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Text
BRACKMAN
It recently occurred to me that there is a new year coming up in a week or two and we need a new pieced block of the month. How about: Twelve stellar blocks celebrating the Alcott Family of Concord, Massachusetts, their friends and associates during the Civil War. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: JUNE 2021 One could tell America's story through one family--- tales of each generation and their chronological contexts. A prime example would be the Key/Lloyd/Tayloe/Scotts, including stories of the first Phillip Barton Key who remained loyal to the British in the Revolution to his nephew Philip Barton Key II, murdered by Dan Sickles, later a Major General in the Union Army, and ending with novelist F CIVIL WAR QUILTS: SETS FOR HANDS ALL AROUND BOM Next week (just in time for Tony's birthday) we are starting our 2021 pieced BOM Hands All Around: Alcotts At War with the first sawtooth star variation in the series. You may want to be thinking about how you are going to set the stars and how much fabric you need. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: SQUARE IN A SQUARE SET FOR HANDS ALL AROUND Sampler Quilt to Recall the Civil War Along the Kansas/Missouri Border. A BOM with 14" traditional blocks and lots of history. I'm out of books but check Amazon by clicking on the link below. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: HANDS ALL AROUND #3: ANNA'S CHOICE FORAUTHOR:BARBARA BRACKMAN
Anna's Choice from a late 19th-century Pennsylvania quilt. Anna's Choice ( BlockBase #1141a) is the perfect star to remember the bride. The block is pieced of one triangle, shaded and turned to make an eight-pointed star with no Y seams. Cutting: The HST triangle C. 8” Block (2-Inch Grid) C—Cut 16 squares 2-7/8”. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2021 BOM LADIES AID NEW YORK SAMPLERAUTHOR: BARBARABRACKMAN
Sampler Quilt to Recall the Civil War Along the Kansas/Missouri Border. A BOM with 14" traditional blocks and lots of history. I'm out of books but check Amazon by clicking on the link below. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: ROWENA HASBROUCK'S CIVIL WARAUTHOR: BARBARA BRACKMAN In August 1862 he left Rowena and their son Herman Jacob, just a few weeks old, enlisting in New York's 156th Infantry. Rowena saved many of his letters, mostly from 1863 & 1864. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: LADIES' AID SAMPLER #2: PRIZE COWSAUTHOR: BARBARABRACKMAN
Ladies' Aid Sampler #2: Prize Cows. Ladies' Aid Sampler #2 Cow by Becky Brown. E. Dezendorf's block in an 1855 quilt from Rockland County. sold at a Skinner's Auction. Block corners in this quilt are visually connected by four sprigs. rather than four hearts. Now, you might think a cow is an odd image for. an album quilt but not in NewYork,
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: ENDLESS STAIRS---A QUILT FOR OUR TIMES Endless Stairs---A Quilt for Our Times. A simple pattern to consider some complex philosophies of the past. We are living through difficult times as people try to understand prejudices of the past---prejudices freely expressed by historical figures we respect. We also have to face the history of economic systems that made that bigotry systemic. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 11 LONDON SQUARE London Square by Becky Brown. London Square is a variation of the popular late-19th-century design also called Ocean Waves. (See #3163 in BlockBase.) The name was published by the Famous Features syndicate in the mid 20th century. We can use it to recall Fanny Kemble's courageous and clever move to shape public opinion. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2021 PIECED BOM: HANDS ALL AROUNDAUTHOR: BARBARABRACKMAN
It recently occurred to me that there is a new year coming up in a week or two and we need a new pieced block of the month. How about: Twelve stellar blocks celebrating the Alcott Family of Concord, Massachusetts, their friends and associates during the Civil War. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: JUNE 2021 One could tell America's story through one family--- tales of each generation and their chronological contexts. A prime example would be the Key/Lloyd/Tayloe/Scotts, including stories of the first Phillip Barton Key who remained loyal to the British in the Revolution to his nephew Philip Barton Key II, murdered by Dan Sickles, later a Major General in the Union Army, and ending with novelist F CIVIL WAR QUILTS: SETS FOR HANDS ALL AROUND BOM Next week (just in time for Tony's birthday) we are starting our 2021 pieced BOM Hands All Around: Alcotts At War with the first sawtooth star variation in the series. You may want to be thinking about how you are going to set the stars and how much fabric you need. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: SQUARE IN A SQUARE SET FOR HANDS ALL AROUND Sampler Quilt to Recall the Civil War Along the Kansas/Missouri Border. A BOM with 14" traditional blocks and lots of history. I'm out of books but check Amazon by clicking on the link below. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: HANDS ALL AROUND #3: ANNA'S CHOICE FORAUTHOR:BARBARA BRACKMAN
