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- 1699-05 Antique 10" Skookum Doll - Mary Francis Woods
1699-05 Antique 10" Skookum Doll - Mary Francis Woods
c 1915-1920
10"
Rare Mary Francis Woods Native American 10” Doll. Great Indian character Doll.. All Original. Fantastic face. She measures approximately 10”. She has wooden feet. This Native American Indian Woman was handmade by artist Mary Frances Woods. Woods made her Skookum dolls in the late 1910s into the 20s and used crepe paper on their sensitively molded faces which gives a lovely skin-like texture. Then they were surface painted. Really Nice example. Minor wear from age.
About Skookums
A very early and rare example. The earliest dolls tend to be apple headed dolls with pin eyes, but the apple almost always turns black over time. . The body is wood and feet are painted wood. The beads are late 19th to early 20th century.
A Skookum doll was a Native American themed doll, sold as a souvenir item in the early 20th century. Although considered collectible, they are not authentic Native American dolls, as they were designed and created by a white woman, and quickly mass-produced. Mary Dwyer McAboy (1876-1961), who was from Missoula, Montana, learned to carve apple head dolls as a child from her mother. According to an account by McAboy, her mother had sold apple dolls at church socials and sewing circles.
Mary Dwyer had worked as a schoolteacher before marrying Frank E. McAboy in 1909. Her husband died of tuberculosis four years later, in 1913.
Later that year, Mary McAboy began to market apple head dolls dressed in Indian costumes, and achieved rapid commercial success. According to McAboy, her career as a doll maker began when she made an Indian village which she displayed in the window of a grocery store. Vaudeville actress Fritzi Scheff was performing in Missoula at the time, saw the display, and purchased it for "actual money". McAboy duplicated the display, which also sold quickly, and she then began selling increasing numbers of the dolls. She publicized her growing business through western newspapers, and arranged a display at a women's suffrage office in New York City, gaining press coverage there.
She registered the skookum name as a trademark in 1919, as well as the “Bully Good” trademark. Through this time, the dolls were produced as a cottage industry and were individual in nature. As demand grew, she had difficulty processing large numbers of apples, as excessive moisture led to rotting. She consulted with chemists at Montana State University in an attempt to control the problem. But demand grew so rapidly that she moved to mass production techniques within a year, and soon almost all of the doll heads were made out of composition.
The Arrow Novelty Company took over the manufacturing of the dolls in 1920. Composition heads were painted with life-like facial features. They represented Indians of various tribes and were used for educational purposes in schools throughout the United States.
A product that began as women's handicraft had rapidly shifted to factory production with mostly male workers. In 1929, the H. H. Tammen Co. of Denver and Los Angeles took over production. with the distribution in the east by the Arrow Novelty Company in New York City. Starting in the 1940s, the faces were made of plastic. McAboy supervised production of the dolls until she retired in 1952.
One method of determining the production date of the dolls is by studying the footwear. For example, the earliest dolls from around 1913 had moccasins made of leather. By 1918, the mocassins were simulated with suede applied to wood, and painted designs. By 1924, they were molded of composition material, and by the 1950s, the dolls had plastic feet. Production of the dolls ended in the early 1960s.