Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Political Roses: Radical Rose?

 

In the last post we discussed Whig Roses, which seem to be
central 8-lobed florals with 8 identical rotating buds.


In her 1915 book Marie Webster told us a tale of the Radical Rose, which
she did not picture.

 Her story above is filled with the typical casual racism of her time and seems to be
making fun of old ladies who had country accents.
And it's not believable.
Has anyone ever seen a circa 1860 appliqued floral with a black center?


I'd doubt it mainly because black cotton was not really available. Dyes that gave cotton a true black were harsh, tending to rot or fade quickly. The black silk in the quilt above is an all too familiar sight in the annals of black in antique quilts. 

Attributed to Margaret Smith, Loudon County, Tennessee

I am always looking for a circa 1860 rose with some kind of black as support for Webster's story,
but so far none. Although I have a lot of great rose pictures.

Many from online auctions as the simple roses
were so popular.

Here's a pattern for the rose above---12" Finished Block.

Simple and complex


Friday, October 25, 2024

Political Roses: Whigs & Democrats

 

1840 campaign-related quilt block with
Harrison's log cabin and the possum,
a Whig symbol

It's always a cliche at the four-year election cycle to write that women who could not vote expressed their political opinions in their quilt patterns. Cannot argue with that, particularly in the 1840-1860 years when the Whigs made good use of campaign imagery including quilt designs to elect their candidates William Henry Harrison in 1840 and Zachary Taylor in 1848.

Whig Rose dated 1856 from the late, lamented Darwin Brearley's inventory

These were also the decades of a creative increase in applique designs with quiltmakers adopting the red and green aesthetics and symmetries of Germanic traditional arts (something we've been discussing this month on our KIA page 6KnowItAlls.ShowUsYourQuilts  Click here and ask to join.  https://www.facebook.com/groups/1413180019082731  )

A Whig Rose quilt.
Whig Roses tend to be simple red and green florals based on mirroring symmetries.

The design features eight rotating elements around a central 8-lobed floral with perhaps the earliest published reference to that name about 1912 in The Household magazine.

From the Minnesota project and the Quilt Index

Who is the "Old Whig Rose" mentioned in this 1855
newspaper article? By then the Whigs were being replaced by the
 Republicans. Perhaps it's Millard Fillmore, a Whig turned anti-immigrant Know-Nothing. 

Florence Peto in the 1940s told her readers that a Whig Rose pattern differed from the rose of their chief political rival in that a Democrat Rose had cockscombs around the central flower---roosters being the 19th-c symbol of the party before the donkey.

Democrat Rose from Beardstown, Illinois

Peto speculated that the comb shape represented the Democratic rooster.

Oklahoma ballot, 1907
Party pictorials assisted illiterate voters in their choices

"Hark!"
Volkening Collection
A Democratic symbol or just a colorful rooster on a quilt?

Detail from the Rebecca Diggs quilt at the 
National Museum of American History

Possums not quite so easy to translate into bedding patterns.


You may be in the mood for some quilt therapy so here is a pattern for a Democrat Rose with combs.

There are literally hundreds of variations on the pattern with
a central floral and four images to fit a circular pattern into a square block.
Here's one I made up.
Print the sheets out 8-1/2" x 11". It's a tight fit in an 18" finished square. Add seams.

Couldn't find a pattern for a Republican Rose; seem to have dropped the ball on that one too.


Sunday, October 20, 2024

Kentucky's Earliest Quilts #2: Missing Quilts

 

Kentucky Historical Society
Quilt attributed to Catherine Gaither (1785-?) of Nelson County, Kentucky

Kentucky museums own a few cut-out-chintz quilts like this one. The style tends to be attributed to the years 1810 to 1850 after which other styles of fabric and applique took over.

Linda LaPinta's caption relects the museum's information about this
Broderie Perse or Cut-Out-Chintz quilt, said to have been sewn
about 1820, perhaps with assistance from Gaither family slaves. Catherine
is described as a daughter of Greenbury Gaither.

The Prussian blue cotton prints in the quilt indicate this date is
20 years too early. The bright blue scrolls and border were
quite popular in the United States after 1840 or so, particularly as stripes. 


