In 1865, the John B. Stetson hat company introduced a new product. It called it the Boss of the Plains hat: a durable, waterproof, good-looking hat for men. The Boss of the Plains had a wide brim and a rounded top, and quickly became one of Stetson’s top sellers. Brand-new Boss of the Plains, fresh out of the hatbox. The Boss of the Plains dominated men’s hat fashion (back when there was still such a thing as men’s hat fashion) for about twenty years. Post-Civil War photos frequently show men sporting one. The hat was originally made of beaver pelts. Stetson said it took about 42 beaver belly pelts to make one hat, which retailed for around $4.50, which is roughly $64.00 in 2017 money. The design of the hat didn’t really change over this time… not really. Not the product that Stetson manufactured, anyway. The Montgomery-Ward catalogue was the Everything Store of the 19th century. The change started with the customers. The Boss of the Plains was designed to