Anna's Choice from a late 19th-century Pennsylvania quilt. Anna's Choice ( BlockBase #1141a) is the perfect star to remember the bride. The block is pieced of one triangle, shaded and turned to make an eight-pointed star with no Y seams. Cutting: The HST triangle C. 8” Block (2-Inch Grid) C—Cut 16 squares 2-7/8”. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2021 BOM LADIES AID NEW YORK SAMPLERAUTHOR: BARBARABRACKMAN
Sampler Quilt to Recall the Civil War Along the Kansas/Missouri Border. A BOM with 14" traditional blocks and lots of history. I'm out of books but check Amazon by clicking on the link below. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: ROWENA HASBROUCK'S CIVIL WARAUTHOR: BARBARA BRACKMAN In August 1862 he left Rowena and their son Herman Jacob, just a few weeks old, enlisting in New York's 156th Infantry. Rowena saved many of his letters, mostly from 1863 & 1864. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: LADIES' AID SAMPLER #2: PRIZE COWSAUTHOR: BARBARABRACKMAN
Ladies' Aid Sampler #2: Prize Cows. Ladies' Aid Sampler #2 Cow by Becky Brown. E. Dezendorf's block in an 1855 quilt from Rockland County. sold at a Skinner's Auction. Block corners in this quilt are visually connected by four sprigs. rather than four hearts. Now, you might think a cow is an odd image for. an album quilt but not in NewYork,
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: ENDLESS STAIRS---A QUILT FOR OUR TIMES Endless Stairs---A Quilt for Our Times. A simple pattern to consider some complex philosophies of the past. We are living through difficult times as people try to understand prejudices of the past---prejudices freely expressed by historical figures we respect. We also have to face the history of economic systems that made that bigotry systemic. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 11 LONDON SQUARE London Square by Becky Brown. London Square is a variation of the popular late-19th-century design also called Ocean Waves. (See #3163 in BlockBase.) The name was published by the Famous Features syndicate in the mid 20th century. We can use it to recall Fanny Kemble's courageous and clever move to shape public opinion. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: SARAH STILWELL'S CIVIL WAR Not many quilts dated during the Civil War have survived. Fabric was scarce and many bedcovers went to hospitals. Calico seems to have been available in New Paltz at several general stores, if a bit expensive compared to pre-war prices. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: JUNE 2021 One could tell America's story through one family--- tales of each generation and their chronological contexts. A prime example would be the Key/Lloyd/Tayloe/Scotts, including stories of the first Phillip Barton Key who remained loyal to the British in the Revolution to his nephew Philip Barton Key II, murdered by Dan Sickles, later a Major General in the Union Army, and ending with novelist F CIVIL WAR QUILTS: SQUARE IN A SQUARE SET FOR HANDS ALL AROUND Sampler Quilt to Recall the Civil War Along the Kansas/Missouri Border. A BOM with 14" traditional blocks and lots of history. I'm out of books but check Amazon by clicking on the link below. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: HANDS ALL AROUND #3: ANNA'S CHOICE FOR Anna's Choice from a late 19th-century Pennsylvania quilt. Anna's Choice ( BlockBase #1141a) is the perfect star to remember the bride. The block is pieced of one triangle, shaded and turned to make an eight-pointed star with no Y seams. Cutting: The HST triangle C. 8” Block (2-Inch Grid) C—Cut 16 squares 2-7/8”. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: SETS FOR HANDS ALL AROUND BOM Next week (just in time for Tony's birthday) we are starting our 2021 pieced BOM Hands All Around: Alcotts At War with the first sawtooth star variation in the series. You may want to be thinking about how you are going to set the stars and how much fabric you need. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: FORGIVING SETS FOR SAMPLER BLOCKS Cut the triangles a little larger than what the pattern calls for. My handy-dandy, blue Fons & Porter's Quilters Need to Know Card tells me to cut squares 18-1/4" to set a 12" finished block. Cut them larger---19". Cut into triangles with 2 cuts. Deirdre Bond-Abel used this square-in-a-square solution for sampler blocks for her Hat CreekQuilts.