Prussian blue yields a distinctive color and is prone to migrating as a brown stain, thus
is a good dating clue to "after 1840" in the U.S.

The genealogical information on Catherine Gaither (there are several of them) is confusing and needs to be pursued through our contemporary digital records. There is a Catharine Close Gaither (?-1870), married to Greenberry Gaither, buried in Baltimore (!)

1870 Baltimore obituary

See a recent post about another cut-out-chintz quilt attributed to a Kentuckian here:

Cut-out chintz style was replaced after 1840 by the technique of constructing florals from small-scale or solid bright cottons---conventional applique. Kentucky museums have quite a few of these mid-century fashionable pieces, standard style based on Germanic folk traditions featuring simplified flowers arranged in symmetrical repeats. These appliqued beauties in 1840-1865 style are frequently seen in Kentucky but certainly no evidence of early Kentucky quilts.

 D.A.R. Museum Collection
Red & green applique quilt attributed to Kentucky-born
 Lucy Kemper West (1792-1876.) Probable date: About 1850 
when red & green was high style.

Lucy, born there the year Kentucky became the 15th state, was one of 13 children of Virginians Judith Burdett & John Kemper. She lived in Garrard County where some spectacular mid-19th-century quilts were made. 

And here is my last post on the lack of surviving early Kentucky quilts:

Aside from surviving quilts we can look for evidence of 18th-century bedding in memoirs, diaries and letters of the time and in the contemporary newspapers. Unfortunately---all  also in short supply in Kentucky’s first decades 1780-1820. 


Another option is probate records, wills and inventories of goods distributed after death. In 1933 June Estelle Stewart King published an investigation of early Kentucky wills and inventories, finding only four vaguely described bedquilts. For example: Peter Cartwright of Caldwell County died in 1809 leaving 2 feather beds (feather stuffed comforters), 5 bed quilts plus blankets and sheets, a bed tick and two beds. Five quilts for $16 meant each was worth more than a 1-year-old steer.

Alden O Brien, curator at the DAR Museum, helped me out by doing some searching in Kentucky probate records on Ancestry.com. Mercer County is an early county with records on line. She looked at the 1790s and found very few bed linens listed among the mentions of clothes, tools and livestock. She reports: "Bed and furniture," with "sometimes bedstead separately because, of course, bed means the mattress; furniture may mean the pillows and...what else? Never any sheets, once in a few instances a coverlid or other thing. Just ONE inclusion of bedquilts." The Mercer County records duplicate King's findings.

One explanation for the lack of quilts is that objects require a value to be counted and distributed to heirs. It is possible that by the time early Kentuckians died their family bedding, whether made in Kentucky or brought from an older state, was so worn that it had no value.

Gloria Seaman Allen examined Maryland probate records from 1710 to 1820 for her master’s thesis. She found far more quilts in that well-established colony and state than in Kentucky at the same time.  Inventories, wills and administrative accounts mentioned 311 quilts. (See her paper for the American Quilt Study Group in the 1984 Uncoverings Volume 5 here:

ttps://digitalcommons.unl.edu/aqsg-uncoverings/?fbclid=IwY2xjawFz7hRleHRuA2FlbQIxMAABHX5K0lcRl5t_NtVkrD1A5VZnfPqzUF8-5PzAkDPogp1ODKAJPoPq5Tx5_Q_aem_25nqg1soVTddcUR-50p3JA   )

Noting that it was people of wealth who had goods to be probated, Allen described bedding types as fashions changed. In colonial times before 1780 bedrugs (shaggy outer bedcovers) were the dominant bedding. 

Elaborate bedrug from Connecticut dated 1781
Lynne Zacek Bassett is our expert on Connecticut bedrugs; this one
was displayed in her exhibit at the Florence Griswold Museum in Old Lyme
several months ago. They look just like the "hooked rugs" my friends
are making today---just larger, a lot larger.
UPDATE: Lynne tells me they are NOT hooked; they are embroidered.

In the 1760s quilts appear in 28% of inventories. This finding tallied with her count of surviving pre-1780 quilted bedcovers in museum collections. 

MESDA owns a rare survivor, attributed to Marylander Elizabeth
Webster Downing, 1796.

