Friendship dolls explained

Friendship dolls,, or Japanese ambassador dolls and the, were dolls sent between Japan and the United States in 1927. The dolls were meant to improve the deteriorated relationship between Japan and America that had resulted from the Immigration Act of 1924, which prohibited East Asians from immigrating to the United States and sparked anti-Japanese exclusion movements in California and other parts of the US.[1] The Friendship dolls were meant to inspire children to cultivate friendship with the children of the other country, rather than to initiate specific political or legal changes.[2]

Friendship dolls project

Dr. Sidney Gulick was a former missionary who spent time in Japan between 1888 and 1913. He was familiar with the importance of dolls in Japanese culture, and to promote goodwill between the countries he initiated a program to send dolls from the US to children in Japan.[3] Gulick helped form a group called the Committee on World Friendship Among Children (CWFC),[4] which was overseen by the Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America, and the Commission on International Justice and Goodwill.[5]

In 1927, the group's first project was to organize the sending of 12,739 friendship dolls, also known as American blue-eyed dolls, to Japan to communicate American children's feelings of friendship and goodwill towards the Japanese people.. The Committee on World Friendship Among Children, Gulick, and Japanese businessman Viscount Eiichi Shibusawa worked together on the project. The American dolls arrived in Yokohama time for Hinamatsuri, the annual Japanese doll festival, in March 1927.[6] They were positively received, with one group of dolls receiving an audience with the Emperor of Japan. One source suggests that the dolls popularized a children's song called "The Doll with Blue Eyes".[7] The dolls were distributed to kindergartens and elementary schools throughout Japan and their occupied territories. Fewer than 100 of the dolls were sent to Formosa and divided amongst the ethnically segregated elementary schools and kindergartens.

The project focused on children due to their image as messengers of peace. Gulick also believed that a deeper understanding of different cultures from a young age could prevent the friction created by cultural prejudice. This was reflected in the report “Doll of Friendship” of the Committee on World Friendship Among Children, which stated that there is no other way for eternal world peace other than education.[8]

Shibusawa led a collection in Japan to reciprocate for this gift, although Gulick and the Committee had told them they did not expect such a thing. A group, the Committee on International Friendship among Children in Japan, was formed to oversee the project.[9] Doll makers in Japan were commissioned to produce 58 friendship dolls, each of which represented one of 47 prefectures, four territories, and six major cities, plus one "national" doll.[10]

The dolls arrived in San Francisco in November 1927, and groups of dolls were subsequently brought on a nationwide tour of 479 cities by Gulick and the Committee.[11] Afterwards, they were sent to libraries and museums throughout the United States, with each of the states (48 at the time) receiving at least one doll each. American parents and teachers were asked to the doll exchange as an educationally beneficial event to teach American children about Hinamatsuri and Japanese cultural values.[12]

American blue-eyed dolls

The Friendship dolls were American Composition Dolls, which were very popular at that time. The dolls were primarily made in consultation with three doll makers: Averill Manufacturing Co., Effanbee, and E.I. Horsman & Co. Some of the friendship dolls came from outside the three companies; these included German bisque dolls and other manufactures.

The CWFC requested that the donated dolls were "price as moderate as quality would permit; face, arms, and legs of unbreakable material; joints and wig handsewn; eyes that opened and closed; and a voice that should say unmistakably 'Mama'".[13] The majority had blonde hair and blue eyes, leading to them being called the "American blue-eyed dolls"; the CWFC suggested in their materials that the dolls should “look like attractive and typical American girls,” which would “indirectly suggest that the dolls should be white”. Some dolls were donated with handmade clothing, sometimes reflective of the region they were sent from, and in response to CWFC requests that dolls "be carefully dressed in every detail". They were approximately 30 cm in height, and had mobile limbs and a cotton-filled torso.[14]

The CWFC set up a "Doll Travel Bureau" to manage the donated dolls, which was overseen by CWFC member Rosalie Ashton. Dolls were donated by churches, schools, and scouting groups across the country. Each doll was sent with a message including the name of the doll, the names of the givers and the address for the "thank you" letter. Dolls were given farewell parties and given "passports" that cost 1 cent and "railroad and steamer tickets" that cost 99 cents.[15] It was suggested that "girls specialize on the selection of the dolls and the making of their clothing and that boys serve as business and ticket agents". Dolls were also accompanied with a poem written by Robert Underwood Johnson, titled "Friends Across the Sea", which was written at the request of the CWFC.