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: HANDS ALL AROUND #1: HIDDEN NINE PATCH Make 4 B/C Units. Add A to ends of 2 of those. Make a Nine Patch of the D squares. Add B/C Units to either side. Our youngest model maker is Denniele's granddaughter Addison. who is 10. She chose Dear Stella fabric with an array of insects, perfect for Abba Alcott, a CIVIL WAR QUILTS: SEVEN STARS/SEVEN SISTERS 2 The earliest reference: The Nancy Cabot column in the Chicago Tribune printed the pattern on March 13, 1933, and captioned it "Seven Sisters." Loretta Leitner Rising, the columnist, dedicated the quilt to the seven lovely daughters of old Virginia's Fowler family and gave the block two other names: Seven Stars and Virginia Pride. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 49 YANKEE PUZZLE Block from about 1900. Recall the State of the Union in 1861 with an old block called Yankee Puzzle by Ruth Finley in her 1929 quilt book. Other names for the design are Big Dipper, Electric Fan, Hour Glass and Pork and Beans. (BlockBase #1195b) CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 4 TEXAS TEARS 4 Texas Tears. Texas Tears. by Becky Brown. Texas Tears is a variation of a quilt block printed about 1890 by the Ladies' Art Company, a St. Louis pattern source. We can use it to remember Sam Houston. Sam Houston wearing his broad-brimmed hat. and serape in the early 1860s. Sam Houston was Governor of both Tennessee and Texas. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: JUNE 2021 One could tell America's story through one family--- tales of each generation and their chronological contexts. A prime example would be the Key/Lloyd/Tayloe/Scotts, including stories of the first Phillip Barton Key who remained loyal to the British in the Revolution to his nephew Philip Barton Key II, murdered by Dan Sickles, later a Major General in the Union Army, and ending with novelist F CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2021 PIECED BOM: HANDS ALL AROUNDAUTHOR: BARBARABRACKMAN
It recently occurred to me that there is a new year coming up in a week or two and we need a new pieced block of the month. How about: Twelve stellar blocks celebrating the Alcott Family of Concord, Massachusetts, their friends and associates during the Civil War. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: FORGIVING SETS FOR SAMPLER BLOCKS Cut the triangles a little larger than what the pattern calls for. My handy-dandy, blue Fons & Porter's Quilters Need to Know Card tells me to cut squares 18-1/4" to set a 12" finished block. Cut them larger---19". Cut into triangles with 2 cuts. Deirdre Bond-Abel used this square-in-a-square solution for sampler blocks for her Hat CreekQuilts.
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: SETS FOR HANDS ALL AROUND BOM Next week (just in time for Tony's birthday) we are starting our 2021 pieced BOM Hands All Around: Alcotts At War with the first sawtooth star variation in the series. You may want to be thinking about how you are going to set the stars and how much fabric you need. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: CHARLESTON'S AFRICAN-AMERICAN SEAMSTRESSESAUTHOR:BARBARA BRACKMAN
A look at one small group of women---pre-Civil-War African-Americans in Charleston offers some context in an unusual city known for its chintz-style bedcovers. We can classify Charleston's African-American seamstresses as belonging to four economic categories: 1) Enslaved seamstresses. 2) Free women of color (as they were called) 3) Acategory
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2021 BOM LADIES AID NEW YORK SAMPLERAUTHOR: BARBARABRACKMAN
Quilt attributed to Susannah Butts Adsitt Boots Dutchess County, New York International Quilt Museum Sampler applique quilts were the fas CIVIL WAR QUILTS: CONTENTED COWS Sampler Quilt to Recall the Civil War Along the Kansas/Missouri Border. A BOM with 14" traditional blocks and lots of history. I'm out of books but check Amazon by clicking on the link below. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: LADIES' AID SAMPLER #2: PRIZE COWSAUTHOR: BARBARABRACKMAN
Ladies' Aid Sampler #2: Prize Cows. Ladies' Aid Sampler #2 Cow by Becky Brown. E. Dezendorf's block in an 1855 quilt from Rockland County. sold at a Skinner's Auction. Block corners in this quilt are visually connected by four sprigs. rather than four hearts. Now, you might think a cow is an odd image for. an album quilt but not in NewYork,
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: ENDLESS STAIRS---A QUILT FOR OUR TIMES Endless Stairs---A Quilt for Our Times. A simple pattern to consider some complex philosophies of the past. We are living through difficult times as people try to understand prejudices of the past---prejudices freely expressed by historical figures we respect. We also have to face the history of economic systems that made that bigotry systemic. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 49 YANKEE PUZZLE Block from about 1900. Recall the State of the Union in 1861 with an old block called Yankee Puzzle by Ruth Finley in her 1929 quilt book. Other names for the design are Big Dipper, Electric Fan, Hour Glass and Pork and Beans. (BlockBase #1195b) CIVIL WAR QUILTS: JUNE 2021 One could tell America's story through one family--- tales of each generation and their chronological contexts. A prime example would be the Key/Lloyd/Tayloe/Scotts, including stories of the first Phillip Barton Key who remained loyal to the British in the Revolution to his nephew Philip Barton Key II, murdered by Dan Sickles, later a Major General in the Union Army, and ending with novelist F CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2021 PIECED BOM: HANDS ALL AROUNDAUTHOR: BARBARABRACKMAN
It recently occurred to me that there is a new year coming up in a week or two and we need a new pieced block of the month. How about: Twelve stellar blocks celebrating the Alcott Family of Concord, Massachusetts, their friends and associates during the Civil War. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: FORGIVING SETS FOR SAMPLER BLOCKS Cut the triangles a little larger than what the pattern calls for. My handy-dandy, blue Fons & Porter's Quilters Need to Know Card tells me to cut squares 18-1/4" to set a 12" finished block. Cut them larger---19". Cut into triangles with 2 cuts. Deirdre Bond-Abel used this square-in-a-square solution for sampler blocks for her Hat CreekQuilts.
