis they picked the navy cap but added the visor to become the peaked cap that nearly every army & police force uses today.
A true salt would roll the rim of his dixie cup down. I made a big deal yo everyone that listened that women should wear the same cover as men in uniform. Dixue Cups were like $5 while the ladies hat was like $40.
Fun Fact about USN Dixie Cup: works as a bucket to bail out a life boat/small boat or catch rain water when in same. Flopped down over the ears it helps protect from tropical sun. In "bucket mode" it can be used to catch some air and act as a mini life preserver. Bright white color can be waved as a signal for rescue. I was a Machinist Mate and used mine as a "glove" when grabbing hot valve handles.Also used it to haul ice down to my engine room. Soaked in ice water and put on my head in bucket mode it help against heat stress in same engine room.
@Amossnowdaharleyman Remember trying to get the proper roll on the edge to get the proper 'old salt' look? Lol
Also useful to flog a buddy leaving for the last time to d/c or go to another command.
As a seaman (E3) USS Kitty Hawk (CV-63) in 1984, sent down to the engine room for the very essential and immediately needed tool, the 'BT punch', I could never have imagined how hot the engineering spaces were. Fortunately the BT's had mercy on my 18 year old, 135 pound 5 foot 8 inch skinny frame and gave me a minor punch in the arm and advised me to not let my shipmates know they gave me a break. I acted it up really well by holding my breath all the way back to my workstation, so my face would be red and I would still be sweating, and kept rubbing my left bicep in apparent pain. It worked, they all had a laugh at my, not actual expense, but they did not know that. I never told them that, I just let them think that they had gotten one over one me. I was actually familiar with the 'BT Punch' because my bootcamp company commander was an MMC and mentioned it at some point. When I got the order to go get one, I decided that I'd rather just go along with it than hide from it. The Navy does have their traditions, you will be respected more if you go along with them, so I went to the engine room to receive my BT Punch. Sorry, off subject there, I was only down there a couple times, so incredibly hot and humid!
@@richardduerr9983 I was on the USS Roanoke AOR-7 in 84. I was a strange one: actually loved being at sea in my hole (engineroom). Still think of the night views of the stars 1500 miles from the nearest light pollution: what the cavemen saw...
When I was in basic training, we were taught to use them as a floatation device. I always thought it was stupid because it didn't work well at all. I always assumed a big reason our caps were like that was because it is easier to fold and stow. Sailors don't have a lot of space to put things on a ship, so no one would want a big hat that took up a lot of space.
Many a Seaman Recruit in boot camp came out with a 'grinder reminder'; a sunburn across the middle of the forehead and pale skin above it. Bidding farewell to my Dixie cup was an emotional moment for me when I went through CPO initiation. One of great things about the Dixie Cup is the ability to fold it into quarters and stuff it in the back of your 13 button trousers so as not to have to carry it in your hands when indoors. And you could always take your spare cover with you on deck when pulling into a foreign port and tossing it down to a pretty girl. Then all you had to do was find the gal with a hat that had your name on it!
"Grinder reminder"
It's been ages since I heard that term! Thanks for bringing back some memories.
i was in the navy when to uniform change came around, we all hated the "dixie cup". it was very cheaply made (thanks China) and would fly into the water at the slightest breeze. I kept a stack of them in my locker for that very reason. :P
South America is not a country, it is a continent.
@@nickgov66 Umm...yeah, of course it is. I'm guessing your comment is in reference to some other part of the comment section as I can't see how it relates to these... :-/
My Dad, who was a US Marine in WWll, always referred to it as a "gob hat". He called sailors "swab jockeys".
Good presentation.
Thanks
Early tee shirts were called gob shirts since they were first issued to sailors, nicknamed gobs.
I was in the US Navy from '77 to '81, and up until the last year, our dress hat was that white covered chief's hat, which was properly called a "combination cap." I was delighted to get the Dixie Cup on my head when they brought them back.
For working uniform we wore navy blue ball caps, through that whole period.
I joined in '85, and remember something being said about the change in uniform...that the Dixie cup, dungarees, and chambray shirt were voted for overwhelmingly (and the crackerjack uniform). I was pleased that I didn't have to deal with a combination cap...I've always felt they're ugly.
@@TheEudaemonicPlague Oh yeah, I came in expecting uniforms like I saw in the old movies. Bell bottoms and jumpers. I ended up spending three and a half years in a double breasted suit on watch. I was so happy the crackerjacks came back, even though it was only months before my enlistment was up.
