American Girls 2002

American Girls 2002




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American Girls 2002
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
" American Girls " is a single by American rock band Counting Crows . It is the second track on their fourth studio album, Hard Candy (2002), and features Sheryl Crow on backing vocals. The song was released on May 13, 2002.

This 2000s rock song -related article is a stub . You can help Wikipedia by expanding it .






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Historical Characters





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Truly Me





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Create Your Own





Wellie Wishers





Bitty Baby









Historical Books‎





Miscellaneous Books





Movies





American Girl Magazine









American Girl Place





AG Rewards





American Girl Hospital





American Girl Benefit Sale









Girls of Many Lands





American Girl Magazine





History Mysteries





Miss AG Bear





Bitty Twins





American Girl Minis





Hopscotch Hill School





Generic Items





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American Girl Wiki is a FANDOM Books Community.

All dolls, outfits, furniture, and accessories released in 2002. This includes Historical Characters , American Girl Today , Girls of the Year and Bitty Baby .


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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is the latest accepted revision , reviewed on 4 September 2022 .
This article uses bare URLs , which are uninformative for readers and may be threatened by link rot . Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style. Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting, such as Reflinks ( documentation ) , reFill ( documentation ) and Citation bot ( documentation ) . ( August 2022 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message )
For the film based on the character, see Kit Kittredge: An American Girl .


^ "20510909 Corporate – American Girl" . americangirl.com . Archived from the original on 16 December 2012 . Retrieved 12 September 2015 .

^ "AGPT: History of AG" . American Girl Playthings . Retrieved 21 June 2013 .

^ Jump up to: a b c Kindelan, Katie (28 May 2014). "American Girl Rebuts Critics After Dropping Minority Dolls – ABC News" . Retrieved 29 May 2014 .

^ Mac Kay, Allie; Cruz, Nancy (27 August 2014). "American Girl 'BeForever' Collection" . KTLA . Retrieved 29 August 2014 .

^ Fisher, Daniela (28 August 2014). "Mattel intros new American Girls line" . Kidscreen . Retrieved 29 August 2014 .

^ "Children's Literature – Meet Janet Shaw" . Archived from the original on 16 October 2012 . Retrieved 21 June 2013 .

^ Rubin, Julia (29 June 2015). "All Dolled Up: The Enduring Triumph of American Girl" . Racked . Retrieved 3 July 2015 .

^ Wilson, Kristian. "This American Girls News Is Huge For '90s Kids" . Retrieved 28 March 2018 .

^ "American Girls Collection Book Comparisons" . Emily's American Girl Dolls . Retrieved 2 July 2013 .

^ "American Girl doll, Caroline, celebrated in Sackets Harbor" . Watertown Daily Times . Retrieved 8 July 2013 .

^ "American Girl Doll Kirsten to be Archived" . Doll Diaries . Retrieved 21 June 2013 .

^ Jump up to: a b http://www.theseattletraveler.com/at-seattle-childrens-theater-addy-an-american-girl-story/

^ "20510909 Corporate – American Girl" . americangirl.com . Retrieved 12 September 2015 .

^ "American Girl Archives – The official site for preserving a character's place in American Girl history" . americangirl.com . Retrieved 12 September 2015 .

^ Jump up to: a b Solly, Meilan (2022-08-25). "New American Girl Doll Celebrates Black Joy During the Harlem Renaissance" . Smithsonian Magazine . Retrieved 2022-08-26 .

^ Jump up to: a b Zahn, James (2022-08-23). "Celebrate Harlem History with American Girl's Claudie Wells" . The Toy Insider . Retrieved 2022-08-26 .

^ Koch, Makenzie (2022-08-23). "Meet the newest American Girl doll, Claudie Wells from 1920s Harlem" . FOX 4 Kansas City WDAF-TV | News, Weather, Sports . Retrieved 2022-09-01 .

^ Tripp, Valerie (2000). Meet Kit . American Girl Publishing. ISBN 1584850167 . Kit's real name was Margaret Mildred Kittredge. She was named after her mother and an aunt of her dad's.

^ DeVries, Jack (1 August 2008). "American Girl: Kit Mystery Challenge Review – IGN" . IGN . Retrieved 23 May 2014 .

^ "American Girl Kit: A Tree House of My Own – GameSpot" . GameSpot . Retrieved 23 May 2014 .

^ Jump up to: a b c d "American Girl® Debuts New Digital Content For Girls, About Girls, And Starring." PRNewsWire . Retrieved 5 November 2015 .

^ Jump up to: a b Hughes, Heather (18 November 2016). "The Young and the Restless Spoilers: Alyvia Alyn Lind Stars in Dolly Parton's 'Christmas of Many Colors: Circle of Love' " . Celeb Dirty Laundry . Retrieved 22 November 2016 .

