A bargain assortment of various ethnic dolls from the 1960s to 1980s, most sold as inexpensive souvenirs, all from the same Salt Lake City estate. There are three types of Native American Indian dolls: a nicely hand made cloth Navajo style woman, a soft rubber Native American baby from Zions National Park, and a Jackson Hole Wyoming souvenir doll dressed in beaded fringed suede with a baby papoose on her back.
There are two Asian dolls. One is a Bradley style with painted face, big eyes, and a metal head dress with tassels, the other is a miniature in her own plastic dome. The little soft vinyl doll in the Mylar tube container appears to be a Spanish girl. The celluloid Canadian Mountie has an elaborate red coat with medals and insignia, plus a holster with a removable plastic gun. I'm not sure what the ethnicity is of the paper mache doll in in the straw hat. The little Colonial fur mice dolls were Bicentennial souvenirs with labels reading Original Fur Animals Made in W. Germany.
The largest doll is the Navajo style woman at 9-3/4 inches. The Asian dome doll and the Revolutionary era mice are about 3 inches high. There's a plastic stand, probably for the Jackson Hole doll, marked Carlson Dolls. All are in nice, displayable condition with no odors. The only issues are some light dust from display to a couple of dolls, stretched out elastic on the brown heart shape stand, and a crack to one of the sandals on the paper mache doll.