The Dallas Police Department is going back to its Western roots — or at least borrowing from the hat rack. Earlier this week, the agency announced that officers are now allowed to wear cowboy hats while on duty.
In a video shared on Instagram, a black felt hat is proudly plucked from the shelves at Cavender’s, a Texas outfitter known for its boots, belts and western wear. The clip shows officers stepping out of patrol cars wearing their new headgear, looking somewhere between rodeo-ready and traffic stop-bound.
The department says it partnered with Cavender’s to make the hats available to officers, with an approved felt option for winter and straw for summer. Officers can purchase them if they want, but taxpayers aren’t footing the bill.
This may seem like a bid to out-western Fort Worth, which has long leaned into its cowboy identity. Fort Worth’s police department has a long-standing tradition of officers wearing cowboy hats. Their heritage hat program provides cowboy hats to graduates of the academy.
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But in Dallas, cowboy hats are not so out of place. Dallas may be buttoned-up suits and business lunches, but it’s also a city where dressing sharp doesn’t mean dressing without flair. Cowboy boots have long peeked out beneath the hem of courtroom trousers or church slacks. A cowboy hat might not be standard uniform fare, but it’s not totally foreign to our sense of style, either.
This move is part of other uniform changes. Last year, the department began allowing officers to show tattoos at work and have groomed, natural beards. These changes were aimed at improving morale, modernizing the force and helping with recruitment.
Still, Dallas isn’t exactly a frontier town anymore — if it ever truly was. We’re a city of corporate deals, brunch crowds and rooftop bars. Cowboy hats feel a bit like leaning into a stereotype, but maybe that’s part of the charm? Dallas might be shinier than its stockyard cousin to the west, but it’s still Texas.
A cowboy hat might not solve the big challenges facing the department, like the push to reach at least 4,000 officers by 2029, but it’s a fun, distinctly Texan touch. And if it adds a bit of style or character to the job? That’s something we can tip our hats to.