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For someone raising a family in a hovel made from tin signs in the city dump, this lady seems to be doing pretty well.
January 1939. "Mother of family on relief living in shanty at city dump. Herrin, Illinois." Seen earlier here. Photo by Arthur Rothstein. View full size.
She doesn't appear to be a woman of loose moral character.
(my Mother, who is was a teenager at the time of this photo says that back then only circus performers, sailors and women of loose moral character had tattoos!)
c'mon, you wouldn't have said that to my Mother on the prairies of Saskatchewan in 1938.
I'll take a wild stab and say Kewpie doll.
And here I thought that Aunt Mamie (of the comic strip "Moon Mullins") was a caricature. I didn't realize that some women had tats back in the day.
I live in a city in which a very high percentage of the population is tattooed, and can attest to an awful lot of roses and butterfly tattoos.
Not so many newspaper-lined shacks, though.
At least four. And here I was thinking they were of more modern origin for women. Live and learn.
She seems to be a clean, resourceful woman!
For a shack made out of junk, lined with newspaper and located in the city dump, that place is clean, as is her dress and general appearance.
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