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: SETS FOR HANDS ALL AROUND BOM Next week (just in time for Tony's birthday) we are starting our 2021 pieced BOM Hands All Around: Alcotts At War with the first sawtooth star variation in the series. You may want to be thinking about how you are going to set the stars and how much fabric you need. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: CHARLESTON'S AFRICAN-AMERICAN SEAMSTRESSESAUTHOR:BARBARA BRACKMAN
A look at one small group of women---pre-Civil-War African-Americans in Charleston offers some context in an unusual city known for its chintz-style bedcovers. We can classify Charleston's African-American seamstresses as belonging to four economic categories: 1) Enslaved seamstresses. 2) Free women of color (as they were called) 3) Acategory
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2021 BOM LADIES AID NEW YORK SAMPLERAUTHOR: BARBARABRACKMAN
Quilt attributed to Susannah Butts Adsitt Boots Dutchess County, New York International Quilt Museum Sampler applique quilts were the fas CIVIL WAR QUILTS: CONTENTED COWS Sampler Quilt to Recall the Civil War Along the Kansas/Missouri Border. A BOM with 14" traditional blocks and lots of history. I'm out of books but check Amazon by clicking on the link below. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: LADIES' AID SAMPLER #2: PRIZE COWSAUTHOR: BARBARABRACKMAN
Ladies' Aid Sampler #2: Prize Cows. Ladies' Aid Sampler #2 Cow by Becky Brown. E. Dezendorf's block in an 1855 quilt from Rockland County. sold at a Skinner's Auction. Block corners in this quilt are visually connected by four sprigs. rather than four hearts. Now, you might think a cow is an odd image for. an album quilt but not in NewYork,
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: ENDLESS STAIRS---A QUILT FOR OUR TIMES Endless Stairs---A Quilt for Our Times. A simple pattern to consider some complex philosophies of the past. We are living through difficult times as people try to understand prejudices of the past---prejudices freely expressed by historical figures we respect. We also have to face the history of economic systems that made that bigotry systemic. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 49 YANKEE PUZZLE Block from about 1900. Recall the State of the Union in 1861 with an old block called Yankee Puzzle by Ruth Finley in her 1929 quilt book. Other names for the design are Big Dipper, Electric Fan, Hour Glass and Pork and Beans. (BlockBase #1195b) CIVIL WAR QUILTS: HANDS ALL AROUND: #6: OPEN WINDOW FOR 1 day ago · When the painting arrived in May, 1877 mother Abba wasthrilled:
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: SETS FOR HANDS ALL AROUND BOM Next week (just in time for Tony's birthday) we are starting our 2021 pieced BOM Hands All Around: Alcotts At War with the first sawtooth star variation in the series. You may want to be thinking about how you are going to set the stars and how much fabric you need. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: ROWENA HASBROUCK'S CIVIL WAR In August 1862 he left Rowena and their son Herman Jacob, just a few weeks old, enlisting in New York's 156th Infantry. Rowena saved many of his letters, mostly from 1863 & 1864. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: HANDS ALL AROUND #5: STAR PUZZLE FOR Block 5 is much like #3 but with a twist in the triangle shading. A Star Puzzle from the Iowa project & the Quilt Index. BlockBase #2146. Star Puzzle in the Ladies Art Company catalog. at the end of the 19th century. Cutting: You need four B triangles and CIVIL WAR QUILTS: HANDS ALL AROUND #1: HIDDEN NINE PATCH Make 4 B/C Units. Add A to ends of 2 of those. Make a Nine Patch of the D squares. Add B/C Units to either side. Our youngest model maker is Denniele's granddaughter Addison. who is 10. She chose Dear Stella fabric with an array of insects, perfect for Abba Alcott, a CIVIL WAR QUILTS: SHOPPING FOR REPRO PRINTS Sampler Quilt to Recall the Civil War Along the Kansas/Missouri Border. A BOM with 14" traditional blocks and lots of history. I'm out of books but check Amazon by clicking on the link below. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: CONTENTED COWS Sampler Quilt to Recall the Civil War Along the Kansas/Missouri Border. A BOM with 14" traditional blocks and lots of history. I'm out of books but check Amazon by clicking on the link below. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: HANDS ALL AROUND #2: BRONSON ALCOTT The real-life, self-reliant Abba Alcott was often left alone to raise her children during husband Bronson's absences. He spent six months in England when Louisa was ten and never seemed able to earn a living although he traveled the lecture circuit and opened and closed schools from Philadelphia to Boston, among them The Concord School of Philosophy in the back yard. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: ELIZABETH GRISHAM BROWN'S CRAZY QUILT The Browns were caught up in the crazy quilt fad of the. 1885-1900 years, which is when the quilt was likely made. Elizabeth & husband Joseph Emerson Brown (1821-1894) Monument on the grounds of the Georgia state capitol. Quiltmakers do not get many sculptural monuments and Elizabeth has two, due to her position as wife ofGeorgia's Civil War
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 3 SEVEN SISTERS When the Civil War began in 1861 Sarah Morgan was a well-to-do 19-year-old living in Baton Rouge, the capitol of Louisiana.She had a lively family centered in a row of substantial houses on Church Street(now Fourth).