^ Fillo, MaryEllen. "American Girl Introduces Newest BeForever Doll, Maryellen Larkin, Fulfilling A Dream" . Hartford Courant . Retrieved 26 November 2015 .

^ Pearl, Diana. "New American Girl Doll Maryellen Larkin" . People . Retrieved 25 August 2015 .

^ Santoro, Alessia (27 August 2015). "New American Girl Doll Maryellen Larkin From the 1950s" . PopSugar . Retrieved 27 August 2015 .

^ Simon, Benjamin. "American Girl Releasing Post-War 1950s Doll" . The Inquisitr . Retrieved 25 August 2015 .

^ Raynor, Madeline (3 November 2016). "This American Girl Christmas special trailer will warm your heart — exclusive" . Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved 5 November 2016 .

^ Jump up to: a b Cavassuto, Maria (25 August 2016). "TV News: Marsai Martin of 'Black-ish' Becomes First American Girl" . Variety . Retrieved 25 August 2016 .

^ Brown, Kara (22 February 2016). "American Girl Introduces Melody, a Civil Rights-Era Doll From Detroit" . Jezebel . Retrieved 22 February 2016 .

^ Jump up to: a b "American Girl debuts Melody Ellison, African American doll from civil rights era – CBS News" . CBS News . 22 February 2016 . Retrieved 22 February 2016 .

^ Brown, Sevonna (24 February 2016). "American Girl 'Civil Rights' Doll and Black Girlhood" . Time . Retrieved 25 February 2016 .

^ Samoy, Kayla (23 February 2016). "American Girl introduces Melody, a black doll from Civil Rights Era" . USA Today . Retrieved 25 February 2016 .

^ Patrick, Denise Lewis (1 January 2016). No Ordinary Sound: A Classic Featuring Melody . American Girl . American Girl Publishing. ISBN 978-1609587512 .

^ Barsanti, Sam (25 August 2016). "Black-ish's Marsai Martin cast as American Girl Melody" . The A.V. Club . Retrieved 25 August 2016 .

^ "Julie: An American Girl Musical" . ReelzChannel.com . Archived from the original on 2008-06-18 . Retrieved 2008-08-05 .

^ "Movies: About Julie: An American Girl Musical" . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times . 2010. Archived from the original on 2010-11-25.

^ Jump up to: a b "At American Girl, boy doll finally meets world – Chicago Tribune" . Chicago Tribune . Retrieved 24 February 2017 .

^ Hill, Erin (April 25, 2017). "American Girl Debuts First Korean-American Doll" . PEOPLE.com . Time Inc. Retrieved 23 December 2017 .

^ Casanova, Mary (2009). Chrissa . American Girl Publishing. ISBN 978-1593695668 . Chrissa's dying grandfather says her full name. "In a quiet voice, (Grandpa) said 'Just you, Chrissa Marie.[...]'

^ "HBO readies new American Girl" by Jennifer Netherby – Video Business, 9/12/2008

^ "Our Exclusive Interview with 'McKenna Shoots for the Stars' Lead Actress Jade Pettyjohn" . Simply Stacie . 11 July 2012 . Retrieved 14 November 2013 .

^ "New American Girl doll 'Isabelle Palmer' makes 2014 debut in Chicago" . ABC 7 Chicago . Retrieved 2 January 2014 .

^ "American Girl's 2014 Doll of the Year Revealed: Meet Isabelle the Dancer" . ABC News . Retrieved 2 January 2014 .

^ "Meet Isabelle: The New American Girl Doll of the Year! (Photos)" . Babble . 31 December 2013 . Retrieved 2 January 2014 .

^ Peppercorn, Ellen. "Meet Isabelle the 2014 American Girl Doll" . Thrifty and Chic Mom . Retrieved 2 January 2014 .

^ "Isabelle Dance Studio (iOS)" . VGChartz . Retrieved 2 January 2014 .

^ "Meet Grace Thomas, American Girl's 2015 Girl Of The Year" . KMBZ . 31 December 2014 . Retrieved 1 January 2015 .

^ "New American Girl Doll Grace Thomas For Sale: She's A Baker And Entrepreneur" . Inquisitr . 31 December 2014 . Retrieved 1 January 2015 .

^ "American Girl's 2015 Girl of the Year: Meet Grace Thomas, Baker and Entrepreneur" . ABC News . Retrieved 1 January 2015 .

^ "Meet Grace Thomas, American Girl's 2015 Girl of the Year" . MyCentralOregon . Retrieved 1 January 2015 .

^ Lafayette, Jon (17 February 2015). " 'MasterChef Junior' Whips Up American Girl Promo" . Broadcasting & Cable . Retrieved 19 February 2015 .