Weren't you guys allowed to have beards & longer hair back then too?
@@11C1P Yeah, that was Admiral Zumwalt. I had a full beard in 1978. He was trying to encourage enlistment and retention while civilians were, well, hippies. He even allowed African Americans to wear afros.
The Navy gradually clawed that back. I was down to a mustache a year later.
We didn't get to wear longer hair, though we could have it blocked in the back instead of tapered, which made it look fuller.
I was serving on board the USSGuam, LPpH-9, when Zumwalt came to power- and our legal officer got an order from the CNO office change ships refs to allow beards.
I retired from the Navy 21 years ago. I still have a Dixie Cup.😊
Me, too. My wife likes putting it on once in awhile.
I recently found one of my original ones from Boot camp, July 1984.
2001-2005 I was in the Australian Navy Cadets and we were proud of our little sailor caps.
As someone who has spent a lot of time in the sun on the water, the sennet hat is probably the best hat for dealing with sunburn and ocean glare. Although the military has rarely cared about the well being of their crews.
I concur!!!❤
I was in the Navy right as Admiral Zumwalt decided we were all going to look alike, officers and enlisted dress uni that is. I never got a sailor hat, which was the only reason I joined tbh...
When I was in the Navy, we called them Gilligan hats...
The USCG wore the white topped banded “flat hat” with dress blues or whites from 1967 to 1976. The Dixie cup was used with the undress uniform and the dungarees.
I come from a long line of Coast Guard families and have quite a few photos of relatives wearing that cap.
They should have kept the old uniform as there really was no need to change to the 'Bender Blues' of today that makes Coasties look like hotel doormen. I comment as having been in the CG during the uniform transition period. There were a lot of unhappy people because of the uniform change. The service was always scrapping for funds but the decision was made to go with the Blues that required millions spent on the new uniforms and millions spent on converting locker space aboard cutters to accommodate. A stupid waste of money quite like 'camo' uniforms aboard Navy ships.
Dressing your Sailors as Clowns was finally to much for the Admirality, the Straw that broke the Hat, so to speak.
We would fold our Dixie Cups in a way that would almost turn them into mini bicorns. A good example is how Jack Nicholson wore his in "The Last Detail. Others would roll the rim down along the edges.
Soak them in luke warm water to soften them then fold the top quarter or third down so it made a crease. made it look SALTY.
I AM the MFing Shore Patrol! 😂
It's not good unless the cheese is melted! @@c3aloha
I always rolled mine like Steve McQueen in The Sand Pebbles. ;-)
In my day in the USN. We wore the navy ball cap on board ship and only the Dixie cup when off ship on ships business.
I was in the usn, still have my Dixie cup. I was told the reason for the Dixie cup was in the sun and tropics you coul fold the brim down and it would keep the sun off your face and neck with out being bulky or wide.
USN under CNO Elmo Zulmwalt rescinded the cracker jack uniform in the early to mid 1970's. I spent my entire enlistment in a suit with an officer style cap. I got out in late 79. Not long after they reverted to the cracker jack
My daddy also but I joined because I liked the crackerJack's, although i found out when i enlisted that women couldn't wear,cracker jacks
Was in RTC when we got our Dixie cups someone turned theirs inside out and you could hear everyone realize Gilligan's hat was an upside down Dixie cup
I was very glad to be made informed on this!
Man, you always make the hat tipping look so easy
Well it is
Proud to have been a squid for 17 years !!
Still got my "pork pie hat" in the British style from when I was a Sea Scout. Loved that thing!
You know what'll really intimidate our enemies? We'll dress as literal clowns😂😂
My fave vid so far. You covered a lot of ground in nine minutes. Very interesting.
The harlequin uniforms! 😂😂😂 Maybe some rumors about seafaring men on long voyages are true!
2:28 I know that it's not very important, but I'm very glad you showed a picture from "the terror", one of the most underrated TV shows of all time.
I love that show
The TV show was terrific. Do yourself a favor and read the novel by American author Dan Simmons. Outstanding work.
Oddly enough, the Dixie cup is a popular sailor hat, but in the US, the striped undershirt is not US issue
I love this channel. It needs so many more subs and views. So much good research and fabulous presentation. Kudos to you sir!
Thanks. ✌🏻👊🏼
My Uncle Billy was in the Navy. He served as a radio man on board the USS Joseph Strauss (DDG-16). A job that no longer exists on a ship that no longer exists. Unfortunately, he passed away from lung cancer in August 2022.
