Nine Patch quilt dated 1806 by Charlotte Roe,
Virgil, New York.
Smithsonian Institution
Our patchwork quilt traditions derive from Europe, particularly England and the Netherlands. With many unsigned early quilts found in the U.S. it's hard to say if the maker lived in York or New York.
But Charlotte Roe left us clues in her quilt, including the name of her town. The style---a simple nine-patch arranged block style---is also a clue to where she lived.
Nine Patch dated 1808,
Ester O Carver
If one were looking to make an early American quilt, this design would be
a good choice.
Nine Patch dated 1808 with initials A.T.E.
Collection Old Sturbridge Village Museum
The date on A.T.E.'s quilt.
The block can have a center square wider than the corner squares...
Nine Patch dated 1802 from Gammage Antiques, Maine.
Or nine squares of equal sizes
You would alternate the blocks with plain white fabric,
Setting them either on point or on the square.
The earliest example in my photo collection is the only 18th-century version, attributed to
Elizabeth Bowman Nace of Hanover, Pennsylvania. Hers is dated 1786 on the reverse.
I'm always less confident of a date on the back of a quilt as
someone might have recycled a bedsheet or other household linen
for a backing at a later date.
I wonder if so many nine patches survive because they were a girl's first quilt---kept for sentimental reasons. But Elizabeth Elizabeth Bauman Neas (or Elizabeth Bowman Nace) was not a girl in 1786. She was born in the 1740s so would have been in her forties when the quilt was made.
Elizabeth Bowman Nace (1741 - 1815)
Here's her grave in Mount Olivet Cemetery, Hanover, York County, PA
The Neas House in Hanover still stands.
The British Quilt Guild collection has 69 quilts made before 1840 in their online files. Not one is a nine patch set block by block.
Seen at the Vermont Quilt Festival.
Estimated Date 1830s.
So when you see one of these nine-patches with early prints you can assume it is American-made and feel pretty good about dating it from 1780 on, depending on the fabric.
Red & green & a scalloped edge
Perhaps 1845-1890
But do remember there's no late cut-off date. Quilters continued
to make nine-patches alternated with plain white squares throughout the 19th & 20th centuries
Here's an early nine-patch without an inscribed date but family history indicates it was made by Lavina Ensign (Woodruff Westover), begun when she was 5 in 1795.
See more at the Litchfield Connecticut Historical Society:
Such an interesting history for this relatively humble quilt design. It's always one of my favorites because there are many variations and settings. Thanks for these lovely historical facts.
ReplyDeleteGlad to see these, as I am a nine-patch enthusiast!
ReplyDeleteI believe that 1802 quilt is the one we documented in Woolwich (Maine) in 1990. My mistake in an earlier comment as I remembered it as 1804. There were two that day from the same family one was this one and the other was a Puss in the Corner medallion layout dated 1803 (or maybe 1804). I think Cyndi knows who owns that one. Cyndi has just finished a month long Shop Hop and will dig out the documentation info for you on this one and the 1797 one as soon as she can get to it. One of our reasons for uploading everything to the Quilt Index is so that we can dig out specific items like "dated" quilts. We are woefully behind!
ReplyDeleteSo are we In Kansas. Our slides shifted in color so badly....
ReplyDeleteI have pictures of both those quilts as they were on eBay years ago. There was a pair.