^ "American Girl Teams with 'MasterChef Junior' " . License! Global . Retrieved 19 February 2015 .

^ Tsai, Nancy (10 June 2015). "Grace Stirs Up Success: Q&A with Actress Olivia Rodrigo" . Barnes & Noble . Retrieved 1 January 2016 .

^ "Sweet Shop on the App Store on iTunes" . Apple Inc. Retrieved 1 January 2015 .

^ Jump up to: a b "American Girl's 2016 Girl of the Year Is Lea Clark, Photographer and Animal Lover" . ABC News . 31 December 2015 . Retrieved 1 January 2016 .

^ Jump up to: a b Orenstein, Hannah (31 December 2015). "American Girl's 2016 Doll of the Year Is Basically Bindi Irwin" . Seventeen . Retrieved 1 January 2016 .

^ Strickland, Ashley (January 10, 2018). "New American Girl doll is an aspiring Martian astronaut" . CNN . Retrieved 29 January 2018 .

^ Singh-Kurtz, Sangeeta; Singh-Kurtz, Sangeeta (2 January 2019). "American Girl's 2019 "Girl of the Year" has a screen-time problem" . Quartzy . Retrieved 20 January 2019 .

^ Falligant, Erin (26 December 2019). Joss . ISBN 978-1683371540 .

^ America, Good Morning (December 31, 2020). "American Girl's 2021 doll of the year is wildlife conservationist Kira Bailey" . Good Morning America . Retrieved February 18, 2021 .

^ Menza, Kaitlin (15 June 2016). "New American Girl Doll Line – WellieWishers" . Good Housekeeping . Retrieved 17 June 2016 .


American Girl is an American line of 18-inch (46 cm) dolls released originally in 1986 by Pleasant Company (now Mattel). The dolls portray eight- to eleven-year-old girls of a variety of ethnicities. They are sold with accompanying books told from the viewpoint of the girls. Originally the stories focused on various periods of American history, but were expanded in 1995 to include contemporary characters and stories, the latest addition being WellieWishers, a line of 14.5-inch (37 cm) dolls aimed for younger children.

Provided below is a list of characters from the Historical series (BeForever), Contemporary Characters, Girl of the Year, World by Us, and WellieWishers lines.

2014–current (BeForever re-release)

2018-2019 (BeForever re-release)
2021 (35th Anniversary)
2022-current (Historical Dolls re-release)

The Historical Characters (originally known as "The American Girls Collection" or, colloquially, "Historical Characters") were initially the main focus of Pleasant Company. This product line aims to teach aspects of American history through a six book series from the perspective of a nine-year-old girl living in that time period. Although the books are written for a target market of eight-to-thirteen-year-old girls, they endeavor to cover topics such as child labor , child abuse , poverty , racism , slavery , alcoholism , animal abuse , and war in a manner appropriate for the understanding and sensibilities of said market. [1]

The first dolls in the American Girl/Historical line (Samantha, Kirsten and Molly) shared the same face mold but had different hair and eye colors. The first dolls were created with white muslin bodies, but these cloth bodies were changed in 1991 from a white muslin to a matching flesh tone. This accommodated the low necklines of Late Colonial/Revolutionary period gowns produced for the Felicity Merriman character (also introduced in 1991). Additional face molds were later developed for other dolls, and the line to date includes ten characters covering the period 1764 to 1986.

The "Best Friends" line was introduced in 2004; supplemental characters from the core book series were created in doll form and marketed as "best friends" for some of the Historical Characters. These Best Friend dolls share the collections of the main characters, but each has her own book, and additional products were marketed under their names. [2] However, in May 2014, American Girl announced that Ruthie, along with Ivy, Cécile and Marie-Grace, will be retired from their historical roster, citing business reasons as they decided "to move away from the character-friend strategy within the line". [3]

A reboot of the Historical Characters line dubbed as BeForever was launched in August 2014, complete with redesigned outfits, a two-volume compilation of previously-released books, and a " Journey Book " for each character, with players taking the role of a present-day girl who found her way to the past and met up with one of the Historical girls. The line also coincided with the relaunch of Samantha Parkington , whose collection had been discontinued in 2008. [4] [5] On October 1, 2019, American Girl officially removed the BeForever branding from Historical Characters and by early 2020 most BeForever Central Series books were replaced with abridged Central Series books. American Girl also discontinued the My Journey books, the historical mystery books, and any remaining Best Friends books. In 2021, American Girl launched limited edition Anniversary Dolls of the first six Historical Dolls for their 35th Anniversary. They were discontinued by 2022.

Kaya is a young girl from the Nimiipuu or Nez Perce tribe living in the pre-contact Northwest . Themes in her core series focus on leadership,
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