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Child's Shorts
ca. 1963 (manufactured)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Pair of shorts with braces of brown and white checked polycotton, lined with white. The shorts have self straps which button into tape loops inside the waist front. The waist back is elasticated and the shorts also fasten with a button-through placket at each side.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Polycotton |
Brief description | Brown and white poly-cotton shorts made in Britain by Golliwog in about 1963 |
Physical description | Pair of shorts with braces of brown and white checked polycotton, lined with white. The shorts have self straps which button into tape loops inside the waist front. The waist back is elasticated and the shorts also fasten with a button-through placket at each side. |
Dimensions |
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Production type | Mass produced |
Object history | Golliwog is the brand name for these shorts. The original golly was a central character in a series of books published between 1895 and 1909. Bertha Upton (1849–1912) wrote the books and her daughter, Florence Kate Upton (1873–1922), illustrated them. They based the character ‘Golliwogg’ (as it was originally spelled) on a doll Florence owned as a child growing up in 1880s America. The appearance and clothing of the doll (see B.493-1997) is based on the ‘blackface minstrel’ figure, a 19th-century racial caricature of African Americans. Blackface minstrel shows were performed by white actors and singers, who parodied African Americans by darkening their skins with shoe polish or burnt cork. These portrayals perpetuated many negative stereotypes and were steeped in racism. The shows originated in the USA, with the first widely known blackface character, ‘Jim Crow’, appearing around 1830. Soon after it became popular in the UK, which developed its own blackface traditions. Florence moved to the UK in the 1890s, where the Uptons’ books became very popular. Their Golliwogg character was not copyrighted, allowing multiple representations of the golly to enter the public domain. The character featured in British toys, games, textiles, ceramics and children’s books, and was used as a mascot by the food manufacturer, Robertson’s, from about 1910. From the 1980s the character’s popularity began to wane as campaigners fought against the racist stereotypes that the golly represented. Robertson’s continued to promote the figure as part of a British ‘national tradition’ until 2001, when they stopped using the golly in their branding. |
Production | Golliwog brand name |
Collection | |
Accession number | MISC.810-1988 |
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Record created | July 1, 2009 |
Record URL |
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