I have a picture of my uncle wearing a talley type hat in WW II! But my brother wore the peak in the late 1970's. And on deck he wore a ball cap.
Very interesting again ! 👏
Made me think of humorist Popeck, from witch I learned touching the pompom is supposed to bring good luck.
I can't believe you left out the U.S. Coast Guard donald duck hat. -USCG vet
The touching the pom pom tradition is so normal that French sailors really don't mind it at all. Also yes, I'm pretty sure they win the hearts of many ladies. Seen it often while in Port. 😊
The Navy white hat looks so awesome! in the Washington honor guards. They curl them perfectly.
sailor cap is an emergency flotation device which when turned inside out, gripped tightly and held under the body it contained a bubble of air which aided in keeping head above the water line
After reading through many of the comments, I was surprised to note that no one mentioned the other nickname for the "Dixie Cup". That being the "Dog Dish". I have fond memories of that hat. But have to admit a very strong sense of pride on my last day wearing that as I went through CPO initiation!
Great and interesting video!
The US Navy cap is basically a rain hat with a brim that can be turned up or down. You can see the brim turned down quite often in WW2-era training films.
Interesting information. My Dad was a Sea Bee during WW2. He had several of the Dixie cup hats and a flat top, Donald Duck, hat. We kids wore the Dixie cup hats outside in the summers to keep the sun off our heads. There were several kids in our neighborhood who did also.
love the channel! please do one on the coolest hat of all time; the peaked cap
The red pom pom on top of the hat will also make it easier for the marksmen in the rigging to identify friend vs foe.
Well, hello sailor!
I have no clue how many dixie cups I still have. Every time we had a uniform inspection, I bought a new one. I wore an eight point every day, so a dixie cup was a dress uniform only thing. It was cheap enough to grab a new one that it was not worth taking a hit on a cap that wasn't clean enough.
Le mot BACHI est un terme argotique et populaire, connu et utilisé par les marins . Le nom officiel est BONNET. Merci pour ces vidéos toujours très interessantes.
Interesting 🤔, great video 👍
I went in the U.S. Navy in 1976 and we wore ball caps. Starting in 1980 they started bringing them back when they reissued the 'Cracker Jack' uniform. I personally hated the Dixie Cup because on my ship we had to wear them even 'underway'. The slightest wind and the Dixie Cup was in the ocean! I lost so many that I can't even remember! During the years of the ball cap, I still had the same one I was issued in boot camp until we switched back. Hated that damn Dixie Cup!
I have my daddy's! He was a sailor, then became a dirt sailor, which were seabees construction workers! Think the fighting seabees!
I always thought the Dixie cup was kind of silly looking, and I do recall a lot of sailors saying they could blow off on a ship. I think the Teller hats look sharper. My father was in WWII, and wore the Dixie cup on shipboard duty, but always wore the Teller hat when on leave or as a walking out uniform. Again, the Germans would wear the overseas hat on U-boats or on board ship...hard to see them blow off. The problem with Zumwalt's making sailors were the officer's uniform is uniforms like that are difficult to fold away and store on a ship. As for the griping on this thread about wearing the Dixie cup the right way, leave Foyer alone. I noted in WWII navy magazines, they were always berating sailors to not to wear the hat pushed back or cocked, but square on the head...which shows how many sailors said to hell with the regs when they left ship. These videos by Foyer are really addictive.
I always found the navy’s uniforms to look goofy. The US army has done an awful job trying to distance itself from Europe and its fashion in the 20th century. The US has always been (up until now) a European land, why give up cooler uniform styles?
I remember they did away with the Washington DC presidential police unit whom had kickass white and gold uniforms with visor caps and all, mainly because it was “too stylish” like wtf
@ 5:03 ...the preferred hat of the stay puft marshmallow man
The Phoenician cap looked like a knitted conical hat
with the point falling either to the side or
forward. A similar hat was worn by some soldiers
of ancient countries.
You forgot: the dixie cup hat's brim can be flipped down all around for great protection
Love it 😊
The Dixe Cup only.
Apparently it was a custom for sailors to trade ribbons - I've seen collections of ribbons with many different ship names on them. These were private collections donated to maritime museums.
