Black and White versions of Effanbee's 1968 Twinkie are on display at the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C. |
My quest to find dolls like the last known dolls used in Drs. Kenneth and Mamie Clark's Dolls Test began in late 2018. It was around that time that I first saw the above online images of the dolls, which are now on display at the National Museum of African American History and Culture. The site only identifies them as being made by Effanbee in 1968. Because I knew the Clarks began conducting their Dolls Test during the late 1940s to study the psychological effects of segregation on African American children, I surmised that these were one of the last pair of dolls used in the test and in their psychology practice at the Northside Center for Child Development in Harlem New York.
According to Dr. Kenneth Clark's eulogy, the first dolls used in the Dolls Test were purchased from Woolworth's on 125th Street in Harlem for 50 cents. They were probably made of composition. The last known dolls the doctors used, made by Effanbee, are made of vinyl.
Snowball (a.k.a.) Black Grumpy by Effanbee 1913 |
Because Effanbee has made a variety of dolls throughout the years, with many having similar facial features and/or using the same head sculpts, some offered optionally as White or Black, and some issued only in White versions, I had to first determine which 1968 Effanbee doll made in both Black and White versions was the last doll used by the Clarks in their doll study. The doll was eventually identified as Twinkie as noted in the first image of this post. The details of my research are included in my blog post, Twinkie or My Fair Baby? A link to the post is included under the Related Links section of this post.
With the actual doll and the 16-inch size identified, I searched for and saved several different search combinations on eBay. Doing this would prompt eBay to notify me when there were new listings that contained keywords from my saved searches. Some of the saved searches included "black doll Effanbee"; "1968 doll Effanbee"; "1968 black doll"; and "Effanbee Twinkie" to name a few.
16-inch Twinkie from 1968 by Effanbee |
I knew it would be easier to find the White version first and that is what happened. In April 2019, this 16-inch all-vinyl doll arrived wearing a hand-knit dress, bonnet, diaper, and booties as illustrated above. The doll's head marks are as shown below:
14
EFFANBEE
19©68
2500
Her back is marked:
EFFANBEE
19©68
2808
The search continued for her counterpart.
Black Twinkie from 1964 arrived in August 2019. Even though this version was not made in the same year and is not the same height as the 1968 Dolls Test dolls, I purchased 1964 Twinkie because of the very low beginning bid. Because I was still playing with dolls in 1964, this version of Twinkie and the doll that traveled with her (Vogue's Baby Dear) are dolls I could have owned as a child had they been available for my mother to purchase. For nostalgic reasons, I bid and won the auction as the only bidder. The search for the 1968 Black version continued.
1968 Black Twinkie was finally found wearing a brown floral-print dress with matching bonnet. Her head and back markings are identical to the White doll's marks. |
In October of 2019, the long-sought-after 16-inch Black version of Effanbee's Twinkie from 1968 was offered in an auction at an incredibly low price. I had a bidding competitor or two who also wanted the doll, but I was the determined high bidder winning the auction at still a very low price. That win, of course, was followed by a long sigh of relief.
The 1968 Twinkie dolls wear their arrival clothing. |
With both dolls having been found, the next step was to remove and store their clothing and dress them in white diapers as the Clarks had done with their dolls. An unused pre-folded cloth diaper was used to make two doll-size diapers.
I used the White doll's knit diaper as a pattern to cut out two diapers that would fit the dolls. The cut edges were stitched to prevent fraying. I also used clear nail polish on the cut edges for reinforcement. The diapers are pinned on with medium-size safety pins as shown next.
16-inch all-vinyl Black and White versions of Effanbee's 1968 Twinkie |
One of the Clarks' first experiments using dolls involved 253 African American boys and girls ages three to seven, who resided in northern and southern regions of the United States. The children had brown complexions that varied from light, medium, to dark. They were instructed by the experimenter to do as shown in the image below.
Results showed the majority of children chose the White doll
when performing requests 1, 2, and 4. The
majority chose the Black doll for request 3 (give me the doll that looks
bad). Test results proved that African
American children felt racially inferior to White children.
The Clarks continued their studies on racial bias at their Harlem center through the 1970s by which time all U. S. public schools had been desegregated. Of note, Dr. Kenneth and Mamie Clark became the first and second African Americans to graduate with a Ph.D. in Psychology from Columbia University. Dr. Kenneth Clark graduated first. Also of note, in 1966, Dr. Kenneth Clark became the first African American president of the American Psychology Association.
In this last photo, Effanbee's 15-inch Twinkie from 1964 poses with the 16-inch versions from 1968. |
Related Links
Dr. Kenneth Clark's Eulogy
Twinkie or My Fair Baby
Doll Study 1947 Racial Identification and Preference
Video: Brown v. Board of Education Doll Test
Video: Dr. Kenneth Clark speaks in a 1988 interview
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There are countless items to collect and write about. Black dolls chose me.
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There are countless items to collect and write about. Black dolls chose me.
Thank you for following, commenting, and sharing using the share button below.
Check out what I am selling here.
Check out my eBay listings here.
Please follow my sister blog Ebony-Essence of Dolls in Black.
Donate here to support this blog. Thank you!
Thanks for another instructive post. Thanks for your dedication. I am glad you were able to get the two dolls.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome. It's always nice to complete a search for a sought-after doll. It's almost like winning the lottery. Almost.
DeleteThank you for sharing my joy.
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Thank you so much, Linda!
ReplyDeletedbg
I have one of the 1968 black dolls.
ReplyDeleteThat is wonderful! Which one do you have, Anonymous?
ReplyDelete