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I Miss Women Wearing Hats and Veils in Church. A brief reminiscence of days gone by
Archdiocese of Washington ^ | april 10th, 2012 | Msgr. Charles Pope

Posted on 04/11/2012 5:08:39 PM PDT by Salvation

I Miss Women Wearing Hats and Veils in Church. A brief reminiscence of days gone by.

By: Msgr. Charles Pope

I know, I know, I am so hopelessly old fashioned. But I want to say, I miss women wearing hats. I have written before (HERE) of how I miss them wearing the veil in Church. But even before the veil, the hat was more commonly worn by women in 1940s and before (See photo  below left, of my parish taken in the early 1950s, click photo for a larger view). Veils became popular in the later 1950s and 1960s before head coverings for women (and men) all but disappeared in the late 1960s (along with just about everything elegant).

The Easter Bonnet, once a main tradition at Easter, now provokes stares of confusion when mentioned to younger people today. “Easter Bonnet?…What’s that?!” Too bad, gone with the (cultural) wind.

Frankly we have become a very informal culture and we almost never dress up any more. Jeans and a T-Shirt, even for Mass. When I was a kid in the early 1960s I would not set foot in the Church without trousers, a button down shirt, a necktie and (in the cooler months) a dress jacket). Women and girls always wore a dress and a veil or hat. Frankly too, we would not think of going to a restaurant in those years either, without dressing up a good bit.

Yeah, I know, I am hopelessly out of date and some of you feel judged. But I’m just going to say it again, I miss the fact that we almost never dress up any more, and that things like hats, jackets and ties for men, formal and pretty dresses for women, veils (or hats) in Church are gone.

In the African American Community where I have served for most of my priesthood, dressing up for Church and women wearing hats and veils, hung on a lot longer, but it too has largely subsided. I read an article in the Washington Post yesterday that largely read the funeral rites over hat wearing in the Black congregations. There’s still a few with the “ole time religion” but they are far fewer. Here are a some excerpts from the article:

For generations, church sanctuaries across the nation on Sunday mornings, especially in black churches and especially on Easter, transformed into a collage of hats: straw ones, felt ones, velvet ones, every shape, size and color, with bows, jewels and feathers, reaching for the heavens.

But anyone walking into today’s services expecting to see a nonstop parade of women making fashion statements on their heads will be sorely disappointed. Many daughters and granddaughters of the women who made bold and flashy hats synonymous with the black church have not carried on the tradition.

Anita Saunders, 42… grew up watching her mother’s generation flaunt their hats in church. “And I always loved it,” says the Indianapolis resident. “It was part of Sunday, the experience of the hats. We looked forward to seeing what hat Sister So-and-So was going to wear. My friends, we all grew up in the same church with mothers who wore hats, but we don’t. And so, yes, it seems it’s fading out.”

Elaine Saunders…is part of that generation of black women who launched hat-wearing into the stratosphere…..Their style was dignified, elegant, sometimes irreverent and even humorous, but it was always eye-catching. “You have a certain air when you put on a hat. If you put on the whole shebang and you’re satisfied, you walk different. You act different. And people treat you different,” says Saunders….

The whole shebang would be a hat that matches the suit that matches the shoes that match the bag….

Mother and daughter not only wore hats and gloves to church but also donned them for shopping trips downtown. “If you were dressed up, they thought you were somebody important, so you’d get waited on,” Saunders said.

“I guess as I got older, around my teens, I started flirting around with different hairstyles,” said Sylvia Magby, 58, “I started cutting my hair, and I just never found a hat that fit my head.” Her youngest sister, Anita…won’t go near a hat (except the emergency baseball cap for bad hair days). She was much younger when she first rebelled against them. “I was maybe 6, and I was very concerned that the hat would disturb my bangs, and I wanted nothing to do with it,” she recalls.

Many women say, “I have hats from my mother and other relatives, but I don’t wear them,” or “Hats don’t look good on me,” [But] as Saunders sees it, “there will be a set of women who will wear hats forever.”…there, in all its splendor,  that poof of fuchsia and iridescent feathers, … for all the world to see.

