I've just started reading Bruce Paley's 'Jack the Ripper: The Simple Truth' and came across this reference to hats on page 37.
"In the wake of Kelly's death, a reporter from the Observer went walkabout through Dorset Street and its environs, recording his impressions. 'The passersby are comparatively few, and of the lowest order,' he observed, as he neared Dorset Street, 'navvies, dock labourers, and the heterogeneous class living in the common lodging houses which in this quarter abound. There was one other class in evidence, and this was unquestionably prominent. A large number of ragged and degraded women, women in draggle-tailed skirts and huge hats and feathers, women in gaudy dresses and hatless, women in every stage of drunkenness - these patrolled the street by the dozens, singing their loudest and jostling one another in their degradation.'
Carol
"In the wake of Kelly's death, a reporter from the Observer went walkabout through Dorset Street and its environs, recording his impressions. 'The passersby are comparatively few, and of the lowest order,' he observed, as he neared Dorset Street, 'navvies, dock labourers, and the heterogeneous class living in the common lodging houses which in this quarter abound. There was one other class in evidence, and this was unquestionably prominent. A large number of ragged and degraded women, women in draggle-tailed skirts and huge hats and feathers, women in gaudy dresses and hatless, women in every stage of drunkenness - these patrolled the street by the dozens, singing their loudest and jostling one another in their degradation.'
Carol
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