Share on Facebook

The Story Behind Davy Crockett’s Iconic Coonskin Cap

Dwight Blocker Bowers, a curator from the Division of Culture and the Arts, recently shared the story of Davy Crockett’s coonskin cap. It was on display earlier at the Starring North Carolina! Exhibit at the Smithsonian affiliate museum, the North Carolina Museum of History.

A round button, labelled
Blank Archives/GettyImages

A coonskin cap is made of actual skin of the raccoon, complete with its face and tail. This hat, worn by actor Fess Parker, features a fabric lining and a leather band.

During the 1950s, the coonskin cap became an iconic symbol, popular among boys in both the national and international scene. This mania that seized the US and the UK was inspired by the fur headpiece worn by Davy Crockett, a frontiersman character played by actor Fess Parker in a mini-series with the same name. The show had five parts, all shown on the Disney TV series.