QUILTS & FABRIC: PAST & PRESENT


Monday, September 11, 2023

Great Find: "The Peony & Lily Quilt"

 

A quilt recently up for auction.
With inscribed information on date, maker, place and what is most remarkable: Pattern names.

"The Peony & Lily
L. Maria Dunbar
West Hamilton
Madison Co
NY
May 1, 1851"


The inscription seems to be a counted style of embroidery done in Turkey red thread---not a cross stitch. The auction house thought the date might be 1831---but no one was making red and green florals like this in 1831. The date is 1851---when the style was all the rage.

Two block patterns and a floral border with three or four designs.

The main floral with its 3 heart-shapes is an unusual design and I don't believe I've seen it before. We might call it a rose. But she called it a peony.

Which is the Peony and which the Lily?
Look at the leaves.

Maria captured the Paeonia lactiflora leaves accurately.


As I say we might think of these as roses. In my Encyclopedia of Applique you can find dozens and dozens of published patterns for "roses" and about a dozen named "peony."

Encyclopedia of Applique

Is that really a rose Marie Webster? Or is it a Piney?
Pronunciation and spelling of the word peony might be one reason we call them roses. We have so few examples of 19th-century quilts with the pattern name inscribed. But Maria Dunbar's makes three peonies.


Shelburne Museum Collection
In 1847, Parnel R. Grumley Pierce (1820-1898) wrote " The Peony and Prairie Flower No 6 " on the back of her quilt.
See more about Parnel here:
http://barbarabrackman.blogspot.com/2021/01/parnel-grumleys-peony-prairie-flower.html

New England Quilt Museum Collection
Binney Collection
"The Piony"

Note the leaves.


Parnel's peony

"Peony" from Ruth Finley's 1929 book

We also have published records of peony quilts as fair entries.

Mrs. A.A. Hosmer won a prize in New York in 1846 for
a "quilt (peony figure.)"

A fair in Troy, Kansas in 1872---Mrs Young's Peony losing out
to Mrs. Parker's California Wheel (we could digress into that name but NO!)

This year for the block-of-the month at my CivilWarQuilts blog we are appliqueing an Herbarium, which has made me aware of how important botanical studies were to mid-19th-century women. They would notice leaves.

So this must be Maria Dunbar's Lily.


Mrs. Waters entered a "Lilly Pattern" in a Pennsylvania fair in 1851

A name that has endured.

One other name in Parnel Grumley's inscription: The Prairie Flower, a name that seems more a metaphor than botanic.


1854
Mrs. J. P. Horner's Boone County, Missouri Fair winner, 
The Prairie Flower


Prairie Flowers?

1858

5 comments:

  1. That is interesting, the spelling of peony. My grandmother always called it a piony with the i as a short vowel sound!

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  2. In Dutch we call the peony : pioenroos. The accent is on oe, pronounced as oo in cool. Roos as rose.

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  3. Maria's quilt is beautiful! I'd say that piony is a variant spelling of peony rather than a misspelling.

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    1. Nann---you are right---not mispelled. That's not my caption. I wonder how many ways people spelled and pronounced the word and do today. I guess I could look it up in the Dictionary of Regional English. I say paan'ee.

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  4. These are such beauties! Thanks for the history being them.

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