I sometimes think croquet is losing it's [sic] innocent charm
- RBSC-ARC-1656-Croquet_Box31_Image0032
- Item
- [20th century?]
Prince, John G
I sometimes think croquet is losing it's [sic] innocent charm
Prince, John G
I've been waiting until I was old enough to play, and now look!
Prince, John G
Waters, Joy Bluck
[Dragonflies breaking the pro's concentration]
Westenberg, Jude
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
[Two ladies playing croquet, with a dog]
Chapman, Frederick T
Prince, John G
Sturtevant, Doug
Cheryl Ann
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
The Delineator, vol. LXVIII, No. 2
The Delineator
Hunt, Chris
[Silhouette of two women with croquet mallets]
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
[Two figures playing croquet in the garden of a country house, others on the verandah, New England]
[Unknown American school]
Schlichting-Carlsen, Peter
Hennessy-Smith, Carol
[A fan, depicting five women playing croquet]
[Unknown English school]
Edwards, Eileen
[The Cats' strange croquet and tea party]
Swanwick, Ada E
[Sherlocko finds a felonious croquet player]
Mager, Charles A 'Bud'
Homer, Winslow
Treasury of Classic Tales - Alice in Wonderland
Walt Disney Studios
[Heart?], G
Croquet: 1989 USCA national championships and wine tasting
Miller, Jessel
Croquet: 1989 USCA national championships and wine tasting
Miller, Jessel
Howard, Ric
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
[Mounted silhouette of two women with croquet mallets]
[Unknown] (Authorized heading)
Our deportment or the manners, conduct & dress of the most refined society
Young, John H
Contains 2 letters addressed to Tremaine from Ron, 1 letter with no addressee from Alby.
"The following short treatise in [sic] intended to make clear to those who have not played it before, or hardly at all, the comparatively slight differences between the present game and this new Clip game."
Tremaine Arkley Croquet Collection
The Tremaine Arkley Croquet Collection contains over 2,400 paintings, illustrations, engravings, advertisements, photographs and other ephemera depicting the game of croquet throughout the years. The images range from fine art to cartoons and everything in between, and show the rise in the game’s popularity in England and America in the 19th and 20th centuries. Many items in the collection show gender roles, as croquet was one of the first games that men and women played together.