It is a price tag, displaying the price ‘ten and six’: 10 shillings and 6 pennies. Many people wonder about the tag on the Mad Hatter’s hat. It is also often suggested that Tenniel made the Mad Hatter resemble the politician Disraeli, but other people argument that he was based on a local furniture dealer called Carter, or on Thomas Randall, an Oxford tailor. Carter was known in the area as the Mad Hatter, partly because he always wore a top hat and because of his eccentric ideas. ‘Mad as a hatter’ probably owes its origin to the fact that hatters actually did go mad, because the mercury they used sometimes gave them mercury poisoning.Ĭarroll may have asked Tenniel to draw the Mad Hatter to resemble Theophilus Carter, a furniture dealer near Oxford. The phrase ‘mad as a hatter’ was common in Carroll’s time. In Tim Burton’s 2010 movie, the Hatter’s name is Tarrant Hightopp. In ‘Through the Looking-Glass’, the Hatter returns in the form of the Anglo-Saxon messenger ‘Hatta’.Īlthough everybody calls him ‘the Mad Hatter’, Lewis Carroll never actually called him that in the story. The Hatter is mentioned in chapter 7 and 11 from the book “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland”. When he is called upon by the Queen, he is very nervous and frightened. He occasionally is very rude and provokes Alice during the tea party. Later he also appears as a witness during the trial. Mercury poisoning at a home day care center – Hillsborough county, Florida, 2015.The Mad Hatter is one of the members of the Mad Tea Party.
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