10/6 Mad Hatter Day! (2024)

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The Mad Hatter has always been a beloved character, and a bit of a cultural icon. Heoccupies just a small amount of the Alice stories, but he isone of Lewis Carroll’s most popular inventions. In fact, he is so popular, we even have a day to celebrate him! Today, October 6, is National Mad Hatter Day.

Why October 6th? Well, if you remember the original Alice illustrations by Sir John Tennial, you might know that there is a slip of paper on the Hatter’s hat that reads: “In this style, 10/6.”

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This means the Hatter has an order to make a hat in exactly that style, and it will cost ten shillings and sixpence. In U.S. date representation, the month comes first and then the day, so 10/6 means October 6th.

Mad Hatter Day was founded in 1986 by a group of computer programmers in Boulder, Colorado who noticed the “date” on the Hatter’s hat. They thought it would be a good idea to make this a national holiday, and petitioned for it. Although it is not official, Mad Hatter Day is recognized by hat enthusiasts, time travelers, March Hares, and Alice fans worldwide.

But where did the Hatter come from? Was he really mad? And what exactly was his big gripe with Time?

Madness and Mercury

Lewis Carroll did not invent the idea of an insane hat maker solely on his own.The phrase “mad as a hatter” was part of popular jargon as early as 1837, some thirty years before the Alice stories were published. Many real life hatters were known to exhibit erratic, flamboyant behavior, talk to themselves and have mood swings.

What made the Mad Hatters mad?

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In the 18th and 19th centuries, hat makers typically used mercury nitrate as part of the process for curing felt. Exposure to mercury resulted in some weird behavior. Symptoms of mercury poisoning include anxiety, muscle weakness, memory loss, hearing and vision problems, slurred speech, drooling, and diarrhea. Top hats, so popular during the Victorian era, used a great deal of cured felt, so maybe there was a “rise” in madness during the time Carroll wrote Alice. Hence “mad as a hatter” became a popular phrase.

Luckily, use of mercury was eventually banned from the hatting industry. In1898, laws were passed in Europe that protected hat makers from the risk of exposure. By the 20thcentury, mercury poisoning among British hat makers had become a rarity. The United States, however, did not ban mercury until 1941, when thePublic Health Service deemed it hazardous and finally prohibited its use.

Insane Inventions

Ironically, Carroll is said to have based his Hatter not on a real hat maker, but on a furniture dealer named Theophilus Carter, who was known locally as the Mad Hatter. Carter always wore a top hat. (But apparently not in this picture.)

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Carter was an eccentric with some far out ideas, and he produced some wacky inventions.One such invention was the “Alarm Clock Bed”. This contraption contained a mattress that would tip the sleeper out of bed and into a tub of cold water to wake them up. According to the Virtual Victorian website: “At the appointed hour of alarm, after the sound of ringing bells to wake the ‘modern’ sleeper, an automated mattress tipped and flung the poor wretch from his bed to a bath of cold water – supposedly refreshed and restored for the brand new day ahead.”

I am not making this up! The bed was actually featured as an attraction in Prince Albert’s Crystal Palace Exhibition, which took place in Hyde Park in 1851. We don’t have a real picture of this notorious thing, but it was thought to look something like this:

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The ladder on the bottom would slide the victim into the refreshing tub of “seaside” cold water below. Yeah, I can see why this invention didn’t take off…

Time Waits For No One

Or does it?

Perhaps it is significant that Carter’s invention involved a clock. Both Lewis Carroll and his Hatter were obsessed with time. As you may recall, at the Mad Tea Party, it was always six o’clock, tea time.

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The time never changed, and this was because the Hatter was being punished. It all started at a concert where the Hatter was appointed to sing for the Queen. Halfway through the song, the Queen yelled that the Hatter was “murdering the time!”

As a result, Time would not cooperate with the Hatter.“And ever after that,” says the Hatter, “he won’t do a thing I ask. It’s always six o’clock now.” (Time, according to the Hatter, is actually a “he” not an “it”.)

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At the Tea Party, time stands still. They must keep full table settings all around, as they move from place to place to get clean cups — because time never changes.

Interestingly, Albert Einstein himself held a point of view similar to the Mad Hatter’s!

