Notice the hair parted on the sides and piled on top. A common style for young boys in 1840s. |
President Grant's wife, Julia Dent Grant, once wrote about her early years and commented on children's fashion. "...the children's arms and legs were bare in those days..." (American Victorian Costume in Early Photographs)
Baring the shoulders surprises me. It's amazing to me in a time when there was no central heating and the United States was experiencing what later came to be known as the Little Ice Age.
As I studied photographs, I noticed that this trend quit by the 1860s. No more bare shoulders. Mrs. Grant's comment reinforced that there was a change in fashion for whatever reason. (Was the war responsible? I expect it somehow was.)
Whatever the reason for the change, the bared shoulders in early daguerreotypes connect the image with the 1840s and 1850s. It was a time of innocence before a war ripped apart the United States.
If you are interested in old photograph and fashion, I recommend Priscilla Harris Dalrymple's easy to read book, American Victorian Costume in Early Photographs (published by Dover). I use it as a resource while writing my novels.
She fell in love with an ideal. Too bad the man that she meets is so different.
Jack Dixon knew his mother was right. It was time he married. He'd go along with whatever she writes in her letter to the matchmaker.
Priscilla Pringle fell in love with the man who wrote such a tender letter. Too bad that when she meets the man in Missouri, he is the complete opposite.
She'd leave and return immediately. But what would happen to the orphaned piglet she is bottle feeding?
Will she stay after the piggy is weaned? Is Jack the only one who needs to change to make their marriage work?
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