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Miss Spokane Dress

Miss Spokane Dress - Dress
Accession #: 2962.25A
Title: Miss Spokane Dress
Object Type: Dress
Participants:
Physical Description: Dress of deerskin with leather train attached to back with 31" fringe. Sunburst pattern of transparent seed beads and spangles on bodice-otherwise unadorned. Dress has snap back closure.
Description: Friends entered Marguerite Motie in a 1912 Spokane Advertising Club contest for an attractive young woman to promote the city. The 17-year-old found herself acting as Miss Spokane for over 20 years. Dressed as a stereotypical Indian princess, Miss Spokane acted as hostess and official representative of the region, and symbolized the bountiful and burgeoning city of Spokane. Even after Motie married her high school sweetheart, Walter Shiel, and moved to Seattle, she returned for appearances until a new Miss Spokane was chosen in the late 1930s. By 1977 the Miss Spokane program had ended. Originators chose to dress Miss Spokane in Native American attire to represent the region's native history and culture. Several Miss Spokanes were adopted into local tribes, whose members helped create authentic ceremonial gowns. Miss Motie's mother designed the Miss Spokane costume in muslin. Local furrier Bodnick & Jacobs made it out of leather, and Mrs. Motie beaded the dress.
Category: Textiles
Related Objects:
2962.25 (Bodnick & Jacobs Furriers, Ensemble, Miss Spokane Costume, 1912)
Geographical Reference: Spokane (Washington->Spokane County)
Dimensions:
length 53"
Materials/Techniques:
leather (Material)
beadwork (Material)
Related Exhibits:
Credit Line: Museum Transfer, Fort Wright Historical Museum, 1983

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