1840s afternoon gown

This 1840s era afternoon gown is our Brooks dress and is headed to a museum group in Bergen, Norway. This gown is made of 100% cotton. This gown is based upon an original cotton American gown in the collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and is featured in last year’s cinematic production of Cinderella starring Lily James.

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Fore more information about this gown or any of our custom made garments, please visit our website at www.maggiemayfashions.com or email us at info@maggiemayfashions.com

Early 1840s gown

This late 1830s-early 1840s era smocked gown was made for a production at the Santa Fe Opera. It is 100% cotton with a muslin lined bodice and sleeve. The smocking is all done by machine and the skirt unhemmed as it will be fitted at the costume shop.

A gorgeous example of a transitional era gown!

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For more information about this gown or any of our custom made historical garments, please visit our website at www.maggiemayfashions.com!

1840s-1860s drawn bonnet

Here is a snapshot of a recently completed red shot- silk drawn (or gathered) bonnet. It is the same color and style as the one shown on my website.

1840s gathered bonnet

This is a soft bodied bonnet. I developed the pattern for this bonnet a few years ago. It is super light weight and not bulky at all. It is perfect for 1840s, 1850s, and even 1860s era impressions.  The ties are made of black cotton satin.

This bonnet is off to a very kind lady in Kansas! Enjoy!

Fashioning Rugby: Dressing Margaret Hughes

by Susan Jarrett

This multi-part series, originally presented at Historic Rugby’s Visitor Center in June 2021 and entitled- Fashioning Rugby: An English Lady’s Guide to Proper Dress in East Tennessee from 1870-1890, uses primary source documents (letters, photographs, artifacts) to imagine what key female residents of Rugby, Tennessee would have worn during the heyday of the settlement (1881-1887).

Background

Rugby, Tennessee was the utopian vision of Thomas Hughes- a landed gentleman from Oxfordshire, England and influential lawyer, judge, politician and author. He is most famous for his novel Tom Brown’s School Days (c. 1857). Disaffected by the current economic, political, and religious state of Victorian Era England, Hughes envisioned a new society- one in which equality and the rejection of capitalism could create a more just, pure, and thus blissful existence.

Specifically, Rugby was a rejection of the British custom of primogeniture- or the right of the firstborn legitimate child to inherit the parent’s entire or main estate in lieu of shared inheritance among all or some children.

History tells us that Hughes’ Utopian settlement within the wild untamed wilderness of Northern Tennessee would ultimately fail. But for the 7 years in which it endeavored, The Rugby Settlement was successful in capturing the imagination of all who sought out and continue to forge a trail toward a more egalitarian society.

Restored Uffington House (Home of Margaret Hughes)- Rugby, Tennessee. Image Historic Rugby.

Margaret Hughes

Margaret Elizabeth (Wilkinson) Hughes was the widowed mother of settlement founder Thomas Hughes. She is also the mother of famed social reformer, Jeanie (Hughes) Senior. In her late 80s, she relocated to the Rugby settlement from England with her teenage granddaughter, Emily, in an effort to show support for her son’s community. She was a friend of Lord Alfred Tennyson, was painted by George Frederic Watts, and gave up an aristocratic life in a stately English manor for a modest wooden home in rural Northeast Tennessee.

Margaret Elizabeth Hughes by Watts. Watts Gallery.

Margaret Hughes Wardrobe

Born in 1800, Margaret Hughes would have lived two thirds of her life under the reign of Queen Victoria (1837-1901). It is evident, Her majesty’s style influenced Mrs. Hughes sartorial selections- specifically her preference for mourning wear. All of Margaret Hughes formal portraits show her wearing a black French Chantilly mourning veil and black gown. While it was common for women beyond a certain age to prefer darker colored dresses, the majority of images we see of Mrs. Hughes exhibit some type of mourning wear. Surviving Rugby photographs also denote that much of Mrs. Hughes wardrobe was cut in a mid Victorian style (1850s-1860s). Hughes lived at Rugby from 1881 until her death in 1887. Let’s imagine what she would have worn.

Undergarments

Margaret Hughes came from a British gentry class and would have worn all the proper layers of undergarments for the duration of her life. Here we have images of a corded corset as was popular in the 1840s and provided a little less constraint than the steel boned corsets of the 1880s. Her undergarments were most likely made of fine cotton muslin or even linen and she would have opted for petticoats in lieu of cages and skirt improvers.

Gowns and Accessories

Margaret Hughes’ gowns would have been made of dark colored silks- most likely a solid color with little ornamentation- and cut in “an earlier style.” Margaret Hughes was not an ostentatious woman and would have therefore preferred fine quality over fussiness. She chose French textiles and china over English made and was alway photographed with her fine Chantilly lace veil.

Next: Dressing Emily Hughes

CalicoBall logo

CalicoBall is a grassroots effort to document, preserve, and present rural America’s diverse historical traditions. CalicoBall is an educational extension of Maggie May Clothing. All rights reserved.

D.I.Y. 1860s Era Straw Spoon Bonnet

This 100% all natural narrow braid 3-end straw plait bonnet is designed after an original straw bonnet in the collection of the Bartow-Pell Mansion Museum. This bonnet shape was at its height during the 1840s, 1850s, and 1860s and was worn with or without a bavolet (curtain). The extant bonnet shown in the images is in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and dates to the 1860s. Best worn with ties or a hat pin.

Brim depth: 8.5 inches

Back width: 4.5 inches

Front width: 10 inches

D.I.Y. Close Fitting Straw Bonnet

This shallow, close fitting narrow braid 3-end straw plait bonnet is ideal for girls ages 7 and up and ladies looking for a shallow bonnet extending to the cheekbones. Can be worn with or without a bavolet (curtain). The extant bonnet in the images is c. 1840 and is the collection of a museum in Spain. Our straw hats are undecorated and ready for your customization. Best worn with ties or a hat pin.

Brim depth: 7 inches

Back width: 5 inches

Front width: 10 inches

Sneak Peek at our upcoming Workwoman’s Dress!

All the stay at home orders have us inspired to launch new designs! Last year, we launched our Anne Dress. Earlier this year, we launched our Suffragette Dress. And this fall we are excited to launch our Workwoman’s Dress!

Our Workwoman’s Dress is a sister to our American South dress. The differences lie in the lower price point, details, and multiplicity. This new dress is a suitable work dress for the 1840s through about 1900.

Our Workwoman’s Dress features an unlined, loose fitting bodice attached to a fully gathered skirt via a waistband. The skirt is approximately 110″ wide and has a single turn hem. Our workman’s dress does not use piping at the armscye or the neckline. The gown closes at the center front with buttons and a skirt hook/eye at the waistband.

Our new Workwoman’s Dress launches in our special order catalog Fall 2020! Stay tuned!