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2021 PIECED BOM: HANDS ALL AROUNDAUTHOR: BARBARABRACKMAN
It recently occurred to me that there is a new year coming up in a week or two and we need a new pieced block of the month. How about: Twelve stellar blocks celebrating the Alcott Family of Concord, Massachusetts, their friends and associates during the Civil War. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: JUNE 2021 One could tell America's story through one family--- tales of each generation and their chronological contexts. A prime example would be the Key/Lloyd/Tayloe/Scotts, including stories of the first Phillip Barton Key who remained loyal to the British in the Revolution to his nephew Philip Barton Key II, murdered by Dan Sickles, later a Major General in the Union Army, and ending with novelist F CIVIL WAR QUILTS: SETS FOR HANDS ALL AROUND BOM Next week (just in time for Tony's birthday) we are starting our 2021 pieced BOM Hands All Around: Alcotts At War with the first sawtooth star variation in the series. You may want to be thinking about how you are going to set the stars and how much fabric you need. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: FORGIVING SETS FOR SAMPLER BLOCKS Cut the triangles a little larger than what the pattern calls for. My handy-dandy, blue Fons & Porter's Quilters Need to Know Card tells me to cut squares 18-1/4" to set a 12" finished block. Cut them larger---19". Cut into triangles with 2 cuts. Deirdre Bond-Abel used this square-in-a-square solution for sampler blocks for her Hat CreekQuilts.
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: CHARLESTON'S AFRICAN-AMERICAN SEAMSTRESSESAUTHOR:BARBARA BRACKMAN
A look at one small group of women---pre-Civil-War African-Americans in Charleston offers some context in an unusual city known for its chintz-style bedcovers. We can classify Charleston's African-American seamstresses as belonging to four economic categories: 1) Enslaved seamstresses. 2) Free women of color (as they were called) 3) Acategory
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: LADIES' AID SAMPLER #2: PRIZE COWSAUTHOR: BARBARABRACKMAN
Ladies' Aid Sampler #2: Prize Cows. Ladies' Aid Sampler #2 Cow by Becky Brown. E. Dezendorf's block in an 1855 quilt from Rockland County. sold at a Skinner's Auction. Block corners in this quilt are visually connected by four sprigs. rather than four hearts. Now, you might think a cow is an odd image for. an album quilt but not in NewYork,
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2021 BOM LADIES AID NEW YORK SAMPLERAUTHOR: BARBARABRACKMAN
Quilt attributed to Susannah Butts Adsitt Boots Dutchess County, New York International Quilt Museum Sampler applique quilts were the fas CIVIL WAR QUILTS: CONTENTED COWS Sampler Quilt to Recall the Civil War Along the Kansas/Missouri Border. A BOM with 14" traditional blocks and lots of history. I'm out of books but check Amazon by clicking on the link below. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: ENDLESS STAIRS---A QUILT FOR OUR TIMES Endless Stairs---A Quilt for Our Times. A simple pattern to consider some complex philosophies of the past. We are living through difficult times as people try to understand prejudices of the past---prejudices freely expressed by historical figures we respect. We also have to face the history of economic systems that made that bigotry systemic. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 49 YANKEE PUZZLE Block from about 1900. Recall the State of the Union in 1861 with an old block called Yankee Puzzle by Ruth Finley in her 1929 quilt book. Other names for the design are Big Dipper, Electric Fan, Hour Glass and Pork and Beans. (BlockBase #1195b) CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2021 PIECED BOM: HANDS ALL AROUNDAUTHOR: BARBARABRACKMAN
It recently occurred to me that there is a new year coming up in a week or two and we need a new pieced block of the month. How about: Twelve stellar blocks celebrating the Alcott Family of Concord, Massachusetts, their friends and associates during the Civil War. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: JUNE 2021 One could tell America's story through one family--- tales of each generation and their chronological contexts. A prime example would be the Key/Lloyd/Tayloe/Scotts, including stories of the first Phillip Barton Key who remained loyal to the British in the Revolution to his nephew Philip Barton Key II, murdered by Dan Sickles, later a Major General in the Union Army, and ending with novelist F CIVIL WAR QUILTS: SETS FOR HANDS ALL AROUND BOM Next week (just in time for Tony's birthday) we are starting our 2021 pieced BOM Hands All Around: Alcotts At War with the first sawtooth star variation in the series. You may want to be thinking about how you are going to set the stars and how much fabric you need. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: FORGIVING SETS FOR SAMPLER BLOCKS Cut the triangles a little larger than what the pattern calls for. My handy-dandy, blue Fons & Porter's Quilters Need to Know Card tells me to cut squares 18-1/4" to set a 12" finished block. Cut them larger---19". Cut into triangles with 2 cuts. Deirdre Bond-Abel used this square-in-a-square solution for sampler blocks for her Hat CreekQuilts.
