The Girl in the Gingham Dress

A colorized image of the actual photograph of Susie Crawford in the red gingham dress.

This is Susie Crawford, as she was known then. She was born in 1933, the youngest of three daughters, with a younger brother, Bobby, following just a year behind. In photographs from that time, she appears composed and self-assured, a girl already aware of how she wished to be seen, even if the circumstances of her childhood did not always allow her to choose it.

Her life began in the shadow of the Great Depression, but her story reaches back even further, to the lives of her parents.

Her father, known to friends and coworkers as Andy, but to his family simply as Frank, was a machinist who later became a master tool and die maker. He was a small man, only 5’3”, slender, quiet, and reserved. Much of his silence came from necessity. He had been profoundly hard of hearing since birth and wore a hearing aid with a large box receiver and battery pack tucked into the top pocket of his shirt. He smoked Camel unfiltered cigarettes and, twice a month, enjoyed playing pinochle with friends, always away from home or carefully out of sight.

Colorized image of Frank who was Susie's father.

Frank worked hard, and as the years passed, his skill and dedication provided for his family in ways that many working-class families during and after the Depression could not manage. Yet the most important thing to know about him was not his work, but his devotion. There was only one thing he loved more than taking care of his children, and that was his deep and steady love for his wife, Sylvia.

Sylvia stood in contrast to her husband in both presence and personality. She was taller, fuller in figure, and deeply religious. She did not approve of card playing or dancing in her home, which made Frank’s twice-monthly games something to be quietly arranged elsewhere. It surprised the family when, years later, she allowed her grandchildren to have a deck of animal rummy cards, though only for playing Concentration.

A colorized image of Sylvia, Susie's mother.

Like many women of her time, Sylvia was primarily a homemaker, but as a teenager she had worked as a salesclerk. Originally hired for the Christmas season during her senior year of high school, she discovered she loved earning her own money. When the store offered to keep her on, she made a bold and lasting decision. She left school and continued working until she married Frank in May. She was only sixteen and needed her parents’ written permission to marry, which they willingly gave.

They were married in 1927, just two years before the stock market crash of 1929. Their first daughter, Mary, was born as the economy collapsed, followed a year later by Jo, both arriving during a time when families everywhere were learning to survive with less.

Five-year-old Susie in a pale yellow dress.

By the time Susie was born in 1933, the habits of those years were firmly in place. Clothing was mended, patched, and passed down. Nothing was wasted. For families like theirs, there was no alternative.

There was also a noticeable divide within the family itself. Susie would later remark that it felt as though her parents had two separate families. Mary and Jo, born close together at the beginning of the Depression, and then, years later, Susie and Bobby, who were also born just a year apart. Susie and Bobby shared similar features, both with dark, wavy hair, though hers carried a rich auburn tone.

As the youngest girl, Susie grew up in the long shadow of her older sisters. Their clothes came to her not as gifts chosen with her in mind, but as garments that had already lived another life. They were practical, serviceable, and necessary, but always slightly out of step with the present.

Clothing, for Susie, was never just clothing. It was dignity. It was belonging. It was the quiet desire not to stand apart for the wrong reasons.

And yet, there were moments that softened that experience. She would later speak, more than once, of her oldest sister, Mary, arriving with a new dress just for her. Not passed down, not repurposed, but chosen just for her. That memory stayed with her, not because of the dress itself, but because of what it meant.

Susie was bright, determined, and quietly confident. Her brother Bobby would later recall that she was not only very pretty, but an honor student in both high school and college, with boys frequently calling at the house. After her first date with Joe, she returned home and confidently declared that she was going to marry him, though she had not yet mentioned this decision to Joe himself. She did not see a need to trouble him with such details.

In time, she worked, saved, and earned a college degree in accounting, building a life shaped not only by necessity, but by intention. When she and Joe chose to marry in August of 1954, despite reservations from both families due to differences in background, it was simply another example of her quiet certainty in her own decisions.

As the years passed, and Susie became Sue, she carried her early experiences with her, though not always in ways that others could immediately understand.

Years later, when her daughter was about eight years old, a neighbor sent her home with a bag of carefully folded, gently worn clothes. They were lovely things, still bright, nearly ne, and just her daughter’s size. Her daughter spread them out with excitement, trying them on one by one, delighted by what felt like unexpected treasure.

Sue came upon this scene and paused. She asked where the clothes had come from, and when she heard the answer, something in her expression shifted. Her response was immediate and firm. The clothes were to be put back. Her children, she said, would not wear hand-me-downs.

To her daughter, it made no sense. These were not worn-out clothes. They were stylish, desirable, and already there. She pleaded with her mother, but Sue did not waver.  The hand-me-downs went back in the bag. 

What the child could not yet understand was that this moment had begun decades earlier, in a very different time. It was shaped by years of wearing what was available rather than what was chosen, of stepping into clothes that carried someone else’s story.  Sue had spent her life moving away from that feeling, carefully building something different for herself and for her children.

Anyone who knew Sue later could see it. She was always fashionable, always put together, moving easily with the changing styles of the 1960s, from hot pants to maxi skirts to minis, embracing what was modern and expressive.

So, when we look at that worn, creased photograph from the 1940s, we are not just seeing a young girl in a gingham dress; we are seeing the beginning of a story that would shape how she lived her life.  Everything in Sue’s life was intentional. 

The thin, carefully shaped eyebrows, the hint of mulberry lipstick, the dark auburn hair braided across the top of her head all suggest someone already reaching toward the version of herself she wanted to become.

It is easy to imagine that dress as something chosen with care, perhaps even a gift from Mary, along with a rare visit to a photographer’s studio. A moment preserved, even as time pressed its marks into the paper.

So much of a family’s history lives this way, not in records or documents, but in small moments, in quiet choices, and in the meaning behind them. For a while, these stories are held in memory, shared in fragments, until they begin to fade, much like the photograph itself.

And in the end, what remains is not just a faded photograph of a young girl in a gingham dress, but the quiet, enduring presence of the life she went on to create, shaped by moments that once seemed small, but were never insignificant.


To read another family history story by Jan Mariet, try When the Table Was Full – Jan Mariet’s A Day in the Life or A Small Tablecloth from France – Jan Mariet’s A Day in the Life.