Carol Hemingway
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Carol was born 1911. She was the fourth daughter and fifth child of
the Hemingways. She died in 2002.
{Click an image to enlarge it}
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Carol walks on the beach in Sanibel, Florida, with her father, Dr.
Clarence Hemingway. She appears modest and reserved, not playful and
childlike. Her clothing is distinctly feminine.
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Carol observes her father fishing. The photograph demonstrates the
large role that traditionally masculine activities played in the Hemingway
family.
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Carol on the beach with her mother, Grace Hall Hemingway. She remains
reserved, not like a typical child.
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Carol actually fishes with her father, but she is still dressed like
a little woman.
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Carol holds and supports her brother Leicester, indicating the early
childcare all the girls learned.
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With Madeleine in Windmere, right.
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In this picture, Carol wanders in Lake Walloon.
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She plays with a boat, which is a typically masculine toy.
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Here, Carol and Leicester dress up. She is dressed as a Native American
woman, while he is a warrior. Even for leisure, the children were constrained
to their genders.
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Carol and Leicester, the youngest children, appear similarly like young
girls. Again, Grace Hall had wanted twins.
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Carol takes on the responsibility of a woman by looking after her
brother Leicester.
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Even though Carol and Leicester are playing, she has a maternal role.
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