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: CHARLESTON'S AFRICAN-AMERICAN SEAMSTRESSESAUTHOR:BARBARA BRACKMAN
A look at one small group of women---pre-Civil-War African-Americans in Charleston offers some context in an unusual city known for its chintz-style bedcovers. We can classify Charleston's African-American seamstresses as belonging to four economic categories: 1) Enslaved seamstresses. 2) Free women of color (as they were called) 3) Acategory
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: LADIES' AID SAMPLER #2: PRIZE COWSAUTHOR: BARBARABRACKMAN
Ladies' Aid Sampler #2: Prize Cows. Ladies' Aid Sampler #2 Cow by Becky Brown. E. Dezendorf's block in an 1855 quilt from Rockland County. sold at a Skinner's Auction. Block corners in this quilt are visually connected by four sprigs. rather than four hearts. Now, you might think a cow is an odd image for. an album quilt but not in NewYork,
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2021 BOM LADIES AID NEW YORK SAMPLERAUTHOR: BARBARABRACKMAN
Quilt attributed to Susannah Butts Adsitt Boots Dutchess County, New York International Quilt Museum Sampler applique quilts were the fas CIVIL WAR QUILTS: CONTENTED COWS Sampler Quilt to Recall the Civil War Along the Kansas/Missouri Border. A BOM with 14" traditional blocks and lots of history. I'm out of books but check Amazon by clicking on the link below. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: ENDLESS STAIRS---A QUILT FOR OUR TIMES Endless Stairs---A Quilt for Our Times. A simple pattern to consider some complex philosophies of the past. We are living through difficult times as people try to understand prejudices of the past---prejudices freely expressed by historical figures we respect. We also have to face the history of economic systems that made that bigotry systemic. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 49 YANKEE PUZZLE Block from about 1900. Recall the State of the Union in 1861 with an old block called Yankee Puzzle by Ruth Finley in her 1929 quilt book. Other names for the design are Big Dipper, Electric Fan, Hour Glass and Pork and Beans. (BlockBase #1195b) CIVIL WAR QUILTS: HANDS ALL AROUND: #6: OPEN WINDOW FOR 1 day ago · When the painting arrived in May, 1877 mother Abba wasthrilled:
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: SETS FOR HANDS ALL AROUND BOM Next week (just in time for Tony's birthday) we are starting our 2021 pieced BOM Hands All Around: Alcotts At War with the first sawtooth star variation in the series. You may want to be thinking about how you are going to set the stars and how much fabric you need. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: FORGIVING SETS FOR SAMPLER BLOCKS Cut the triangles a little larger than what the pattern calls for. My handy-dandy, blue Fons & Porter's Quilters Need to Know Card tells me to cut squares 18-1/4" to set a 12" finished block. Cut them larger---19". Cut into triangles with 2 cuts. Deirdre Bond-Abel used this square-in-a-square solution for sampler blocks for her Hat CreekQuilts.
