Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

The Little Zouave: “Up Boys and at Them”

View original record

Hand-painted lithograph
New York, New York: Currier & Ives, 1861
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


Zouave uniforms made popular costumes for children, including playsuits and toy soldier wardrobes. These outfits miniaturized key elements of the original costume, such as baggy pantaloons secured with a sash paired with an open jacket and topped with a fez. Some ensembles completed the look with various cultural references, including accessories like a curved “Mameluke” sword, adapted from Ottoman Egyptian weaponry, and an American flag. Many tailors found eager consumers in children from bourgeois and elite households, even prompting Teddy Roosevelt’s parents to commission a photographic portrait of their four-year-old son in the costume. One popular children’s story tapped into the phenomenon of Zouave-inspired toys in the Christmas Eve edition of Harper’s Weekly (1864): a dolls’ gala sets the scene for a romance between a Parisian belle and an inexperienced but dazzling Zouave toy soldier, purchased at a benefit fair. Countless other children’s stories further played on the sentimental and lovestruck persona of the Zouave as a protagonist.