The Hat Industry of Luton and its Buildings


Book Description

Although perhaps best known today as the home of Vauxhall Motors, Luton's industrial roots run much deeper. Long before it became associated with motor cars, Luton was the centre of ladies' hat production in this country - a success founded upon the earlier regional industry of straw-plaiting. Many surrounding towns and villages fed into the industry and helped to make the region globally renowned. At its peak in the 1930s, the region was producing as many as 70 million hats in a single year; however, it entered a rapid decline following the Second World War from which it never recovered. This has left Luton, Dunstable and a number of other local towns with a challenging inheritance of neglected and decaying fragments of a once vital industry. This book is intended to be an introduction and guide to the area's historical depth and to its distinctive and varied character, seeking to explain the development of the region as the centre of the hatting industry in the south and exploring the lives of the people working there during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The historic links between the surviving building stock and the hatting industry are assessed and the book highlights the significance of the surviving fabric and the potential of the historic environment within future conservation and regeneration plans.













Hat Industry Handbook


Book Description

All of these had to be made by specialists in the hat trade. The hat trade flourished all over England but none compared to Luton which became the center for hat production on an enormous scale. Astonishingly at Luton's height, the town was producing thousands of hats a year! Every person wore and owned several hats for different conditions and occasions. It was also one of the most common presents to receive for a birthday or Christmas. At its height in the 19th Century, almost every person in Luton was in some way connected to the hat trade.




Hat Industry Statistics


Book Description

All of these had to be made by specialists in the hat trade. The hat trade flourished all over England but none compared to Luton which became the center for hat production on an enormous scale. Astonishingly at Luton's height, the town was producing thousands of hats a year! Every person wore and owned several hats for different conditions and occasions. It was also one of the most common presents to receive for a birthday or Christmas. At its height in the 19th Century, almost every person in Luton was in some way connected to the hat trade.




The Luton Hat Industry


Book Description







The Luton Hat Trade, a Brief History


Book Description

It is difficult to imagine today that Luton was once the world centre of the Hat Industry, but for centuries that is exactly what it was. There was hardly a street that did not have a hat makers or someone connected to the hat trade in it. There was Olney's who manufactured straw Boaters, Lane's, who were the block makers. Brightman's in Bute Street and Snoxell's in Frederick Street. A & C Simpson of Guildford Street. Some still survive but one after another many closed as the town that had survived embargoes, and even Napoleon's blockades, changed into a university town. Age old traditions taught to children before they could run, disappeared too. Legend tells that there were more hat businesses in Luton than days of the year. Here for the first time world renowned author Alex Askaroff brings Luton's history back to life with actual stories from hat makers and much more. Come on a journey and discover why some people really were as 'mad as a hatter'.




Swiss Straw Work


Book Description