This week’s Sepia Saturday prompt photograph features a women kneeling on her long skirt and holding an early camera to take a photograph. I might not have camera images but I have plenty of skirts to show. So another fashion report from me this week!
At the turn of the 19th/20th centuries, a plain dark floor-length skirt was the standard wear for many women such as my great aunt Jennie Danson (1897-1986). On leaving school, Jennie went to work in the Post Office at Poulton le Fylde, Lancashire. Her
daughter Pam recalls a story that during the First World War, a telegram
was received at the Post Office for Jennie's widowed mo0ther, Mrs Maria Danson. Fearing the
worst, Jenny was allowed to run home with it. Fortunately it was good
news to say that brother Frank was in hospital in Malta but was doing well.
Was
this a group (above) of Jennie's work colleagues, given they were all
dressed in the same skirts and blouses? Even better, Jennie had put names on the back of the photograph - Gerty Roskell, Jennie Danson, Annie Jolly, Margaret Porter, Madge O' Rourke,
Edith Jackson, with Jennie second on the left with her long plait.
A
close look will reveal why Dorothy Chisholm is up a ladder, showing off
her long skirt - she is pruning the plant on the wall. Dorothy was
engaged to my great uncle John Danson of Poulton-le-Fylde, Lancashire,
who was a widower with a young daughter. Sadly in 1917 John committed suicide at
Tidworth whilst in army training. The Danson family remained in
contact with Dorothy throughout her life. She never married and I have vague memories of
visiting her with my mother, when she was living in a bedsit - one of
the many women whose lives were changed by the First World War and often termed as "Surplus Women". I have looked at finding out more about Dorothy but so far without success.
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My husband's grandparents Alice Armitage and Matthew Iley White of South Shields, Co. Durham. The photograph is believed to have been taken to mark their engagement. Alice is wearing a distinctive skirt with a broad ruched hem and arrow
insets.
After the war, skirts beame shorter and here is my husband;s great aunt Violet Hibbert again, in a typical 1920's look of cloche hat, long bodice, straight skirt.

Another 1920s unmistakable image - my mother's cousin Annie
Danson married on 4 October 1928 and the local press report provided a
fascinating picture of the fashion of the day, with a colourful and evocative description of the
dresses, with the headline "Gowned in Delphinium Blue".
“The
bride, who was given away by her uncle Mr R. Danson, was gowned in
delphinium blue georgette, the sleeveless bodice being plain, while the
circular skirt was side slashed and bordered all round with deep silver
lace. Her hat was ruched georgette to tone and she wore silver shoes and hose to tone. Her bouquet was of pale pink chrysanthemums“.
The bane of family historians - two photographs in my son in law's collection , but with no note as to who they are!


Another unmistakable image from the late 1920s for this unidentified photogaph with the bride wearing a short skirt, a cloche hat and carrying a huge bouquet.
Onto
the 1930's
In their stylish midi skirts are my mother
Kathleen Danson (left) with her sister Edith. My mother was apprenticed
as a tailoress at the age of 14 and both sisters made their own clothes
on a treadle machine at home, which did not have electricity until the
late 1950's.
1940s simplicity

Postwar
simplicity for my aunt Peggy Danson and her husband Harold Constable,
always known as Con. It was a wartime courtship whilst Peggy was working on
the barrage balloons on the east coast. They emigrated after their wedding to
Australia. I have two cousins there, but unfortunately contact was lost following Peggy and Con's deaths. A pity!
Forty
years on to 1971 and here am I sporting a mini skirt. This was the
era when girls were frantically shortening skirts in their wardrobe to
appear in fashion. Even my mother favoured the trend!
I
loved wearing pinafore dresses and had several in different colours in my wardrobe -
slimming and versatile worn with jumpers or blouses. Here with Inverary Castle,
in Argyll on the west coast of Scotland in the background.
1970
- and can't you tell from our outfit colours! I am in the orange
and brown which seemed to characteristic the decade and my mother
equally vibrant in royal blue and shocking pink. I had been to the
hairdresser's to achieve that bouffant hairstyle.
1977 - Another mother and daughter alike pose - same colour outfits, four knees on show!

We
were soon to move fashion wise into the midi and the maxi era and the
hippy look - long flowing skirts - not my style at all. But for a
brief period, and at the only time of my life, I was on trend with
my mini skirts.
And Finally - back to the start - and wearing long black skirts - this was pretty much the standard uniform for choirs in the late 1970s, before other fashions took over.
Copyright © 2025 · Susan Donaldson. All Rights Reserved
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Sepia Saturday gives bloggers an opportunity
to share their family history through photographs .

spotted in this week's prompt photograph.
What a lot of skirts! And the hemlines sure did yo-yo around! I like that they look very comfortable, none are pencil skirts which made you walk tiny steps!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Barbara, for such a quick response. Yes, I had forgotten all about pencil skirts and at one time they were my standard work wear, with stilettos of course which constantly needed the heels repaired. But no photographs of me in that. fashion.
ReplyDeleteNice outside-the-box match to the prompt with some very different styles & lengths of skirts. And wow, that's a lot of altos! Of course it depends on how large the chorus is. It's lucky Pine Cone Singers had a surplus of altos and 2nd sopranos this spring , There were only 5 first sopranos singing against 8 second sops and 8 altos. That worked because two of us firsts had strong voices. But when I had to drop out to help my daughter after her hip surgery there was a bit of shifting going on. Two 2nd sops were recruited to sing 1st, and 2 altos were moved up to 2nd sops. I'll be interested to see how that works when I go to the concert. :)
ReplyDeleteThank you Gail, for your comment - yes the image dates from the late 1970s when the choir had about 40-50 members - usual shortage of tenors! The photo was taken before our concert of "The Messiah" - the first time it had been performed in Hawick where we lived then, so was a big occasion.
DeleteI'm going to save this blog and use it to date old photos! I am serious! The rule of thumb is, the longer the skirts, the older the photo.
ReplyDeleteGood to get your comment, Peter - "your rule of thumb was not strictly accurate, as over the years skirt lengths did zoom up and down - short in the 1920s but longer in the 1930s - short in the 1970s but long in the 1980s with the hippy look - now anything goes!
DeleteThank you for another excellent lesson (for us guys) in women's fashion history. Like Peter, I will bookmark your post as a useful resource to date photos. I often fumble at finding the correct terms for parts of garments. When is a dress a frock, a gown, or just a skirt? What do you call the puffy sleaves or broad shoulders? Men's wear over the past century seems less complex but offers few distinctive clues that can accurately pinpoint a decade.
ReplyDeleteFrom Scotsue - thank you Mike for your comment - I was pleased to,help you identify the possible period of costumes. I really don’t see much difference between “dress”and “frock” which I think is a more old fashioned term e.g. 1930s-1950s. “Gown”to me implies a more formal evening occasion I.e. with a long floor length dress.
ReplyDelete