"The Straw Hat Riot - The day men were beaten for wearing the wrong hat" recounts one of the most bizarre episodes of mass violence in New York City history. In 1922, there was an unwritten social rule: You must stop wearing straw hats on September 15th. Anyone wearing one after that date was considered socially unacceptable. Historian James Pike details how this fashion faux pas escalated into anarchy. Groups of teenagers roamed the streets of Manhattan, snatching straw hats off men's heads and stomping on them. The pranks turned violent when men defended their hats, leading to a city-wide riot involving thousands of people, docking workers, and police batons. "The Straw Hat Riot" is a study in the danger of conformity. It illustrates how arbitrary social norms can trigger primal tribal violence, transforming a clothing choice into a justification for assault. It is a funny yet frightening look at the fragility of civilized behavior.
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