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Linen Head Dolls: Both Dolls and Textiles





Antique Izannah Walker dolls and Linen Head 

Mystery Dolls in My Collection


Questions regarding dolls in this article can be sent to northdixie@gmail.com and I will forward to the author of the article. 

America came late into commercial doll making.  The great European porcelain factories already dominated the world market and Papier mache’ doll making had a long head start in Europe also.   The first commercial attempts at doll making in the United States included fabric, gutta percha, rawhide and rubber.   Closely following were the papier mache doll heads of Philadelphia including the work of German immigrant Ludwig  Greiner and his large family.  Greiner may have been making his great American dolls as early as the 1840’s as  Izannah Walker is thought to have done.  Fine jointed wooden dolls were factory made in Vermont contrasting with the early hand carved European woodens.



With a life long interest in both Textiles and Antique Dolls, It is natural that my favorite dolls are the dolls that are textiles themselves. Many simple flat faced dolls made one at a time are completely charming, but the dolls that have interested me most right from the start have been those with faces molded of stiffened fabric.  I have collected, bought, sold, repaired, and above all studied and appreciated antique dolls for more than half a century. Only now do I have a small group of the early ones with molded cloth heads.  They are sought after by an avid though small group of collectors and not readily found or afforded by me.

The earliest American ones I know of are the so called linen head dolls, by a still unknown maker, and the dolls of Izannah Walker.  My little group now numbers three linen head dolls, and two Walker dolls.  Many many other doll makers overlapped and or followed these:   Weigand, Hawkins, Chase and more.  My own collecting interest cuts off at 1900. 


The doll making process of Izannah Walker has been well researched and documented. She left us a detailed patent.  The Walker dolls were pressed in a die.  She used more than one layer and stiffened the masks with paste.

The linen heads I believe were made over imported German China doll heads.   China heads were the obvious models for Hawkins, Darrow, Weigand and a few of the I R Comb rubber dolls.  So using the abundant china heads as a basis for molding was common practice. 




I think the Linen was wet with a stiffening agent and shaped over china doll heads of the 1850 to 1860 time frame.  A front and back of the head were made in this way and then joined at the sides.  A wire was used at the base of the shoulder heads to help hold their shape. The resulting heads were painted with oil paints. I have seen only two kinds of bodies so far. This tells me that whole dolls were sold not heads to be attached to homemade bodies.  The three examples that I have are a scant 20 inches, 22 inches and 24 inches tall.  So in height they are similar to their sturdier cousins the Walker dolls.

 The years of production would have been short, as by 1860 these were supplanted by more durable dolls like the Greiner paper mache's. The linen heads would always have had a hard time competing with the large numbers of imported dolls.  So given their fragility, not many have survived to be enjoyed by collectors today.


Several different China head styles were used, including the Long curl doll called Lydia and several so called covered wagon hair styles.  I have seen one of them dressed as a man doll. He was sold on Ebay in 2012 in spite of a completely crushed head someone had tried to sew back together.  They are of course very fragile and easily dented or damaged.  The linen head dolls seem to have originated in New England as that is where most are found.

A few of the dolls had the black glass eyes of the period. The ones with the painted eyes are worth a bit of study.  These eyes are very black, and the tiny lashes slant inward toward the nose not outward as on humans and most other dolls.  I have seen these inward slanting eyelashes on a gutta percha doll from the Maureen Popp collection and I feel these dolls were painted by the same hand.  That rare gutta percha doll can be seen in the auction catalog of Maureen Popp’s dolls.  I have held it in my hand and examined it.    Some early Rubber dolls also have weird looking black eyes a bit similar.


I keep a scrapbook of these dolls and catalog pictures of all that I come across, and so far have seen about 26 of them.   In contrast there are at least 250 publicly known Izannah Walker dolls. More of each type are sure to be sleeping quietly out of sight waiting to be found again, or kept quietly in private collections.







Once I catalogued some 135 of the Walker dolls on my computer with a bit of information about each as I found it, and then suffered a computer disaster and lost the entire work of literally months!  I have tried half heartedly a few times, but never approached a good recovery of the lost data.  You may believe my scrapbook of the linen head dolls is on paper!  I would love to hear about more of these Mystery dolls with or without pictures if any of the readers here know of such in museums or have them in their own collections.    I also welcome any speculations you might have as to the maker, when and who and where.  There is scant similarity to me between these early dolls and the Hawkins dolls and I would doubt they are one and the same.  The fascinating story of dolls that Mrs. Johl wrote about still leads me on.   Edyth O’Neill

To see more about the clothing on this last doll pictured, see my blog at http://edythoneill.blogspot.com/    



Building a Collection Part One:
Buying and Selling Antique Dolls

Edyth O'Neill wrote a fantastic article called "Collecting Antique Dolls in the 1950's".  Edyth's blog is full of good posts like this so please be sure to visit Edyth's blog.

Sandra Fayle of Faraway Antiques
Edyth's article got me thinking about the relationship between selling and collecting dolls. I'm in an antique doll study group where many of the members are also doll dealers. So I asked the question, 

"Which came first, collecting or selling?" 

Many wonderful stories were shared in answer to the question! So I thought it would be fun to highlight some sellers who shared. Maida Today or myself are not recompensed in any way from Featured sellers on this blog. I just think it is fun to do! So I will feature three doll dealers today from some collector/dealers who answered the question to kick off a continuing series on collector-dealers on the web. 

Sandra Fayle of Faraway Antiques

Sandra Fayle of Faraway Antiques wrote a heartwarming story of searching for a special doll for her mother.  This story will tug your heartstrings and is well worth reading at Sandra's blog.  Sandra to realize other people are searching for antique and vintage dolls, and as a result she became a doll dealer.







Lorrie Dove of 
Antique Doll Treasures





Lorrie Dove of Antique Doll Treasures is an enthusiastic student of antique dolls and is a generous person in helping others learn. Lorrie shared pictures of her Columbian Doll here on Maida. Lorrie says, " I started selling out of necessity! Dolls were living in EVERY ROOM of my house! I had read and read doll books, bought and bought dolls, and loved and loved all my dolls for years. Then came the time when I realized I simply had TOO many dolls!"






 Kathy Turner of Virtu Doll



Kathy Turner of Virtu Dolls  became a dealer in order to finance her collection. She purchases antique and vintage dolls and jewelry at auction to sell so that she can buy choice and unique dolls for her collection. More than once Kathy has graciously shared images of special dolls here on the Maida Today blog. I still go back and look at the images she shared of an Enigma doll sometimes called Linen Head Dolls.

Stay tuned for more doll shop features. For those of us who make antique inspired dolls, studying examples that are featured in shops like these is an education! Check out their shops, there are many wonderful dolls to be studied and purchased.

An Old Wooden Queen Ann Doll

Obviously this one has had a life well lived!



She looks to me like a great make do restoration from early 19th century on an 18th century doll?  See how she is dressed, that is not period QA. Then looking closer, the wooden head and torso piece with the gesso and paint all worn off are her early part, and the cloth arms and legs are added to replace lost jointed wooden arms and legs.  I think she is dear!  What is your read on her?  








She sold for $1611.00 on  Ebay

Edyth