Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Stormy Kromer Caps and a God Fearing Man





Good Morning.

Sure is cold here in Wisconsin for November. That just means that I have to break out the Door County Highlander Grog Coffee, preheat my cup and enjoy the warmth it provides. It also means one other thing. It is time to break out my wool hat. My wool hat is not an ordinary hat. Not many men have one. Actually not many men want one. I wear a Stormy Kromer hat! Now what does that have to do with a Christian Devotional? Not a whole lot. But here are a few things this man does. When I pray my hat comes off. While our national anthem is sung or the pledge of allegiance recited, my hat comes off. My hat is off in church, I do not sit and eat with my hat on, and I tip my hat to acknowledge a lady. So guys no matter what hat you wear, wear it right. Man up fellas! Take them off when the time is right.  Ladies set those guys straight.

1 Corinthians 11:4 Every man who prays or prophesies with his head covered dishonors his head,

Stormy Kromer www.stormykromer.com/ They are the official winter hat for this Schutte Man.


The History Behind the Legend of Stormy Kromer

George "Stormy" Kromer was a real guy - a semi-pro baseball player and railroad engineer. Not the kind of guy you'd expect to start a clothing company, in other words, but one who happened to create a cap that became known for long-comfort and the ability to stay snug, even in the fiercest winds.

This final feature, in fact, is the reason he made his famous headgear in the first place, but we'll get to that in a bit.

Mr. Kromer, known as "Stormy" to the folks who knew his temper, was born in 1876 in Kaukauna, Wisconsin. He grew up with baseball and would eventually play on nearly 30 semi-pro teams throughout the Midwest. He might have continued to play that field, too, but he met Ida, and before Ida's father would allow her hand in marriage, our ballplayer needed to find real work.

That meant the Chicago & Northwestern Railroad and long, cold trips across the plains. Stormy was an engineer, and to see where he was headed, he had to stick his head out the window - into the wind. Mother Nature stole his cap more than once, and as the story goes, he set out to get her back.

In 1903, he asked Ida (now his wife and an excellent seamstress) to modify an old baseball cap to help keep it on in windy weather. The all-cloth cap with the soft, canvas visor was a departure from the traditional fedoras of the day, but it was more comfortable and because of it's six-panel fit, it stayed put.

Soon other railroad workers wanted one of Stormy Kromer's caps for themselves, and when Ida could no longer keep up with demand, they hired a few employees and the business was born.

A lot of things have changed since those first few caps - new colors, new fabrics, new styles - but we haven't changed the way we make 'em. They're hand-stitched right here in the good old U-S-of-A, and they're still made to fit better than anything you've had next to your noggin. Stormy Kromer caps are true to the original, and that means you get all the comfort and function that made them famous.

Wear one, and you'll know what we mean.

God Bless,
Marty

1 comment:

  1. That is the name of the big snowman in Minoqua. I wonder what the association is?

    ReplyDelete