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The
Badgett Quadruplets:
Galveston’s Sweethearts
During the month of September, the Rosenberg Library will exhibit a collection of very special vintage paper dolls. The dolls depict the Badgett Quadrapulets, a set of four girls born in Galveston in 1939. The quads—named Jeraldine, Joyce, Joan, and Jeanette— were dubbed “the miracles of Treasure Isle” by the press and became media darlings during the 1940s.
The citizens of Galveston embraced the Badgett family, raising funds to build a new home suitable for the quadruplets. The two-story white house was located at 927 Broadway. As part of the donation agreement, Mr. and Mrs. Badgett had to agree to open their home to visitors for several hours each day so that the public could view the baby girls and take pictures with them. Quadruplets are rare, occurring once in 670,000 cases. The Badgett Quads became an overnight sensation nation-wide. Images of Joan, Joyce, Jeraldine, and Jeanette Badgett appeared in thousands of newspaper articles, magazines, and postcards. They were featured in advertising campaigns for war bonds during WWII and made hundreds of appearances at special events to entertain American troops. Baylor University awarded scholarships to all four girls, and they were made honorary members of organizations such as the Girl Scouts, the Kilgore College Rangerettes, and the American Women’s Voluntary Service. When celebrity entertainers Phil Harris and Alice Faye were married at the Hotel Galvez in 1941, the Badgett girls were asked to serve as flower girls at the star-studded event.
The girls’ celebrity slowly waned, and by the time they graduated from Ball High School in the 1950s, they led normal lives. Two of the quads married and continued to live in Galveston, while the other two married and moved to Dallas. The Treasure of the Month is located in the main lobby on the first floor of Rosenberg Library at 2310 Sealy Avenue. For more information, please contact the Museum Office at 409-763-8854 x. 125. |