Boy's Suit
PeriodCirca 1900
Place MadeU.S.A.
MediumCorded cotton, muslin, mother of pearl buttons
Dimensions19 in. (48.3 cm)
ClassificationsCostume, Children's
Credit LineGift of Paul Hart, 2001
Object number2001.17.1
DescriptionA little boy's three-piece sailor style suit, consisting of a pleated skirt with attached underbodice, jacket, and dickey-style collar, all in sturdy white corded cotton. The pleated skirt is attached at the waist to a plain muslin sleeveless round-necked underbodice with a rear button closure. The suit jacket is constructed with a shawl collar extending over the shoulders to a square bib back trimmed with cotton banding and two appliqued five-pointed stars. The jacket closes in the front with four mother-of-pearl buttons. The jacket's bottom edge originally had wide elastic inserted in a casing to create fullness. The jacket's full sleeves are gathered and pleated to cuffed wristbands with two-button closures. A dickey, consisting of a front bib attached to a standing neckband with a rear button fastening, tucks into the jacket front. The dickey's bib front sports a machine-embroidered five-pointed star inside a foliate wreath worked at the center.Curatorial RemarksUntil the second decade of the 1920s, small boys normally were dressed in skirts. This charming sailor style suit would have been worn by a boy of about four to five years old. The suit is displayed on a store mannequin of about 1900, itself a rare survivor, from a Monmouth County dry goods store. The mannequin retains its original turned brass finial as well as its cast iron boots, complete with molded buttons up the sides, providing a sturdy base.
Collections
Lillie Brown Anderson
George Henry Durrie
Charles Fenderich