Read the Full Article Here: Church Ladies and their Hats, A Fading Tradition

Some will doubtless say, “Well look, it sounds like it was more about pride and getting seen, than worshiping God.” Others will doubtless remark that the Scriptures envision a woman covering her head before God as a way of covering her glory (i.e. her hair) and thus being humble before God. OK fine, but I’d just like to add that there is also something wonderful about the dignity of dressing really well to go to God’s house, something classy, something fitting. And again I’ll just say, I miss it, and always appreciate when I see it.

We men too have let things drop often marching into Church with sandals, jeans and a t-shirt. I regret too that we so seldom wear suits or hats anymore. Priests still wear the suit, but a fine cassock is hard to find and there is a lot of sloppy and poorly set forth liturgical vestments and altar cloths. Finer things are few and far between.

A small boast form your host, I have worn a fedora in the cooler months since my 20s. Not only do I think it looks good, but it is also does a great job keeping the cold away. I am amazed at what a difference a simple hat can make. Think about it men, a good hat can be classy and warm.

And ladies, I don’t DARE tell you what to do, but let me just say it again, I MISS the veils and hats. Yes, a real touch of class. Uh oh, now the comments are open.



TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; History; Theology
KEYWORDS: catholic; culture; current; feminism; hats; hatsandveils; msgrcharlespope; tradition; veils; women
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To: murron
I’m saying that having a dress code did not chase those wanting to attend away, which was the assertion you made in your original response to me.

A dress code by definition excludes. If your church's dress code is no jeans, and someone shows up wearing jeans, they would be excluded, would they not?

If people don’t attend Mass because they are told they must be dressed properly, then they must not have wanted to go that bad in the first place and are looking for any excuse not to go.

So if they are looking for any excuse not to go, why give them one? Again, what is our calling as Christians? To convert nonbelievers to committed followers of Christ! Why are you wanting to turn people away? Are you seriously listening to yourself?

I think the way some people show up dressed for Mass shows disrespect and I do care about it. As far as being bent out of shape, it appears that the one being bent out of shape is you, and you must not like dressing up to attend Mass so this has hit a nerve with you.

What hits a nerve with me is people that worry about speck of sawdust in their brother's eye and pay no attention to the plank in their own eye.

141 posted on 04/13/2012 5:42:18 AM PDT by Publius Valerius
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To: boatbums

Great point. Word.


142 posted on 04/13/2012 5:44:12 AM PDT by Publius Valerius
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To: Publius Valerius

And I know while you’er sitting in Church so high and mighty you’re not judging anyone on anything? Yeah, I’ll bet. You’re just a poster in search of a controversy where there is none. These same people that do not dress properly for Church show disrespect. They would not dream of going to a fine 5 star restaurant dressed the way they attend Mass. And what is more of a fine feast than the receiving the Body and Blood of Jesus? You can sit on your high horse and say that you don’t judge anybody but I know better. Why, you’re judging me and you know nothing about me. People are not going to not go because they have to dress up. That’s a preposterous statement and you have nothing concrete to back that up.


143 posted on 04/13/2012 8:43:19 AM PDT by murron (Proud Mom of a Marine Vet)
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To: Salvation

So hope that your foot is better.

I would love to wear a hat to Mass, but no other women do, so I would feel as if I was calling attention to myself.

Fondly remember the days when ladies and girls wore hats to church. I, too, miss seeing everyone make the extra effort to dress up for church and for other occasions.

I grew up in the suburbs of Baltimore, and, up until I was in college, we would not have dreamed of visiting Baltimore — going downtown — without dressing to the nines. We did not wear hats, but we wore heels and stockings and gloves with dresses or suits.


144 posted on 04/14/2012 6:15:05 PM PDT by Bigg Red (Pray for our republic.)
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To: Lilyjuslan

Heck! I miss women wearing dresses to church. These days many of them show up in jeans.

&&&
Jeans would be an improvement over some of the low-cut, tight tops and shorts one often sees.


145 posted on 04/14/2012 6:18:47 PM PDT by Bigg Red (Pray for our republic.)
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To: Bigg Red

When I can go back to Mass, I am going to wear my hat. Unless the lady who wears the mantilla is there, I will be the only one.

It will be interesting to see what comments I get. I’ll just say I couldn’t come on Easter, so they are getting my Easter bonnet today. Hahaha.


146 posted on 04/14/2012 6:32:04 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: Salvation

So what happened when you wore your Easter bonnet to church?


147 posted on 04/15/2012 12:30:14 PM PDT by Bigg Red (Pray for our republic.)
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