Made for Friends: A Manuscript Deck of Cards Featuring Potter’s Hunca Munca and Princess Margaret

Some children are lucky enough to know an adult with the skills to make them special toys and games.  Sometimes those objects survive against the odds are offered to lucky curators. This little set of Schwarzer Peter cards (a Continental variation on Old Maid)  is just one such find.    It has twenty-seven instead of the usual fifty-two cards, but it seems to be complete because it fits perfectly in the blue box.  The lid has an illustrated title label in German that reads in English: “This game of Black Peter was painted for her dear friends Ernst and Anneliese Grossenbacher in St. Gall.”  It is signed Gertrud Lendorff, who just might be the Swiss art historian from Basel (1900-1981).

The cards cannot be earlier than the 1930s: one of the pair with the Union Jack in the upper left hand corners shows “Margaret Rose aus England.”  Margaret Rose, a little girl in a blue coat and hat with a green scarf, must be the late Princess Margaret (1930-2002), Queen Elizabeth II’s sister.

swiss_cards_brit

A famous character from children’s books also makes an appearance here: Beatrix Potter’s Hunca Munca from The Tale of Two Bad Mice, identified only as “nach einem Englischen Kinderbuch,” that is, “from an English children’s book.”  It’s amusing that the illustrations of Hunca Munca  were redrawn from ones where this bad little mouse was behaving well relatively well.  My guess is that  little Grossenbachers for whom Lendorff made the cards might have been reading The Tale of Two Bad Mice in German translation.  But perhaps Lendorff was introducing them to a childhood favorite of her own. The cards don’t provide any clues about the circumstances in which they were made or how they were received, but they are testimony to Potter’s appeal outside her homeland.

swiss cards_cover

Most of the cards illustrate toys made of porcelain, clay, celluloid, and wood, such as Hansli and the matryoshka doll Tatyiana and her five daughters below.

swiss_cards_babtanddollsOne thing we find unacceptable today is Lendorff’s inclusion of toys that perpetuate offensive stereotypes.  The title label depicts a black baby doll and Lendorff’s model might have been a Heubach bisque character doll.  She redrew the same doll on the card with the caption “Der Schwarze Peterli! Nicht der Schwarze Peter!” [The little Black Peter! Not the Black Peter!].  It is an opprobrious caricature with unnaturally bright red lips.  But unlike some Heubach black baby dolls, it wears what looks like a knitted onesie instead of some spurious form of “native dress.”

covertitle The “Schwarzer Peter”—that is, “Black Peter”–mentioned on the title label is the name that the Old Maid card goes by in German, Danish, Swedish, Hungarian, and Finnish.  The card with Black Peter is the hot potato that all the players try to get rid of as quickly as possible so it won’t be in their hands at the end of the game.  In this particular set, the Black Peter is depicted offensively as a black rag doll (possibly inspired by Florence Upton’s famous character, the Golliwog) instead of the more usual chimney sweep.

inprocess item 6541473

The Black Peter card in the manuscript Schwarzer Peter deck. Cotsen in process item 6541473

In spite of the unpleasant images, this card set is a fascinating addition to Cotsen’s collection of manuscripts made for children over the last three hundred years..

See more Beatrix Potter at the Cotsen virtual exhibitions page

New Exhibition on Architecture in Children’s Books Coming This Thursday, May 29th 2014

Just in time for Reunions, Cotsen will be presenting our newest exhibition:

Building Books: Architecture for Children

The exhibition will feature a diverse array of toys and picture books focused around a central theme of all things constructive. Architects and architecture, builders and buildings, prints and cards and books and blocks! The items featured in the exhibit hail from 10 countries, across 3 continents, and nearly 275 years (from 1740 to the present day). Join us in celebrating the rich history of the connection between children’s books and toys with building and architecture.

Without spoiling too much of what will be available in the gallery, I though you might appreciate seeing some of the building that went into getting the exhibit ready (sorry, couldn’t help myself). Some of the items pictured below didn’t make it into the final show. You’ll have to come in on Thursday, May 29th to see what made it in. . .

Storybook City. 167 Pieces. Skaneateles, NY : T.C. Timber, ca. 1991. Manufactured by Habermaas Corporation.

Storybook City. 167 Pieces. Skaneateles, NY : T.C. Timber, ca. 1991. Manufactured by Habermaas Corporation.

Shinban Ueno Toeizan kirikumi toro-e. [Newly Printed Ueno Toeizan Cut and Assemble Sheet] Illustrated by Kuninaga. Tokyo? ca. 1920?

Shinban Ueno Toeizan kirikumi toro-e. [Newly Printed Ueno Toeizan Cut and Assemble Sheet] Illustrated by Kuninaga. Tokyo? ca. 1920?

Das Kind als Märchenbaumeister [The Child as Fairy Tale Architect] Ludwigsburg, Germany : Hausser, Otto, Max & Mϋller, Freyer, ca. 1910.

Das Kind als Märchenbaumeister [The Child as Fairy Tale Architect] Ludwigsburg, Germany : Hausser, Otto, Max & Mϋller, Freyer, ca. 1910.

A Grocer’s Shop. (Clark’s Monster Models, no. 3) London?: Clark, between 1860 and 1870?

A Grocer’s Shop. (Clark’s Monster Models, no. 3) London?: Clark, between 1860 and 1870?

Richter’s Anchor Box No. 12. Rudolstadt, Germany : F. Ad. Richter & Co. (Anker Steinbaukasten), 1884.

Richter’s Anchor Box No. 12. Rudolstadt, Germany : F. Ad. Richter & Co. (Anker Steinbaukasten), 1884.

Friedrich Boer. 3 Jüngen erforschen eine Stadt: Ein Bilderbuch mit Foto, Bildmontagen und Zeichnungen. Berlin: Herbert Stuffer Verlag, 1933.

Friedrich Boer. 3 Jüngen erforschen eine Stadt: Ein Bilderbuch mit Foto, Bildmontagen und Zeichnungen. Berlin: Herbert Stuffer Verlag, 1933.

Congratulations to all our 2014 graduates, and welcome back Alumni!