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: HANDS ALL AROUND #1: HIDDEN NINE PATCH Make 4 B/C Units. Add A to ends of 2 of those. Make a Nine Patch of the D squares. Add B/C Units to either side. Our youngest model maker is Denniele's granddaughter Addison. who is 10. She chose Dear Stella fabric with an array of insects, perfect for Abba Alcott, a CIVIL WAR QUILTS: HANDS ALL AROUND #5: STAR PUZZLE FOR Block 5 is much like #3 but with a twist in the triangle shading. A Star Puzzle from the Iowa project & the Quilt Index. BlockBase #2146. Star Puzzle in the Ladies Art Company catalog. at the end of the 19th century. Cutting: You need four B triangles and CIVIL WAR QUILTS: CONTENTED COWS Sampler Quilt to Recall the Civil War Along the Kansas/Missouri Border. A BOM with 14" traditional blocks and lots of history. I'm out of books but check Amazon by clicking on the link below. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: HANDS ALL AROUND #2: BRONSON ALCOTT The real-life, self-reliant Abba Alcott was often left alone to raise her children during husband Bronson's absences. He spent six months in England when Louisa was ten and never seemed able to earn a living although he traveled the lecture circuit and opened and closed schools from Philadelphia to Boston, among them The Concord School of Philosophy in the back yard. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: ELIZABETH GRISHAM BROWN'S CRAZY QUILT The Browns were caught up in the crazy quilt fad of the. 1885-1900 years, which is when the quilt was likely made. Elizabeth & husband Joseph Emerson Brown (1821-1894) Monument on the grounds of the Georgia state capitol. Quiltmakers do not get many sculptural monuments and Elizabeth has two, due to her position as wife ofGeorgia's Civil War
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 3 SEVEN SISTERS When the Civil War began in 1861 Sarah Morgan was a well-to-do 19-year-old living in Baton Rouge, the capitol of Louisiana.She had a lively family centered in a row of substantial houses on Church Street(now Fourth).
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 5 KANSAS TROUBLES Pam and Jean and a Kansas Troubles quilt top. Cutting for an 8" block. A - Cut 2 light squares 4-7/8". Cut each into 2 triangles with one cut. You need 4 triangles. B - Cut 4 light squares 1-1/2". C - Cut 8 light and 12 dark squares 1-7/8". Cut each into 2 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 2019 SPROUTS FROM HOSPITAL SKETCHES This year's BOM has a simplified version. _#7 Denniele Bohannon_ _Cathy Patterson Buell at Big Lake Quilter__Sprouts #1_
_#2 Sue Hoover_
_#1 Erica Cannon._
Erica is fusing and then securing the edges with a quilt- as-you-go stitch in a fabric sandwich. She's doing two sets. This one's the Brownie. Sometimes she makes them up Sara Reimer Farley is doing them at 6 inches and adding what shewill.
Each one is on the diagonal with a triangular base. She's got a plan, which involves some other 6 inch blocks. Sue Hoover has a plan too. Pineapples (#5) in the corners Susannah Pangelinan is playing around.38-1/2" Square
There was once an official plan. Blocks finishing to 9-1/2"; sashing finishing to 2-1/2" Next week. Denniele cleaned up at the Missouri State Fair in the machine applique category. We'll look at her Sprouts. Posted by Barbara Brackman at 6:00 AMNo comments:
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SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 2019 ELLEN CAMPBELL REMEMBERS THE EVES We started this search with a quest to find out a little more about Philoclea Edgeworth Casey Eve, whose applique quilt is in the Atlanta History Center. See last week's post: https://civilwarquilts.blogspot.com/2019/08/philoclea-eves-civil-war.html The search took some interesting turns. _Ellen Campbell's typed transcript from the Library of Congresswebsite._
Ellen Campbell was interviewed in Augusta when she was about ninety years old during the federal W.P.A. program in the late 1930s. A former slave, she told the women who recorded her words that she was born in 1846, a grown woman when freedom came, a slave in PhilocleaEve's household.
_Photograph taken near Augusta, Georgia, about 1900_ _Hargrett Rare Book & Manuscript Library at the University ofGeorgia_
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Robert E. Williams took photographs in Richmond County at the end ofthe 19th century.
See a photo of a woman at her quilting frame here: https://dlg.galileo.usg.edu/hargrett/williams/jpgs/rew026.jpg Between 1937 and 1939 WPA interviewers talked to over 200 people who'd been enslaved in Georgia. Adeline Cunningham was a Texas interviewee. The Eve's plantation, Ellen Campbell indicated, was near her cabin at 1030 Brayton Street--- "All this land was fields, then, slap down to Bolzes" (perhaps neighbors named Bowles.) Ellen's house was northwest of the railroad tracks, indicating where the Eve's land was. Her house was on this lot, the red pin in a Google Map Ellen remembered her duties in slavery. _Cased photo from about 1860_ Carrying water to field hands was often a child'sfirst employment.
"When I was about ten years old they started me toting water --- carrying water to the hands in the field." When she was twelve she tended sheep and three years later Philo gave her to Eva, who "was fixing to get married, but she couldn't on account of the war, so she brought me to town and rented me out to a lady running a boarding house. The rent was paid to my missus ." When the girl dropped a tray the boarding housekeeper reacted by stabbing her in the head with a butcher knife. She ran home. "Miss Eva took me and washed the blood out of my head and put medicine on it and she wrote a note: 'Ellen is my slave, given to me by my mother. I wouldn't have this happen to her no more than to me. She won't comeback...."