One memory I have is of the institutional obtuseness that can prevail in the military. In Navy bootcamp we were in formation waiting for our company's turn in the chowhall. It was pouring rain, but we were not allowed to break down the brim of our white hats to protect us in at least some small degree from the rain. Instead we had to stand there with our hats collecting rain water, that then seeped down inside our uniforms. We were soaked from the inside out, which effectively rendered our rain slickers useless. We would have been deemed "out of uniform" had we dropped our hat brims.
At least you got to keep your covers on;. BT in the Air Force, we had to keep our covers off while waiting for chow, got double pnuem 8:58 pneumonia from that.
Excellent épisode, j'ai hate de voir les petits aménagements francophone!!! Merci
i like your videos, have you done one on the deer stalker?
Encore une excellente planche ! Chapeau 🎩 . Il y a un petit problème avec le son, ta pièce a de la reverbe, malgré l'aménagement, elle pénètre ton micro-cravate (c'est souvent le cas) et est exacerbée lors de ton traitement audio. Essaie avec un micro supercardioïde, bien pointé vers toi, ça devrait bien t'aider.
Hmm... je regarderai! j'ai eu quelques problèmes de son avec cette vidéo
@6:09: "Other nations, such as South America..."
You lost me.
Oops... that was supposed to be *in* South America... my mistake...
Sailors were affectionately referred to as 'milk churns' due to standing upright with that hat.
LOL!
My goodness. Dixie cup not named after a paper cup but for the ice cream treat
My dad was issued the Donald Duck cap in the 1950s, but never wore it. Was always the Dixie cup which he liked because it could be unfolded and worn out in the sun. One I thought was kind of cool was the lesser known ww2 blue Dixie cup.
I was in the navy myself and the uniform still fits me, after 35 years and I still cut a good figure in it and the women praise the way it looks.
The English model is also called a pig hat (affectionately). In Germany it is the plate cap ( tellermütze ).
Yeah , i was issued crackerjacks in 73 but about 76 zumwalt turned us all into officers , also our dress whites were cotton , no piping , crackerjacks had piping they were made of wool
I believe Donald Duck was technically in the Army. He was discharged as a sergeant iirc.
You're right, and "Buck sergeant" to be precise.
Ah ben on n'a pas la version française du casque de cycliste !
Je me suis fait la même réflexion...🤔
Je sais, j'attends la contribution d'une amie mais qui a eu d'autres choses qui l'ont empêché de le faire, ça va venir mais je ne sais pas exactement quand. Le reste est fini donc dès que j'ai ce segment je la mets en ligne
Traduction française svp! Tu capable💪
Have you done a vid about the pork pie hat?
What about a video for the Sombrero? (Tipycal Mexican hat)
I already did one!
@@hathistorianjc Oh, sorry my bad! I will watch it😀😀
The Pom Pom was there so that riflemen in the rigging could tell their side from the other as they sniped at the boarders.
The story about the HMS Harlequin leading to the standardisation of uniforms in the Royal Navy is both hilarious and tragically unknown.
And it is so utterly British. "Wot's this? This will just not do! It's silly!" Meanwhile the Captain is thinking himself such a clever boy.
My dad had the Donald Duck hat and I had the Dixie Cup.
My father was in the RN during World War II. You could be issued with a hat, or - as soon as you got some money - you went and bought one privately, which was bigger and more imposing than the one they issued you. Not sure why they were allowed to do that. But they also did the same with their bellbottoms. The privately tailored ones had much bigger - what do you call them - leg openings. They were both supposed to be chick magnets I think.
I think that you call them "flares".
Some navy hats and caps had different insignia or different coloured pom poms to help marine snipers in the rigging differentiate fried from foes in on board battles when sailors boarded enemy ships to engage in close quarter fighting.
Will you do a video on the peaked hat?
I'm sure I'll get to it
The dixie cup hat and even moreso the European navy caps seem like they offer little protection against the sun. As I'd think lots of naval personnel served on deck especially around the time that these hats originated, I'm surprised navies didn't choose a hat with a wide brim.
Because the ships lines in the age of sail would get in the way. When navy ships became ironclads the need for a broad brim became pointless because they were inside the ship 90% of the time. Also wind would blow off a broad brim hat.
I never liked the dixie cup. Felt that after the bureaucrats had gotten rid of the combo cap for E-6 and below that the bill-less cap was a more suitable replacement. It made you look less like Popeye and more like a professional sailor. Unfortunately, they didn't invite me into that particular conversation. And I'm still wondering about their thought process for having sailors at sea wearing blue and gray NWUs, when *white and international orange might be a better choice for someone thrown overboard.* Jus' sayin'...