In total, 22,379 dolls were collected from 47 of the 48 states in the United States, 11,975 of which were sent to Japan according to the historical materials of Eiichi Shibusawa.[16] Other sources cite the number of dolls sent at 12,739.

During World War II, many of the dolls were destroyed, but some were saved by individuals.[17] [18] As of 2002, only 233 American-made dolls had been recovered.

Japanese dolls

Each doll was 32-33 inches tall, with a silk yuzen-dyed kimono, complete with family crest and furisode-style sleeves, and "bridal trousseau" accessories.[19] Each doll had uniquely sculpted facial features made from gofun.[20]

The majority of the dolls (51 of 58) were made by Tokyo's Yoshitoku Doll Company, and represented the 51 prefectures and colonies of Japan. They had a partial wood core covered with fabric, and human hair, glass eyes, hinged legs, and a mechanism that allowed them to say "mama" when squeezed. Individual artists are credited on labels on the back of each doll.

The remaining seven dolls, representing six Japanese cities and the Imperial household, were made by the Ohki Heizo (Maruhei) Doll Company in Kyoto.[21] They were made of wood with peg joints at the legs allowing for movement.

As with the American-made dolls, the Japanese dolls were also sent with passports, steamship tickets, and letters written by children.

Over the years, a few dolls were lost or went missing, but many are still on display today; some, however, may not be displayed under the correct name due to errors in transport.[22] [23] Up to 25 of the dolls may be currently identified under names different than originally intended.[24]

