Wealthy Boy and Girl (Pair) from a Set of 13 Door of Hope Mission Dolls
1919-1929
Scroll
Wealthy Boy and Girl (Pair) from a Set of 13 Door of Hope Mission Dolls
1919-1929
Physical Qualities
Wood, silk, a-boy: 24 cm. (9 7/16 in.) H
b-girl: 22 cm. (8 11/16 in.) H
Credit Line
Gift of Mrs. Alfred R.L. Dohme
Object Number
1952.130.85
The ‘Door of Hope’ Christian mission was started in 1901 in Shanghai, China, to teach girls and women a trade so they could support themselves. The ‘Door of Hope’ dolls have wood heads and hands created by local wood carvers hired by the mission; the difference in the carvers’ skill can be seen. The dolls were assembled and dressed by the young women after they were taught the necessary skills. Pearl S. Buck, later a famous author who wrote extensively about life in China, taught embroidery and knitting at the mission when she was 17 years old.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by gift 1952; Mrs. Alfred R. L. Dohme, Baltimore; possibly by purchase from Elsie Clark Krug, Baltimore
Caroline Goodfellow, "The Ultimate Doll Book", London/NY/Stuttgart: Dorling Kindersley, 1993, p. 134.
"China's Door of Hope Mission Dolls," May 1, 2007, https://dollsmagazine.com/chinas-door-of-hope-mission-dolls/
"China's Door of Hope Mission Dolls," May 1, 2007, https://dollsmagazine.com/chinas-door-of-hope-mission-dolls/
