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Doll:African American Girl Doll

Lorrie Doll Co.1974

The Strong National Museum of Play

The Strong National Museum of Play
Rochester , United States

For much of the 20th century, doll manufacturers have worked to produce dolls that look and move like infants. In the 1920s, doll designer Grace Storrey Putnam presented the Bye-Lo baby, an incredibly popular doll crafted to look like a three-day-old newborn. In the 1930s, one doll maker developed the Dy-Dee doll, the first of the drink-and-wet dolls. Betsy Wetsy, Tiny Tears, and others followed. With the introduction of dolls made of plastic and vinyl in the 1950s, doll manufacturers perfected baby dolls with a variety of functions including eating, crawling, walking, talking, playing peek-a-boo, and even responding to a child's voice. Baby dolls of all kinds serve a special kind of nurturing play in the pretend worlds of young children.

Details

  • Title: Doll:African American Girl Doll
  • Creator: Lorrie Doll Co.
  • Date Created: 1974
  • Subject Keywords: African American
  • Type: Baby Dolls, Baby Dolls
  • Medium: plastic, vinyl, fabric
  • Object ID: 115.4889
  • Credit Line: Gift of Suzanne Brystal Nielsen in honor of Brent Michael and Crystal Lynn Gramkee.

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