Hi Jon,
Webster's dictionary from 1913 defines a "billycock" thusly:
A round, low-crowned felt hat; a wideawake.
The following is from an 1887 article entitled "The Billycock or Wideawake hat".
It may be a case that all billycocks are wideawakes but not all wideawakes are billycocks, but the overall inference is that the two are interchangable. The quaker hat is apparently a type of wideawake, but such headgear would be decidedly out-of-place in the East End.
Ada Wilson's attacker wore a wideawake, and here's how it was depicted in a contemporary sketch:
Best regards,
Ben
Webster's dictionary from 1913 defines a "billycock" thusly:
A round, low-crowned felt hat; a wideawake.
The following is from an 1887 article entitled "The Billycock or Wideawake hat".
It may be a case that all billycocks are wideawakes but not all wideawakes are billycocks, but the overall inference is that the two are interchangable. The quaker hat is apparently a type of wideawake, but such headgear would be decidedly out-of-place in the East End.
Ada Wilson's attacker wore a wideawake, and here's how it was depicted in a contemporary sketch:
Best regards,
Ben
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