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Wedding Dress thumbnail 2
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This object consists of 7 parts, some of which may be located elsewhere.

Wedding Dress

1890 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Heavy cream corded silk wedding dress and trained skirt, bodice with accentuated waist and dramatically flared peplum, shirred leg o'mutton sleeves. Embroidered with pearls, pastes and gathered silk lisse (crêpe chiffon). Shoes of white satin embroidered with bronze and crystal, silk stockings.

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watch Victorian fashion history: 1890s Dive into the more surprising side of Victorian fashion history and see some of the crazes from the 1890s.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 7 parts.

  • Wedding Bodice
  • Wedding Skirt
  • Shoe
  • Shoe
  • Stocking
  • Stocking
  • Wedding Train Lining
Materials and techniques
corded silk with pearl and paste bead embroidery, silk crêpe chiffon trimming. Beaded silk shoes
Brief description
Heavy corded silk wedding dress with paste and pearl embroidery
Physical description
Heavy cream corded silk wedding dress and trained skirt, bodice with accentuated waist and dramatically flared peplum, shirred leg o'mutton sleeves. Embroidered with pearls, pastes and gathered silk lisse (crêpe chiffon). Shoes of white satin embroidered with bronze and crystal, silk stockings.
Dimensions
  • Circumference: 50cm (waistband)
  • Circumference: 82cm (Bust)
  • Circumference: 65.5cm (diaphragm)
  • Length: 57.5cm (sleeve length)
  • Circumference: 56cm (skirt waist)
  • Circumference: 210cm (skirt hem circumference)
  • Length: 102cm (skirt length waist to hem)
Production typeHaute couture
Credit line
Given by Major and Mrs Broughton
Object history
Worn by Cara Leland Huttleston Rogers (1867-1939), an American heiress who married Bradford Ferris Duff on November 17 1890. Sadly, Bradford died the following year of a lung ailment. His young widow remarried, on November 12th 1895, to Urban Hanlon Broughton (1857-1929), for which she wore a dress of "changeable pompadour silk" (shot warp-printed silk) trimmed with point lace.

A photograph of Cara in her wedding dress shows that a ruffle of antique lace was originally attached to the bottom of the chiffon overskirt, following the line of the swagged drapery. The wrists and neckline of the bodice may also have had additional lace trimming, although it is difficult to tell for certain. This lace was later removed, perhaps because it was a heirloom.

As Urban H. Broughton died before he could be elevated to a peerage, his and Cara's eldest son Urban H.R. Broughton (1896-1966) became 1st Baron Fairhaven of Lode on 20 March 1929, while Cara became 1st Lady Fairhaven. This barony became extinct on Urban H.R.Broughton's death, but a later barony, Baron Fairhaven of Anglesey Abbey, co. Cambridge, was granted to him in 1961, with a remainder to his brother, Henry (1900-1973), to enable this title to continue after his death without male heirs.

This forms part of a large donation of late 19th and early 20th century garments and accessories (with a few historical textiles) donated to the Museum in 1972 by Cara's grandson and Henry's son, Major Ailwyn Broughton and his wife, a year before Ailwyn became Lord Fairhaven following his father's death.
Collection
Accession number
T.276,A-F-1972

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Record createdSeptember 11, 2008
Record URL
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