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Doll
Miss Flora Copper suffrage doll, early 1900s. Maker unknown. She is wearing a hat, green-blue jacket and skirt, holding a flag VOTES FOR WOMEN and carrying a handbag. This doll may have been made to poke fun at militant suffragettes. Perhaps the name is a pun (‘floor a copper’).
Grey-brown felt hat with green velvet ribbon hat band, yellow wool hair (S-spun wool secured with black thread), a pink face (tabby-woven cotton) with seam down centre front and details drawn on in black ink, a mouth stitched with orange wool, wire glasses, white blouse with printed blue polka dots and necktie, starched stiff white tall collar, white gloves (no articulated fingers, three 'seams' drawn onto back in black ink), brown boots (glazed tabby cotton), brown and teal blue herringbone twill jacket and skirt and black wool twill stockings and light-brown tabby woven pantaloons. Dress and face are all machine stitched. The blouse is only applied where it can be seen - i.e. where the jacket opens at the centre front, it can be seen that the blouse is stitched to a padded torso covered in green cotton fabric.
Accessories: A light-brown handbag with maroon wool rope handle (2-ply, Z twist) with her name in black ink ('MISS FLORA COPPER') is stitched to her waist. Handbag is made from cardboard covered in glazed brown plain-weave cotton. In her right hand she is holding a flag inscribed with 'VOTES FOR WOMEN' in black ink. The flag consists of an rectangular piece of white glazed tabby cotton with raw edges which has been wrapped around, and stitched, to a small wooden stick. The stick has been stitch-secured to the doll's hand.