Little clay dolls

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Jake2150

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Anybody finding or know anything about these little dolls?
 

ROBBYBOBBY64

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Nice trade pipes. Not sure about the figurines could be broken off a larger scene.
ROBBYBOBBY64.
 

RelicRaker

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"Frozen Charlottes" turn up in my digs every so often but haven't found many recently. Very popular in the 1870s-1900s.
 

ROBBYBOBBY64

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"Frozen Charlottes" turn up in my digs every so often but haven't found many recently. Very popular in the 1870s-1900s.
Are they a real thing? I mean I have heard that term used by multiple diggers. Frozen because they are not posable. Why Charlotte's?
ROBBYBOBBY64.
 

Jake2150

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I just read the whole wiki on ‘frozen charlottes’ very interesting. Thanks!
 

Bottlehog

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Around here (Iowa) we call them "pillar dolls." Dug a lot of those in privies, mostly broken/trash. Have dug a few intact ones though, which lend credence to speculation that the outhouse also occasionally served as playhouse...and some dolls were (tragically) lost in the process. It's always fun to find those and unlock one's imagination. My collection includes many legs and arms, quite a few heads or head & body pieces. Such treasures speak to us.
 

RelicRaker

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Are they a real thing? I mean I have heard that term used by multiple diggers. Frozen because they are not posable. Why Charlotte's?
ROBBYBOBBY64.

Just saw this—sorry for the late reply. As I understand it, the term originates from a popular 19thC story about a girl who refused to wear her shawl while on a night ride thru the snowy woods with her BF. By the time the pair reached their destination, she'd frozen to death. Her name was, you guessed it, Charllotte. People familiar with the tale started calling the dolls Frozen Charlottes.
 

nhpharm

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We dig a lot of the Frozen Charlottes in Texas as well, especially in 1870's and 1880's trash. Love the clay pipes and the huge marble too! I always think when I dig the toys how devastated the children probably were when they lost their marble or their doll was broken...in Galveston many of the lots we dig had alley houses and the people were typically very poor that lived in them. Just cool history.
 

treeguyfred

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Yep Frozen Charlottes were very popular in their day. I have dug up three, all different sizes from 4" tall to a tiny 1 1/2" tall version.
They are wrapped up and safely stored so no pics immediately available. But, I may be able to find some old pics on the puter.
Fred
 

Jake2150

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consequently found this doll bust, maybe had a cloth body as it appears to be complete.
Also, beautiful blue stoneware blob top that I cry over sometimes. This dig site has been a blast. I’ve learned so much, mostly from folks on this site. Thanks for taking the time
 

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