Anchors Aweigh! A History of the Sailor Cap. The title and the beginning of the subtitle should always be capitalized.
Great information. FYI, you mite wanna get some sound-absorbing material such as wall tapastries or carpet. You echo and it detracts from understanding what you say. Best of Luck, Mate!
yeah, my microphone malfunctioned for that particular video, the others should sound better. Sorry about that.
ah_hah...je vois que vous faisez vos vidéos aussi en français...bravo!
The "Dixie Cup" was actually called a Gob Hat.
not going to mention the village people?
thank you! a great moment in the hat's history!
*I STILL WANT TO KNOW HOW SAILORS AND SEAMEN ARE ABLE TO KEEP THOSE SHALLOW CAPS ON THEIR HEADS WHEN THE WIND IS BLOWING ON DECK. ANSWERS PLEASE!*
Chinstays
@@peterwilliams2152 Do you mean chin straps? If so, I've never seen any on sailors' caps--including the one in this video.
OKAY THEN!
Why no brim? I would have thought that working on deck in the sun that a brim would be a good thing to have.
I noticed your inclusion of the state flag of Missouri in your decor. The official dimensions of this flag are 11x19, which are the same as the flag of Greece. I know this because my late ex-husband was born in Patras, and he loved studying vexillology.
If you've already been to Missouri, please come back---I'd love to see someone who's probably a distant cousin.....
How is it that you look "plausible" with any hat you review? 😃 I'd look like a total dweeb in 98% of your hats. Very interesting content in your videos.
The uniform change in the 1970’s was an unbelievably stupid decision. My dress uniform’s the crackerjack could be folded and put into a sea bag, the other branches of the military called them duffel bags. When taken out they didn’t need to be pressed before an inspection. Not so with the new one! Not to mention they didn’t change the lockers in the birthing compartments, there was no where to hang them. On leave at the airport I had someone just a few years younger than me, ask what branch of the military I was in? Was I pissed off ? That term doesn’t come close to how I felt.
Les marins norvégiens portaient aussi un bonnet avec pompom semblable au bachi pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale!
ton anglais est si bon, félicitation, je suis curieux comment tu as un si bon niveau en anglais
Je suis moitié Américain, c'est une de mes langues maternelles!
Was just flipping by and saw your Missouri flag on the wall. What's that story?
Fun fact: In 2021, the Indonesian Navy changed its sailor hat style from the dixie cup style to a style resembling those worn by sailors from communist countries (but without the ribbon). Rumor has it that the change was due to mockery of the dixie cup style, which resembled Popeye's hat.
popeye the sailor man!
White dixie cups were worn as fatigue wear in Polish navy before ww2, after the war they vanished. Pretty weird to see this piece of kit so far from its New World place of origin
First of all I want to say that I really enjoy the knowledge and the subject is very fascinating.
Unfortunately, I have a problem with the recitation of the material - it seems, as if you are reading from what is written on the page in front of you.
I think if the material can be presented in another way, it would be better.
sorry if i hurt you
Thanks for everything keep up the good work
😮
I did 15 years in the Navy and found the hat goofy. I prefer the Navy hats of the Brits, Russians with a chin strap.
Do you know why visorless for seamen? Thanks
Oddly enough when armies started getting rid of Shorter shakos & Kepis they picked the navy cap but added the visor to become the peaked cap that nearly every army & police force uses today.
Also because adding a visor would make it less wind resistant
Officers generally have a version with a visor
@ 6:10: South America is not a country.
Sou'wester?
Bonjour, vous ne faites plus de vidéo en français?
Je cherchais sur Internet le pourquoi du ponpon. J'imagine que vous en parlez
Si si, elles arrivent le 15 du mois, mais j'ai fait un post dans l'onglet "communauté" expliquant pourquoi la précédente a du retard
Et oui, j'en parle
Il n’y a pas encore de versions françaises des deux dernières vidéos ? 😀.
elles arrivent le 15 du mois, mais j'ai fait un post dans l'onglet "communauté" expliquant pourquoi la précédente a du retard
A true salt would roll the rim of his dixie cup down.
I made a big deal yo everyone that listened that women should wear the same cover as men in uniform. Dixue Cups were like $5 while the ladies hat was like $40.
Bonjour cette vidéo ne sera pas en français ?
Si si, le 15