“Almost no Maryland quilts survive from the period 1780,” Allen wrote. Bedding styles changed after 1800; quilts and coverlets became popular with the upper classes who left records. Between 1800-1820 quilts were 2/3 of the described bedcovers. Quilt ownership was a “subject of wealth,” e.g. slaveowners owned more quilts than non-slave holders. 

What did quilts look like in 1800?
An Orpah Harris (1774-?) lived in Providence, Rhode Island
 where this quilted bedcover might have been pieced
of strips of monochrome toile fabric, typical style at the time.

Allen’s Maryland findings help explain the lack of early Kentucky quilts. Before Kentucky’s statehood in 1780 quilted bedcovers were not the coastal colonists’ dominant bedding. Numbers of quilts increased after independence as the property of the wealthy. Wealthy people were not the type to emigrate across the Alleghenys to the rough frontier. New Kentuckians, the middle and lower classes, had no quilts to bring with them.

Silk quilt top pieced over Kentucky papers dating
 from 1857-1860; online auction

And apparently, Kentuckians did not become enthusiastic quiltmakers until after the 1840s when making patchwork bedding became a fashion.

Tuesday, October 15, 2024

Kentucky's Earliest Quilts

 


In 2011 I wrote an essay for the Quilt Index on our earliest quilts. A dozen years or so has passed since we identified these two quilts as early Kentucky quilts, made before 1830 or so. I thought I'd revisit that essay considering Kentucky's earliest quilts. You can read the essay at this link:

Until the American Revolution commenced in 1776, the area that became Kentucky was part of the great colony of Virginia, stretching from the Atlantic and the Chesapeake Bay west across the Appalachian Mountain range up to the Great Lakes. Virginia claimed what would become the states of Ohio, Illinois and Indiana as well as all of Kentucky.


During the Revolution Virginia's colonial government, attempting to administer a large, inaccessible area populated by dozens of native tribes, began to deal with Virginians hoping to move west by consolidating boundaries on the western side of the Appalachians into a single county named Kentucke with an e.

Kentucke County before the Revolution

Kentucke was used by the Indigenous tribes as hunting land and it's that abundance of game that first attracted Virginians settled east of the mountains.

The green line is a high point in the Appalachian range,
 a barrier to settlement. The blue line is the Ohio River.
One could float the Ohio or cross the Appalachians to get to Kentucky.

By the turn of the century the natives were gone, replaced in the familiar, shameful story by settlers of European and African heritage who created dynasties at one social level and at another families working the hardscrabble soil to depletion. 

Early immigrants became "First Families," as in this 1920 book.

Population figures show the 1790 census counted 74,000 new immigrants in the area; ten years later there were 221,000 living in the state. Population figures also tell us that the sources of immigration changed. By statehood most Kentuckians were from neighboring states other than Virginia---North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Maryland.

Living across the Ohio in Cincinnati I grew up with Kentucky quilts and wondered what those early European immigrants brought in the way of quilts. The most recent book of three on Kentucky quilts (see list at page bottom) is Linda LaPinta's Kentucky Quilts and Quiltmakers: Three Centuries of Creativity, Community, and Commerce. She writes that the state's “earliest quilts arrived with their makers who migrated over the Wilderness Road.”

Daniel Boone Escorting Settlers through the Cumberland Gap
By George Caleb Bingham, born in 1811
Collection of Mildred Lane Kemper Museum at Washington University

Bingham's painting from about 1850 has created an indelible image of the Cumberland Gap, the natural Wilderness Road through the Appalachians to Kentucky. How accurate? Do notice the narrow gap between rocks and the limited transportation---human foot and equines---horses and probably mules.


Knowing what we do (or think we do) about bedcoverings and migration LaPinta's statement seems logical. Early settlers brought their Virginia culture with them but did they bring their quilted or patchwork bedding? 

Travel on the Ohio about 1780 meant flat boats powered by humans, not 
the comfortable steamships, the floating hotels of the mid 19th-century.

Early quilts (1775-1830) supposedly brought through the Cumberland Gap or on the Ohio River are in short supply. Surveys of Kentucky’s major museums and national collections that might be repositories reveal no 18th-century examples attributed to Kentucky residents. Identifying quilts before that date is relatively easy because new technologies, trade and taste developed in style, techniques and fabric in the 1830s.