Einstein was obsessed with, and distressed by, the conundrum of the present moment, or the “Now”. According to Einstein,“the experience of the Now means something special for man, something essentially different from the past and the future, but this difference does not, and cannot occur within physics.”

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Think about it. It is always Now. You are reading these words Now, but I am also writing these words Now. It is always Now. You can’t do anything tomorrow, or yesterday. You can plan or recall, but you cannot act. And what you actually do, you DO RIGHT NOW. But Einstein tells us the experience of the Now cannot be grasped by science nor explained mathematically! Perhaps the Hatter was right. It was always six o’clock. Because it is always now. 🙂

In his sequel Through the Looking Glass, Carroll puts the Hatter in another unique time experience. Hatta (aka Hatter, in the version also the King’s messenger) is in jail for a crime he has not yet committed. The Queen explains to Alice: “He’s in prison now, being punished, and the trial does not even begin until Wednesday, and of course, the crime comes last of all.”

Alice wonders what will happen if he never commits the crime.

Similarly, the Queen justifies not serving jam. “The rule is jam yesterday, and jam tomorrow, but never jam today.” So they just never have jam. Which is a shame. They should have it NOW.

Crazy, right? But in his bookRelativity (1952) Einstein wrote: “Since there exists in this four dimensional structure [space-time] no longer any sections which represent “now” objectively, the concepts of happening and becoming are indeed not completely suspended, but yet complicated. It appears therefore more natural to think of physical reality as a four dimensional existence, instead of, as hitherto, the evolution of a three dimensional existence.”

Einstein believed in an undivided solid reality, with no true division between past, present and future. When Einstein’s dearest friend Michele Besso died, Einstein wrote a letter of consolation to Besso’s family, summing up his thoughts:

“Now he has departed from this strange world a little ahead of me. That means nothing. For us physicists, the distinction between past, present, and future only has the meaning of an illusion.”

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Lewis Carroll was an Oxford mathematician. I have argued before that he was ahead of his time. Perhaps Carroll was toying with the concept of non-linear time years before Einstein was even born! But then again, it is all in the NOW, so, from that perspective, one CANNOT BE “ahead of one’s time.”

This is clearly a holiday worth celebrating! To make the most of Mad Hatter Day, you might want to:

Drink tea!

Wear hats!

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Re-read the Alice stories.

Watch some Alice movies.

Ponder Einstein and time. Do it NOW 🙂 No time like the present. Or wait a minute… (CAN we wait a minute??) See what I did there?

Have a great Mad Hatter’s Day!

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10/6 Mad Hatter Day! (2024)

FAQs

What does the Mad Hatter's card mean? ›

A: The card is a price tag in 'old' English money: pounds, shillings and pennies, which was then written as l/s/d. Lewis Carroll has explained the meaning of the tag in his 'Nursery Alice': The Hatter used to carry about hats to sell: and even the one that he's got on his head is meant to be sold.

What are Hatters last words to Alice? ›

At the end of his dance, the Hatter grabs Alice and kisses her passionately. Before she leaves, He abruptly kisses her one last time and whispers "Fairfarren, Alice.".

What do you do on Mad Hatter Day? ›

Wear a silly hat

Get ditzy and wear a funny hat. It can be a Cat in the Hat type hat, an over-sized wood cap like Rerun's, or fall back to the classic top hat. When people raise eyebrows wondering what you're doing, invite them to your tea party and share the story of the Mad Hatter. We all need some silly right now.

What was the Mad Hatter riddle? ›

"Why is a raven like a writing desk?" is a riddle proposed by the Mad Hatter during a tea party in Lewis Carroll's classic 1865 novel, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Alice was unable to answer the riddle because there was no answer. The Mad Hatter admitted as much.

What does the 10 6 mean in Alice in Wonderland Mad Hatter? ›

English illustrator John enniel depicted Hatter wearing a hat with 10/6 written on it. The 10/6 refers to the cost of a hat — 10 shillings and 6 pence, and later became the date and month to celebrate Mad Hatter Day. The idiom “mad as a hatter” was around long before Carroll started writing.

Was the Hatter in love with Alice? ›

-When asked about rumors that there was a relationship plotline between Alice and the Mad Hatter, Burton replied with a very emphatic "No!"

