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Hoopskirts Wider Than Doors: Fact or Fiction?

Could Mother Wilder’s dress really be so wide it couldn’t fit through a doorway? That's what Laura Ingalls Wilder wrote in Farmer Boy.

Please note: If you are reading this blog post in an email, you may not be able to see all images or click on links unless you go to the blog by clicking the title of today's blog post. 

I was curious. So, I had to research (because facts are fun). 

Yes! Hoopskirts made some dresses wider than doors!
You can see an example of a hoopskirt at the Almanzo Wilder farm in New York.
Women and teenage girls wore hoopskirts to make the bottoms of their dresses wide like a bell. Whalebones or other hard material made the hoopskirts stiff. They wore multiple petticoats on top of the hoopskirt so the whalebones wouldn’t show.

Hoopskirts were fashionable but difficult to wear. A lady couldn’t just sit down on a sofa or chair. First she had to gather and lift her hoopskirt, petticoats, and dress. Then she could sit.

In my book The Laura Ingalls Wilder Companion: A Chapter-by-Chapter Guide, (affiliate) I explored the facts behind hoopskirts and many other topics readers today wonder about in the Little House books. I loved researching the sidebars called "Fact or Fiction?"

 Happy Trails! ~ Annette Annette Whipple is a nonfiction children's author. Learn more about her books and presentations at www.AnnetteWhipple.com.

1 comment

  1. I can believe it, especially doors in those days. I and my bridesmaids had hoop skirts at my wedding, though I am sure not as wide as in Laura's childhood. But the photographer had a hard time getting us as close together as he would have liked due to the skirts.

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