Locations

!Doll!Original Location!Current Location!Image!Notes!Ref
Miss AichiNashville, TennesseeJapanWas lost for decades, but was rediscovered in 2014 and returned to Japan
Miss Fukiko AkitaDetroit Children's Museum, Detroit, Michigan[25]
Miss AomoriPrivate collection`[26]
Miss ChibaRiverside, CaliforniaUnknown
Miss ChosenBrauer Museum of Art, Valparaiso, Indiana
Miss Dai Nippon (Miss Japan) Department of Anthropology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.[27] [28]
Miss EhimeGulfport, MississippiDestroyed in Hurricane Camille (1969) and replaced in 1988
Miss FukuiSalt Lake CityUnknown
Miss Fukuoka[29]
Miss FukushimaHouston, TexasPrivate collection
Miss GifuCleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OhioRepaired in Gifu Prefecture in 1995[30]
Miss GunmaBrooklyn, New York City[31] Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens, Delray Beach, Florida
Miss Hiroko HiroshimaBarry Art Museum, Norfolk, VirginiaRecovered in 1997. The Baltimore Museum of Art also has a Friendship Doll named Miss Hiroshima; this is thought to actually be the original Miss Yamaguchi[32]
Miss Hokkaido Putnam Museum of History and Natural Science, Davenport, Iowa[33]
Miss HyogoSt. Joseph Museum, Saint Joseph, Missouri[34]
Miss Ibaraki (Tsukuba Kasumi)Milwaukee Public Museum, Milwaukee, Wisconsin Was put on display again following the 2011 tsunami and earthquake in Japan[35] [36]
Miss IshikawaMontana Historical Society, Helena, Montana
Miss IwateBirmingham Public Library, Birmingham, Alabama[37]
Miss KagawaNorth Carolina State Museum of Natural Sciences, Raleigh, North Carolina[38]
Miss KagoshimaPhoenix Museum of History, Phoenix, Arizona
Miss KanagawaEugene, OregonUnknown
Manchester, New HampshirePrivate Collection
Miss Karafutoconfused with Miss Nagano
Miss Kobe-shiStamford, ConnecticutUnknown
Miss KochiWilkinsburg, PennsylvaniaCarnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania[39]
Miss KumamotoNew Orleans, LouisianaUnknown
Miss Kyoto-fuBoston Children's Museum, Boston, Massachusetts
Miss Kyoto-shiArkansas Museum of Discovery in Little Rock, Arkansas
Miss MieUniversity of Nebraska State Museum in Lincoln, Nebraska
Miss MiyagiPrivate collection in Kansas[40]
Miss Miyazaki Hennepin County Library in Minneapolis, MinnesotaMinnesota Historical Society, Saint Paul, Minnesota[41]
Miss NaganoProvidence, Rhode IslandDelaware Historical Society in Wilmington, DelawareThought to be Miss Karafuto until 1996. Repaired in Japan in 2004[42] [43]
Miss Nagasaki (Tamako)Rochester Museum and Science Center in Rochester, New York[44] [45]
Miss Nagoya-shiAtlanta History Center, Atlanta, Georgia
Miss NaraIdaho Historical Museum, Boise, IdahoRepaired in Japan in 1994 and returned to Idaho with a 'sister' doll, New Miss Nara. In return, Idaho sent a friendship doll named LaTis Kuts Kuts to Japan, dressed in Native American clothing[46] [47]
Miss OitaSpringfield Science Museum in Springfield, Massachusetts
Miss OkayamaValley City, North DakotaNorth Dakota State University Textile Collection in Fargo, North Dakota (since 1973)Repaired in Japan in 2001 and 2020[48]
Miss OkinawaCincinnati Art Museum in Cincinnati, Ohio
Miss Marika Osaka-fuNewark, New JerseyOhio Historical Society in Columbus, Ohio
Miss Osaka-shiNewark Museum in Newark, New Jersey
Miss SagaPhiladelphia, PennsylvaniaUnknown
Miss SaitamaCharleston Museum in Charleston, South Carolina
Miss ShigaMiami, FloridaUnknown
Miss ShimaneChildren's Museum of Indianapolis in Indianapolis[49]
Miss ShizuokaKansas City Museum in Kansas City, Missouri
Miss TaiwanNatural History Museum of Los Angeles County in Los Angeles, California
Miss TochigiCharleston, West VirginiaUnknown
Miss TokushimaNorthwest Museum of Arts and Culture in Spokane, Washington[50] [51]
Miss Tokyo-fuRichmond, VirginiaUnknown
Miss Tokyo-shiNew York City, New YorkUnknown
Miss TottoriTopeka, KansasMuseum of the South Dakota State Historical Society in Pierre, South DakotaOriginally known as Miss Miyagi
Miss ToyamaSpeed Art Museum in Louisville, Kentucky
Miss WakayamaNevada Historical Society in Reno, Nevada[52]
Miss YamagataMaine State Museum in Augusta, Maine
Miss YamaguchiChicago, IllinoisMuseum of International Folk Art in Santa Fe, New Mexico
Miss YamanashiWyoming State Museum in Cheyenne, Wyoming[53]
Miss Yokohama-shiDenver Public Library, Denver ColoradoDenver Museum of Miniatures, Dolls and Toys, Denver, ColoradoEntrusted to Denver Museum of Miniatures, Dolls and Toys after being restored[54]
San Francisco, CaliforniaUnknown[55]

Legacy

Denny Gulick, grandson of Sidney, has tried to revive the doll exchange idea.[56]