Why is it always 6 o'clock at the Mad Hatter's tea party? ›

Later the Hatter's remark is clarified. He and his friend Time have quarreled since the great concert held by the Queen of Hearts, and Time won't move and so it is always six o'clock. His watch stays the same time, which means it is of no use to tell what o'clock it is.

Why is Mad Hatter Day celebrated? ›

Celebrated annually on October 6, Mad Hatter Day celebrates the Hatter, a key character in Lewis Carol's Alice in Wonderland. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland engraving by John Tenniel (United Kingdom, 1872).

What happens at the Mad Hatter's tea party? ›

What's included? The Mad Hatter's (Gin &) Tea Party offers guests a chance to take a trip down the rabbit hole into an immersive, 1.5 hour-long experience hosted by the Hatter himself and some of his equally mad friends. Enjoy 3 crazy craft co*cktails in this mad tea party all while wearing a Mad Hatter hat.

What is the answer to the riddle in Alice in Wonderland? ›

When reading this letter, many readers, automatically correct 'nevar' to 'never. ' However, this is a significant part of the answer, as 'nevar' is 'raven' backwards! Ultimately, as is the frustrating nature of nonsense, Dodgson's answer is exactly as stated above: there is no answer.

Is the Mad Hatter in love with his sister? ›

Growing obsessed with the book, he began to see his own sister as the real-life incarnation of Alice and developed a sickening love for her.

What was the first question the Hatter asked Alice? ›

Ans- The first question the Hatter asked Alice was that her hair wanted cutting. Then he asked her a riddle why was a raven like a writing-desk. 4.

What was Mad Hatter's famous line? ›

If I had a world of my own, everything would be nonsense. Nothing would be what it is, because everything would be what it isn't. And contrary wise, what is, it wouldn't be.

What is the Mad Hatters real name? ›

Tarrant Hightopp, also known as The Mad Hatter, is a fictional character in the 2010 film Alice in Wonderland and its 2016 sequel Alice Through the Looking Glass, based upon the original character from Lewis Carroll's Alice novels.

What language does the Mad Hatter speak? ›

When he becomes upset his eyes change from green to a golden yellow and he begins speaking in a noticeable Scottish brogue.

What does Alice changing size symbolize? ›

In Lewis Carroll's The Adventures of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Alice's changing of size symbolizes her growth and maturity as a child. Throughout the story, she is either too big or too little for what she is trying to do.

Is the Mad Hatter good or evil? ›

No, the Mad Hatter is not a villain in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. He is an ultimately benign individual, despite his odd behavior. Like Wonderland's other inhabitants, he wishes to go about his day without incurring the wrath of the Queen of Hearts, the temperamental ruler of Wonderland.

Who is the Mad Hatter's wife? ›

Priscilla is the wife of the Mad Hatter from the story Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.

Why did the Mad Hatter go crazy? ›

Hatters or hat-makers commonly exhibited slurred speech, tremors, irritability, shyness, depression, and other neurological symptoms; hence the expression “mad as a hatter.” The symptoms were associated with chronic occupational exposure to mercury.

What is Mad Hatter obsessed with? ›

There, he realized that he was driven mad with poisons from his own industry, just as hatters were, and that he was himself now “mad as a hatter!” He became obsessed with hats, which he used as a tool for revenge.

What is the moral of the lesson Mad Tea Party? ›

Perhaps the foremost lesson to be learned from the Mad Tea Party concerns confrontation. Human interaction, particularly in a workshop environment, is dependent on a mutual openness and respect from all parties involved.

What does 7 in the evening mean? ›

In the 12-hour format, time before noon is prefixed with "am" and that after noon, with "pm". Thus, 7 o'clock in the evening is read as 07:00 pm in the 12-hour format. Suggest Corrections. 0. Similar questions.

What does the white rabbit in Alice in Wonderland symbolize? ›

Following the white rabbit means following an unlikely clue and finding yourself in the middle of an extraordinary situation. This situation often challenges your beliefs and changes your life. The White Rabbit is so curious, so strange, that Alice cannot help but to follow him.

