Jessie Franklin Turner


Jessie Franklin Turner was an American fashion designer based in New York in the early 20th century. She was notable for being one of the first American designers to create unique designs, rather than imitating or copying Paris fashions.

Personal life

Franklin Turner stated that she was born in St. Louis in Missouri, to Richard Major Turner of Wheeling, West Virginia, and Louise Pullen Franklin of Plymouth, Massachusetts on 10 December 1881, although Morris de Camp Crawford presented her as being a Virginian native from the state's tidewater region when promoting her alongside other American textile and fashion designers in his 1916-1922 "Made in America" campaign. She married Charles Hiram Ferguson, but retained her maiden name professionally. She died in 1956.

Career

Franklin Turner worked as a lingerie buyer for Bonwit Teller between 1916 and 1918, then went on to design for their custom salon under the name of Winifred Warren Inc. In 1919 the American Museum of Natural History featured a selection of 'Winifred Warren' teagowns and lingerie for Bonwit Teller in their Exhibition of Industrial Art in Textiles and Costumes.
Franklin Turner's shop, which she opened in 1923, was based at 410 Park Avenue, New York. Developing her work by directly draping on a model, Franklin Turner was known particularly for flowing tea gowns and exotic evening dresses, often made in fabrics of her own design. In 1923 she acknowledged the influence of historical and ethnographic textiles in the Brooklyn Museum's collections on many of her most successful designs. These influences continued throughout her career. In 1938, a day dress based on an Ainu coat was exhibited alongside the original coat in the second annual exhibition of New York's Museum of Costume Art. Franklin Turner was one of the directors of this museum, which was located in the Rockefeller Center on the fourth floor.
In 1923 Paul Poiret was quoted as having declared Franklin Turner "the only designer of genius in the United States." When the designer Elizabeth Hawes returned to New York in 1928 to launch her American couture house, she noted that Jessie Franklin Turner was possibly the only American dressmaker at that time to offer high end clothing that was completely her own work, and not made in imitation of Paris fashions.
Although Franklin Turner reportedly never met any of her clients, she was known for her unique and striking clothing for individualistic dressers such as the textile designer Dorothy Liebes and the socialite and fashion icon Millicent Rogers. She retired in 1943.

Exhibitions

Garments by Jessie Franklin Turner are in the permanent collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Rhode Island School of Design Museum.