Members of the Sandusky High School Class of 1928 |
The bob cut hairstyle
was popular in the United States in the 1920’s. It was a hairstyle for women
with the hair cut to neck or chin length, all around the head. The public
reaction to bobbed hairstyles varied widely. An Associated Press article featured
in the September 6, 1921 issue of the Sandusky
Register was entitled “Bobbed Hair Argument Gets Serious.” Some employers
banned the new shorter hair styles. The AP article reprinted editorials which
represented opposing points of view on bobbed hair. One editorial stated,
“Bobbed haired girls may not be vapid and silly, we don’t say they are, but you
can’t get around the fact that they look that way. And, naturally, a girl that
appears frivolous is not wanted in business, even though she may be serious
minded.”
Another editorial thought bobbed hair was sensible. “Bobbed
hair is not a foolish fad. It is the most sensible way for business girls to
wear it. They don’t keep looking at the mirror all the time, and it gives them
a chance to type a letter all the way from the ‘replying to you favor’ to the
‘we beg to remain’ without having to fidget around trying to keep stands from
trickling the ears or blowing in the eyes.”
In the picture below, three young ladies are getting bob
haircuts at the McMahon Barber Shop, inside the Hotel Rieger, in 1925.
Visit the Sandusky Library Archives Research Center to view
historical photographs and high school yearbooks, to see the fashions and
hairstyles of past generations in Sandusky and Erie County.
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