-
Bettiscombe
unknown - Enlarge image
Bettiscombe; Miss Pinney's House
- Object:
Dolls' house
- Place of origin:
England, Great Britain (made)
- Date:
ca. 1870 (made)
- Artist/Maker:
unknown (production)
- Materials and Techniques:
Wood
- Credit Line:
Given by Miss S.Pinney
- Museum number:
MISC.14-1988
- Gallery location:
Museum of Childhood, Homes Gallery, case 1
Betty Pinney was born in 1907, the youngest of four girls. She studied art and later on designed wallpapers and textiles for the Edinburgh Weavers and then for Sandersons. She designed book covers, railway posters and also illustrated books. The dolls' house was found by a friend who ran an antique shop and sold to Betty Pinney for £5. The house was made in about 1870.
Her daughter Susanna tells us that her mother decided to recreate her childhood in miniature combining this with a family who had worked abroad for the Empire which gave her greater freedom with the furnishings. She was an accomplished seamstress and made many of the furnishings herself. Other items were given to her by friends or made for her. The house is therefore a portrait of life in a wealthy household from the late 19th to early 20th centuries. It has two unusual features in that it has a roof garden and a lift which can be operated by turning the handle gently.
















































































