:On May 31, Flora Gill Jacobs, a native of Washington, died from
congestive heart failure at age 87. She was an internationally
recognized authority on dollhouses, and the founder of the
Dollhouse Museum in Washington, D.C.
Flora's collection of antique miniatures, begun in 1945, was the
basis of the museum. According to Noel Barrett, toy dealer and
regular on PBS's Antiques Roadshow and who handled selling
most of the collection when the museum closed, "Flora was one of
the most famous names in dollhouse collecting in the postwar
period ... she single-handedly put it on the map in America."
When her collection outgrew her house, Flora found a spot in
northwest Washington, D.C., where she founded the museum. She was
director and curator from 1975 until she closed it in 2004 citing
risings costs and advancing age. The museum was where Flora, as
she told the Washington Post in 1988, spent most of her
time, "I hardly ever go out into the life-sized world." It housed
more than 40 dollhouses from the Eighteenth to the early
Twentieth Centuries, focusing mainly on Victoriana. The star
attraction was an ornate Mexican villa, circa 1890, with its own
chapel (miniature priest included), roof gardens, aviary, working
elevator and a gated driveway with a Paige touring car.
Flora was a newspaperwoman by training; as a student at
Georgetown University she wrote theater and movie reviews for the
old Washington Times-Herald where she became the fashion
editor. She later worked for the Washington Post as a
reporter for the woman's page. She was also renowned as a book
author, "I am a writer who became engulfed by a collection," she
once said.
Her first book was published in 1953, A History of Dolls'
Houses, depicting the most famous European and American
dollhouses from 1558 to the 1950s. She wrote many other books
including novels for children often based on dollhouses she had
collected. Her first dollhouse, purchased for $35 in New Jersey,
was a post-Civil War mansion. It was such a "wreck" that it
seemed haunted. The process of restoring it and filling it with
Victorian furniture and decorative arts, became the inspiration
for her first children's story, The Dolls' House Mystery,
1958. Her most recent book, published in 2005, is The Small
World of Antique Dolls' Houses.
Flora is survived by her husband of 65 years, Ephraim Jacobs, and
her daughter, Amanda Bolling Jacobs of Centreville, Md.
Memorial donations may be made to UNICEF, 333 East 38th Street,
New York NY 10016; The Humane Society's Kindred Spirit Fund, Dept
IT, 2100 L Street NW, Washington DC 20037; or the National Trust
for Historic Preservation, 1785 Massachusetts Ave NW, Washington,
DC 20036.