Modern girls may believe that Barbie has the ultimate fashion wardrobe, but the long-ago owner of this 18thc wooden doll in the collection of Colonial Williamsburg would have argued otherwise - and she'd win.
Standing about 16" tall, this wooden doll is a true Georgian beauty, with brown glass eyes, a rosy painted complexion, and a curled hair wig. She has a cone-shaped figure that reflected the fashionable silhouette created for real women by stays. Her shoulders, elbows, legs, and hips are all jointed, which must have made her a costly toy indeed. (For comparison to other dolls of about the same era, see here, here, and here.)
This lady also has an enviable wardrobe that's entirely handsewn, shown here in her own storage drawer. Included are stylish gowns, stays, petticoats, shifts, nightgowns, a cloak, and a wealth of accessories that include caps, shoes, stockings, pockets, and handkerchiefs. Miraculously, only one piece is missing after more than two centuries, a fingerless mitt that has left the survivor without a mate.
While many surviving 18thc dolls (called pandoras) were meant to show the latest fashions in miniature in the shops of mantua-makers, this one was definitely a plaything. She was passed down through the daughters of a single family, and when she arrived in Colonial Williamsburg, she was accompanied by family letters that gave her an exceptional provenance. Most likely her original owner was Mary Anne Wainman (1784-1846), who might have played with the doll at her family's home, Carr Head, in the parish of Kildwick, West Riding, Yorkshire.
Many thanks to Linda Baumgarten, Jan Gilliam, and Christina Westenberger for "opening the drawers" of the collection for me, and for their assistance with this post.
Doll and original clothing, Great Britain, most likely England, c1790. Collection, Colonial Williamsburg. Photographs by Susan Holloway Scott with permission of The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation.
From The Anthenaeum : A Magazine of Literary and Miscellaneous ...., volume 4 John Aiken Longmans, Hurst, Rees, and Orme, 1808. Page 276 Domestic Occurrences (Sept)
ReplyDeleteYorkshire
Married. Walter Skirrow, Esq. of Lincolns Inn London, to Miss Mary Anne Wainman, second daughter of William Wainman, Esq. of Carhead.
Yve - Sure, share away! Just make sure the photo credit with Colonial Williamsburg is included. And thank you. :)
ReplyDeleteAnonymous - Yes, that's the doll's first owner - good sleuthing! I believe the doll was then given to her daughter, and through the family until it was purchased by Colonial Williamsburg.
In Frances Hodgson Burnett's A Little Princess, Sara's father bought her a doll like this when she first moved to London. Remember? I can't recall the doll's name, but I marveled at her complete wardrobe and wanted to have the same for my dolls. That was one of my favorite stories when I was young. Thanks for the reminder...
ReplyDeleteShe's so beautiful, I bet she was well loved.
ReplyDeleteHow extraordinary and marvellous that she is so well kept - I too thought of A Little Princess..fabulous thanks as ever
ReplyDeleteWhat is the figure next to her in the box?
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