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"Mexican Raiders"

Posted: Tue Dec 03, 2013 9:17 pm
by Pat Holscher
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Re: "Mexican Raiders"

Posted: Tue Dec 03, 2013 9:17 pm
by Pat Holscher
Is that a Savage lever action?

Re: "Mexican Raiders"

Posted: Tue Dec 03, 2013 9:19 pm
by Pat Holscher
Image

Re: "Mexican Raiders"

Posted: Thu Dec 05, 2013 6:56 am
by Jim Bewley
Was the Sombrero worn more prominently back then?

Jim

Re: "Mexican Raiders"

Posted: Thu Dec 05, 2013 7:16 am
by Pat Holscher
Jim Bewley wrote:Was the Sombrero worn more prominently back then?

Jim
Yes. In photos of this period sombreros were extremely common and probably over half the rural Mexican men depicted wear them. I'd guess up to something like 70% did. Rurales wore them as part of their uniform.

You do see other broad brimmed hats however. Mexican federal troops seem to have worn a hat with a three or four inch brim routinely. Quite a few Mexican revolutionary officers wore brimmed hats with brims about that size. I almost think that these were "town hats" that were worn in part to show that they were educated men, rather than rural peasantry.

Poncho Villa, who in the poplar imagination is thought of as wearing a sombrero, almost never did or may actually never did. He always seems to have worn a felt cowboy hat the type you'd see north of the border. On the other hand, Emiliano Zapata always wore a sombrero.

Today they seem to be ornamental items only. I'm not sure what brought about the change but I wonder if the influence of the US had something to do with it, as today straw cowboy hats seem the rural Mexican norm, and whether the automobile had something to do with it, as it isn't a hat suitable for a person traveling in a car.

Re: "Mexican Raiders"

Posted: Thu Dec 05, 2013 9:30 am
by mnhorse
Pat Holscher wrote:Is that a Savage lever action?
Sure looks like one.
Richard