In 2012, American novelist Kirby Larson published a novel called The Friendship Doll, which followed Miss Kanagawa during her tour across the United States.[57]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Koresawa, Hiroaki. 青い目の人形と近代日本. 2010. 978-4-902163-56-8.
  2. Book: Koresawa, Hiroaki. 青い目の人形と近代日本. 2010. 978-4-902163-56-8. iv-v.
  3. Web site: About the Collections - Miss Yamaguchi Japanese Ambassador Doll . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090419152336/http://moifa.org/collections/aboutcollectionsyamaguchi.html . 2009-04-19 . Moifa.
  4. Web site: Silent Envoys . 2023-11-01 . Natural History Museum . en.
  5. Book: Koresawa, Hiroaki . 青い目の人形と近代日本 . 2010 . 978-4-902163-56-8 . 67.
  6. Web site: 4. Blue-eyed Dolls Coming to Japan . 2023-11-01 . www.city.isehara.kanagawa.jp . ja.
  7. Web site: A Mission of Friendship . https://web.archive.org/web/20110713085329/http://www.janmstore.com/friendol.html . 2011-07-13 . 2023-11-01 . Japanese American National Museum.
  8. Book: Committee on World Friendship Among Children . Dolls of friendship; the story of a goodwill project between the children of America and Japan . Friendship Press . 1929 . New York . xiii . en.
  9. Web site: Good . Katie Day . 2020-07-28 . 'Messengers of Goodwill': America's Tokens of Friendship and Power . 2023-11-01 . The MIT Press Reader . en.
  10. Web site: Loohauis-Bennett . Jackie . 2011-04-27 . Milwaukee doll stars in Japan relief effort . https://web.archive.org/web/20230203231225/https://archive.jsonline.com/entertainment/arts/120792434.html . 2023-02-03 . 2023-11-01 . Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
  11. Web site: About Miss Mie : Miss Mie: Historic Japanese Friendship Doll . 2023-11-01 . University of Nebraska State Museum of Natural History . en.
  12. Book: Koresawa, Hiroaki . 青い目の人形と近代日本 . 2010 . 978-4-902163-56-8 . 69–74.
  13. Book: Committee on World Friendship Among Children . Dolls of friendship; the story of a goodwill project between the children of America and Japan . Friendship Press . 1929 . New York . 8 . en.
  14. Book: Koresawa, Hiroaki . 青い目の人形と近代日本 . 2010 . 978-4-902163-56-8 . 75–80.
  15. Book: Committee on World Friendship Among Children . Dolls of friendship; the story of a goodwill project between the children of America and Japan . Friendship Press . 1929 . New York . 10–11 . en.
  16. Book: Koresawa, Hiroaki . 青い目の人形と近代日本 . 2010 . 978-4-902163-56-8 . 80–83.
  17. Web site: 1990-09-06 . Town wants friendship doll to come home from Japan . 2024-02-15 . UPI . en.
  18. Web site: Kubota . Kazumichi . August 27, 2022 . The story behind a wartime 'enemy doll' sent from America . 2023-11-01 . The Asahi Shimbun . en.
  19. Book: Pate, Alan Scott . Ningyo: The Art of the Japanese Doll . 2013-02-12 . Tuttle Publishing . 978-1-4629-0720-5 . en.
  20. Web site: Friendship Doll at the Library . 2023-11-01 . Denver Public Library History.
  21. Web site: Miss Yokohama, Colorado's Japanese Friendship Doll . 2023-11-01 . History Colorado.
  22. Web site: Wilkins . Beth . "Miss Miye," I Presume . 2023-11-01 . University of Nebraska State Museum of Natural History . en.
  23. Web site: Miss Kyoto Japanese House Exhibit . 2023-11-01 . Boston Children's Museum.
  24. Web site: Miss Totorri in Wheeling: The Japanese Friendship Dolls of 1927 . 2024-02-26 . OCPL.
  25. Web site: Now: Legacy of Friendship Exchange: 97-year old Ichimatsu dolls on view at "Japanese Friendship Dolls" exhibition in Detroit Institute of Arts, Dec. 2, 2023 – Jun. 5, 2024 . 2024-02-15 . Cultural News . en-US.
  26. Web site: 2014-01-31 . Japanese woodblocks: 'An extension of the Impermanent' . 2024-02-15 . The Missoulian . en.
  27. Web site: Large Costumed Doll, "Miss Japan" . 2023-11-01 . Smithsonian Institution . en.
  28. Web site: Passports to Friendship . 2023-11-01 . Japanese American National Museum.
  29. Web site: Endo . Emi . 1995-03-04 . Schools Given Japanese Dolls In Gesture Of Friendship . 2024-02-15 . The Spokesman-Review.