Why does Alice finally get up and leave the tea party? ›

'. The Hatter reveals that they have tea all day because Time has punished him by eternally standing still at 6 pm (tea time). Alice becomes insulted and tired of being bombarded with riddles and she leaves claiming that it was the stupidest tea party that she had ever been to.

What was asked at the tea party? ›

The Mad Hatter's Riddle

During the Mad Tea Party, The Mad Hatter asks Alice the riddle: "why is a raven like a writing desk?" She puzzles over this for some time, only to be told by the Hatter that the riddle has no answer. Lewis Carroll later made up an answer to it, even though he never originally intended to.

Why is did the Mad Hatters hair turn white? ›

And when they were exposed to mercury many years it really started affecting them: skin began to pale down, nails began to gain some "yellowish" color, hair started to become fuzzy. Even pupils could become dilated. Hatters' skin was affected by mercury poisoning, but the colors were also mood colors.

What are the Mad Hatter's powers? ›

While the Mad Hatter has no inherent superpowers, he is a brilliant 'neurotechnician' with considerable knowledge on how to dominate and control the human mind, either through hypnosis or direct technological means.

What does Cheshire Cat symbolize? ›

The Cheshire Cat is sometimes interpreted as a guiding spirit for Alice, as it is he who directs her toward the March Hare's house and the mad tea party, which eventually leads her to her final destination, the garden.

What does we're all mad here mean? ›

When you hear this quote, it's usually in celebration of the total insanity that is human existence. Some folks say it in exasperation. Some folks say it in resignation. But in any case, it's an acknowledgment of this crazy thing we call life.

Why were they called the Mad Hatter's? ›

Colloquially used to describe an eccentric person, “mad as a hatter” is based on a problem that arose in the 1800s when hat companies used lead in the hat-making process. The lead got into their systems and they went insane, hence the term “mad as a hatter”.

Is the Mad Hatter male or female? ›

Hatter (Alice's Adventures in Wonderland)
The (Mad) Hatter
AliasHatter Mad Hatter
SpeciesHuman
GenderMale
OccupationMessenger, hatter
8 more rows

Is the Mad Hatter a boy or girl? ›

The Mad Hatter
Illustration by Sir James Tenniel
❖ General Information ❖
SpeciesHuman
GenderMale
12 more rows

What is the Cheshire Cat's famous line? ›

In Carroll's altered reality, the conversation between the disoriented Alice and the mysterious Cheshire Cat actually went like this: "Would you tell me, please, which way I ought to go from here?" "That depends a good deal on where you want to get to," said the Cat.

Why is Kitty Cheshire a rebel? ›

Kitty Cheshire is a Rebel because she doesn't want to follow the rules of destiny. However, it is seen that Kitty is friends with some Royals (Lizzie Hearts, duch*ess Swan, Blondie Lockes, Apple White), but likes to cause chaos and trouble, just like her mother, the Cheshire Cat.

What is the moral of Alice in Wonderland? ›

While Alice's adventure might seem mad on the surface, its main goal is answering the Caterpillar's question and figuring out the greatest puzzle of all – "who in the world am I?". Life can also seem mad but by discovering who we are, and accepting ourselves, assures a much smoother ride through our own journey.

What does the White Rabbit in Alice in Wonderland symbolize? ›

Following the white rabbit means following an unlikely clue and finding yourself in the middle of an extraordinary situation. This situation often challenges your beliefs and changes your life. The White Rabbit is so curious, so strange, that Alice cannot help but to follow him.

What does a mad mean in slang? ›

Extremely foolish or unwise; irrational; imprudent. (colloquial, usually with for or about) Extremely enthusiastic about; crazy about; infatuated with; overcome with desire for.

What does Alice and Wonderland symbolize? ›

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland represents the child's struggle to survive in the confusing world of adults. To understand our adult world, Alice has to overcome the open-mindedness that is characteristic for children. Apparently, adults need rules to live by.

Why did they put mercury in hats? ›

Mercury was a key ingredient in the art of felt hat making as it could toughen animal fur fibers, allowing them to matt together more robustly for a firmer hat. Felt hat makers would use mercury nitrate – Hg(NO?)? – for the process, known as secretage or carroting, and it was used in this way for around a century.

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