WASHINGTON, DC.- The Smithsonians National Museum of American History will receive a donation from the Red Hat Society, a womens social organization that fosters a sense of joy and sisterhood. The gift includes a bright red fedora, the hat that initiated the founding of the Red Hat Society, and a purple-feather boa. Both accessories were owned by Sue Ellen Cooper, the founder and Exalted Queen Mother of the society; she donated them to the organization in 2002.
In the fall of 1997, Cooper purchased the old red fedora from a thrift shop in Tucson, Ariz., drawn by its low price and elegance. A year later, she presented the hat, along with a poem by Jenny Joseph titled Warning, to a friend celebrating her 55th birthday. The poem, which reads When I am an old woman, I shall wear purple, with a red hat which doesnt go and doesnt suit me, verbalized the message Cooper intended for her friend, that growing older should be done playfully and on her own terms. That message affected the lives of the women Cooper encountered: the red hat became her signature gift, and its symbolism inspired them to don their own red hats. In 1998, at a tea party in Fullerton, Calif., the Red Hat Society was born. News about the women in purple and red spread rapidly, and in just five years there were more than 40,000 chapters worldwide.
The Red Hat Society is a wonderful, one-of-a-kind example of American culture and tradition, says Brent D. Glass, director of the museum. It is an organization that encourages strong bonds and living life to the fullestideas that are cherished by our society.
The Red Hat Society stresses the importance of friendship and sisterhood, the value of play and the determination to find the good in life everywhere possible. Though the organizations original focus was on women 50 or older, they now welcome members of all ages who wish to join in the fun. The Red Hatters don red hats and purple attire at all official society events, and they often wear flashy red accessories such as gloves and feather boas.
The red hat and feather boa are symbols of an interdenominational, interracial, intergenerational and international womens social organization that provides a sense of cohesion and stability in womens lives. The museum records the development and rise of fraternal societies and organizations such as the YMCA/YWCA, the Masons, Boy and Girl Scouts and fire-fighting societies through a collection of objects that symbolize these organizations missions.