Sarah Runyan Anderson (1771 - 1828) converted drapes into
a quilted bedcovering, now in the collection of the Kentucky Historical Society.

The Kentucky quilt books show one example that might have been made prior to 1830. Sarah Runyan Anderson’s wholecloth bedcover was assembled from a European monochrome toile first printed with copper plates in 1785 (and reprinted several times.)  Her toile quilt was accompanied by a family history with historical support. New Jersey-born Sarah moved to Kentucky where she attended an estate sale and bought the old window curtains recycled into this quilted piece. As she died in 1828 this may be the earliest surviving Kentucky-made quilt.





Kentucky museums own several examples of white work bedcovers, which are wholecloth monochrome quilts, quilted, stuffed and/or embroidered on high-quality white cotton (or a cotton/flax mix.) Some may date to the early-19th century when American mills developed the technology to produce such luxury fabric. 

Whitework exhibit at Western Kentucky University
The bedcovers have to be examined in the cloth to appreciate
the fine needlework. The style was popular in the first decades
of the 19th century when classical white imagery was a fashionable
link to Greek ideals.

The Kentucky Museum at Western Kentucky University owns a whitework quilt attributed to Temperance Wren Sharp (1783/1788-1858) and an appliqued, stuffed quilt they attribute to her daughter, another Temperance Sharp (1829-1877.)


This all-white stuffed and quilted piece is attributed to the elder
of the Temperance Sharps made, it was said, before her wedding in 1816. 
The technique uses a filler of plain quilting---diagonal lines here to make the
stuffed work (grapes) and corded lines (vines) pop out.

Western Kentucky University

The red & green applique quilt on the right is attributed to the younger Temperance. Similarities in the stuffed work designs are striking with leafy vines growing out of simple rosettes. In the catalog headings the whitework quilt at left is dated as 1806; the applique as 1807 (both then by the elder Temperance?) We know so much more about dating quilts now we can view the red and green quilt's alleged date as far too early. It must be after 1840 or so, style disputing the early date of 1806 for the similar quilt on the left.

See a link with a more accurate date for the second quilt in the actual caption here:
1850 Census Garrard County, Kentucky
Mother and daughter living with son Will, a merchant.

The elder Sharp may have been among the ambitious Kentucky seamstresses who stitched these but one also must take into account that such luxury bedcovers were consumer goods, a French export. Any whitework masterpiece we might view as a pleasant picture of early rural elegance could actually reflect a cottage industry in France.


Another possible source for early Kentucky quilts is national museums. Neither the Smithsonian nor the International Quilt Museum show Kentucky-made quilts attributed to the pre-1840 changes in techniques and fabrics. The D.A.R. Museum owns two older quilts that I cited in my essay as early quilts/ Kentucky made. Their genealogical work and mine, however, put those Kentucky origins in doubt.


Returning to the Kentucky-made quilts in my Quilt Index essay. This quilt, now in the DAR Museum, is attributed to Martha Harness Darst, It measures almost 120" wide.

Martha Harness Darst (1788-1854)

Martha married Isaac Darst (1790-1844) in 1817 when the quilt may have indeed been stitched. But there is so far no evidence Martha or any of her immediate family lived in Kentucky. (I have no idea where I found that geographical source.) She's buried in Circleville, Pickaway County, Ohio, about 30 miles south of Columbus. Her birthplace is thought to have Moorefield, Virginia (now West Virginia.)

The D.A.R. has two stuffed-work quilts) attributed to the Darst family
Lovely early quilts, but I am afraid they have nothing to do with Kentucky.

Next Posts: More on early Kentucky quilts. Why don't we see them?

Three books on Kentucky quilts:

Mary Washington Clarke, Kentucky Quilts and Their Makers. University Press of Kentucky, Lexington, 1976.

Jonathan Holstein, John Finley & the Kentucky Quilt Project, Kentucky Quilts 1800-1900. Kentucky Quilt Project, 1982.

Linda Elisabeth LaPinta, Kentucky Quilts and Quiltmakers: Three Centuries of Creativity, Community, and Commerce. University Press of Kentucky, Lexington, 2023.