  30. Web site: April 2022 . Consul General Shindo Travels to Cleveland . Consulate-General of Japan and Detroit.
  31. Book: Museum, Brooklyn . Report Upon the Condition and Progress of the Museums . 1922 . 8 . en.
  32. Web site: Miss Hiroshima (Friendship Doll) . 2024-07-19 . Barry Art Museum . en.
  33. Web site: Peake . Scott . 2023-07-13 . History of the Collection . 2023-11-01 . Putnam Museum . en-US.
  34. Web site: July 2008 . Japanese Friendship Dolls . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110724225214/http://www.stjosephmuseum.org/newsletters/2008-07.pdf . July 24, 2011 . May 7, 2010 . St. Joseph Museum (St. Joseph, Missouri) web site.
  35. Web site: Japanese Friendship Doll . 2023-11-01 . Milwaukee Public Museum.
  36. Web site: Messenger of Friendship . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100506024426/http://www.mpm.edu/exhibitions/featured/friendshipdoll/ . 2010-05-06 . Milwaukee Public Museum.
  37. Web site: Birmingham Public Library - Miss Iwate .
  38. Web site: Japanese Friendship Dolls . Consulate General of Japan in Atlanta.
  39. Web site: A Century of Exploration . 2024-02-15 . carnegiemuseums.org.
  40. News: Takahashi . Masashi . Fall 2003 . Welcome Back Miss Miyagi! Returning Home after 76 Years . 2024-02-26 . JGLC Newsletter . 1–2.
  41. Web site: Guthrey . Molly . 2017-11-05 . She arrived in 1927 and then disappeared. What happened to Minnesota's friendship doll? . 2023-11-01 . Twin Cities . en-US.
  42. Web site: Miss Nagano: The Japanese Friendship Doll . 2023-11-01 . Delaware Historical Society . en-US.
  43. Web site: Potts . Jennifer . 2013-10-17 . A Special Reunion for Miss Nagano . https://web.archive.org/web/20131222054911/http://thismorningishistory.wordpress.com/2013/10/17/a-special-reunion-for-miss-nagano-7/ . 2013-12-22 . This Morning is History.
  44. Web site: Gian Carlo Cervone . [RMSC Collections Department] Nagasaki Tamako ]. 2022-10-01 . 2011-07-27 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110727222225/http://collections.rmsc.org/NagasakiTamako/ . dead .
  45. Web site: Shih . Savannah . 2017-11-21 . New York Celebrates 90th Anniversary of Japanese Friendship Doll . 2023-11-01 . Asia Matters for America . en.
  46. Web site: 1994-11-20 . JAPAN DOLL BACK IN IDAHO - WITH SISTER . 2024-02-15 . Deseret News . en . Associated Press.
  47. Web site: Miss Nara, 1927 . 2024-02-15 . Washington State University Libraries . en.
  48. Web site: 2020-02-18 . NDSU's 'Miss Okayama' to return to Japan for repairs . 2024-02-15 . North Dakota State University.
  49. Web site: Jennifer Messmer . The Secrets of Our Collection - The Children's Museum of Indianapolis . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130309214946/http://www.childrensmuseum.org/blog/childrens-museum-marketing/the-secrets-of-our-collection . 2013-03-09.
  50. Web site: Collections (Northwest Museum of Arts + Culture) . 2023-11-01 . Northwest Museum of Arts + Culture . en.
  51. Web site: 2011-03-17 . Japanese refurbish Spokane friendship doll . 2023-11-01 . Northwest Asian Weekly . en.
  52. Web site: Clifton . Guy . A new cap for Miss Wakayama . 2023-11-01 . Reno Gazette Journal . en-US.
  53. Web site: Miss Yamanashi: Wyoming's Friendship Doll from Japan . 2024-02-26 . wyomuseum.wyo.gov.
  54. Web site: Miss Yokohama . 2023-11-01 . Denver Museum of Miniatures, Dolls & Toys . en-US.
  55. Web site: Fields . Monique . 1997-07-24 . The Search Is On To Find Missing S.F. Friendship Doll /... . 2023-11-01 . SFGATE . en.
  56. Web site: Denny Gulick, Ph.D . East Asian Scient and technology web site . University of Maryland . May 7, 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100613120536/http://www.oit.umd.edu/AS/EAST/Gulick.HTM . June 13, 2010 .
  57. Book: Larson, Kirby . The Friendship Doll . 2012-05-08 . Random House Children's Books . 978-0-375-85089-9 . en.