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Johnny Gruelle’s daughter Marcella brought him an old rag doll one
day, and he drew a face on the worn fabric. Pulling a book off the
shelf, he noticed two James Witcomb Riley poems, “The Raggedy Man” and
“Little Orphan Annie.” “Why don’t we call her Raggedy Ann?,” he said.
Or so the story goes. Gruelle’s family made the original doll by hand,
and he gave Raggedy Ann life in 1915. She became a children’s book
character in 1918, and Gruelle’s publisher P.F. Volland arranged to
sell Raggedy Ann dolls as well. The tie-in between Gruelle’s Raggedy
Ann Stories and the dolls proved a great marketing success. Gruelle
averaged one new book a year for twenty years. Reprinted many times,
the books renew the character for every generation. In the stories
kindly Raggedy Ann comes to life when humans aren’t looking and
embarks on adventures with her brave brother Andy. Marcella Gruelle
tragically
died at age 13, just as Raggedy
Ann debuted. But she showed up as a tender remembrance in Marcella: A
Raggedy Ann Story (1929). |