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Maker(s):Dore
Culture:English
Title:riding jacket
Date Made:1889
Type:Clothing
Materials:textile: dark blue, twill-weave fine wool broadcloth;
Place Made:Great Britain: Greater London, London
Measurements:Center Back - CB: 19 3/4 in; 50.2 cm
Accession Number:  HD 2022.15.2
Credit Line:Gift of Lois B. Duncan, Anna M. Dakin's great-grandaughter
Museum Collection:  Historic Deerfield
2022-15-2_quickf.jpg

Description:
Jacket, part of a woman's riding habit, consisting of two jackets, an asymmetrically cut side-saddle skirt, trousers, and riding crop. The riding habit, worn by Anna M. (Dakin) Bond (1860-1897), Springfield, Massachusetts, is made from dark blue, fine wool broadcloth (woven in a twill weave), with various linings, interfacings, and stiffeners. The original c.1885 riding habit was made by L.P. Hollander & Co. of Boston. The slightly later jacket was made in London in 1889 and is labeled "DORE/ LADIES TAILOR AND HATTER./ 13 GEORGE STREET. HANOVER SQUARE. W1." Anna had this second, more up-to-date jacket made when she, her sister Emily, and others traveled to Europe and England the year before Anna's marriage to George R. Bond On June 17, 1890. The second coat is slightly smaller than the first. This fact, along with the reduction in the waist of the riding skirt, suggest Anna lost some weight from the time of the c.1885 habit.

Label Text:
Building a Collection, September 27, 2025-February 23, 2025: This stylish riding habit, consisting of a fitted jacket, breeches, side-saddle skirt, and crop, were worn by Anna M. Dakin (1860-1897) of Springfield, MA. The voluminous skirts were made to accommodate riding side saddle. The ensemble came to Historic Deerfield with two different jackets, one shown here with decorative braid fastening (also called frogging) dating to the mid-1880s, and another probably acquired later in London while Anna was on a European tour with friends prior to her 1890 marriage to George R. Bond (1855-1943). Women’s riding habits were traditionally made with fine wool broadcloth, which aligned them closely with masculine suiting, and tailors (rather than dressmakers) often created them. This jacket, however, bears the label “L. P. Hollander,” indicating that it was created by one of the premier clothing emporiums in Boston, probably in its custom dressmaking shop. L. P. Hollander’s founder, Marie Theresa (Baldwin) Hollander, was a passionate abolitionist and early supporter of woman’s suffrage.

Tags:
equestrians

Subjects:
Textile fabrics; Wool

Link to share this object record:
https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=HD+2022.15.2

Research on objects in the collections, including provenance, is ongoing and may be incomplete. If you have additional information or would like to learn more about a particular object, please email fc-museums-web@fivecolleges.edu.

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