Dr. Ralph Bunche and Eleanor Roosevelt Observe The First True Colored Doll - Jet Magazine, November 8, 1951
Originally uploaded by vieilles_annonces
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I am a Black-doll enthusiast, doll historian, freelance writer, author of The Definitive Guide to Collecting Black Dolls; Black Dolls: A Comprehensive Guide to Celebrating, Collecting, and Experiencing the Passion; and The Doll Blogs: When Dolls Speak, I Listen.
I thought when I first saw this that it might have been the first black doll made by a black company but I have a book on black collectable black items that has dolls a lot older that this one. Most of them were made by whites too. What is it about this doll that makes this doll the first?
ReplyDeleteThe Saralee doll is described in doll reference literature and in the original promotional advertising as the first anthropologically correct black doll. It was fashioned after the likeness of real black children whose images were studied to achieve the doll's ethnically correct features.
ReplyDeletePrior to this doll's creation, American-made black dolls typically were just brown versions of white dolls. Little thought went into creating dolls that looked like black children. Of course this trend continued, but Saralee set a precedent in America that black children need dolls that mirror their facial features as well as their complexion.
Copy and paste the following URL into your browser to read more about the doll. (Scroll down to Saralee Doll Added to Museum.) http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/library/historymonth.html
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