The interviewer asked if the Eves were "good to her." (Did the interviewees tell the white women what they thought they wanted tohear?)
Ellen's answer: William Eve was "the best white man anywhere around here on any of these plantations. They all owned slaves. My boss wouldfeed them well."
_Young women with their children on the Fripp Plantation from_ _the Library of Congress. _ The Eves had 40 cabins at Goodale according to the 1860 census. Did the Eves have a house on the plantation? > "They lived in town and he came back and forth every day. It wasn't > but three miles. The road ran right from the plantation and > everybody who drove through it had to pay a toll > That road is where the Savannah Road is." Did Ellen remember when the Yankees occupied Augusta? _6th Massachusetts Regiment_ _from the Library of Congress_ > "I saw them coming down the street. Every one had a canteen on his > side, a blanket on his shoulder, caps cocked on one side of > head. The cavalry had boots on and spurs. First they set the > free on Dead River, then they come on here to set us free. > They marched straight up Broad Street to the Planters' Hotel... _The Planters Hotel about 1905_ > "They stayed here six months till they set this place free. When > they were camping on the river bank we'd go down there and wash > their clothes for a good price. > "They had hard tack to eat. They...told us to soak it in water, and > fry it with the meat gravy. I haven't tasted nothing so good since. > They said, 'This hard tack was what we had to live on while fighting > to set you free'." In her diary slave-owner Ella Gertrude Clanton Thomas wrote about the day the Union troops arrived. > "Sunday May 7, 1865. This morning a large force of Yankees came > marching into Augusta the drums beating & colours > flying----surrounded by a large crowd of Negroes... Patsey said > there were 800 of them." Freed slaves often continued working for the same people after the war, but under a different economic system that lurched forward by trial and error. In July, 1865 Charles Jones wrote his mother that Philoclea Eve "has been sued by three of her household servants for wages---a most unwarrantable procedure.... We will all have to recognize the fact that our former slaves have been set free...and if they continue with us we must pay for services rendered." _Ellen Payne, Texas interviewee_ Interviewers collected testimony from 20,000 Americans who'd lived in slavery. Tennessee's Fisk University and Louisiana's Southern University began the project in 1929. The New Deal program the Federal Writer's Project continued the interviews from 1936 to 1939. It's great to link an interviewee with her once-owners's story. Ellen Campbell's memories give us more information about the Eves and the Eves's story tells us more about Ellen. See Ellen Campbell's testimony at this Google Book preview: https://books.google.com/books?id=7KhxDgAAQBAJ&pg=PT2974&lpg=PT2974&dq=bolzes+augusta&source=bl&ots=-eIv5tBu2h&sig=ACfU3U0S4XgAbpnhLrPb98uACf2A0kXGSg&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjQ95bkgLXjAhV4Ap0JHW3JDcIQ6AEwC3oECAkQAQ#v=onepage&q=bolzes%20augusta&f=false Posted by Barbara Brackman at 6:00 AM1 comment:
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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2019 MOUNTAIN LAUREL SAMPLER A virtual quilt out of 20 of your versions versions of Block #6 Mountain Laurel. I put this up on our group page. Robin Koehler showed one Polly Mello had just had quilted at Bellweather DryGoods. A sampler of red and greens. She appliqued a double dogtooth border around the edge. Lovely traditional take. A sampler of Mountain Laurel blocks is a good idea. Simple applique, lots of fabrics. If you used the official pattern you've got room in the center for a sampler of birds. I added birds to the center of some of your blocks: Birds in the Laurel Bush Eight birds I've copied from antique quilts. If you print them out on an 8-12/" x 11" sheet they MAY fit in the center of an empty Mountain Laurel.The Facebook Group:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/2152934498369880/ Posted by Barbara Brackman at 6:00 AM3 comments:
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SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 2019 PHILOCLEA EVE'S CIVIL WAR _Atlanta History Center_ _Detail of a quilt attributed to _ _Philoclea Edgeworth Casey Eve (1813-1889)_ A few months ago on our trip to the Atlanta History Center Merikay Waldvogel, Tara Miller and I got a good look at this chintz quilt with several panels, including the popular fruit basket design. We were fascinated by Philoclea's first name and her quilt. A classic Southern chintz applique quilt: Many ready-to-cut panel shapes, a little extra applique and simplequilting.
The quilt was donated in 1991. I doubt Philoclea Eve put a stitch in it. Being quite wealthy after her 1840 marriage she might have bought it, maybe in Savannah, but perhaps an Augusta, Georgia seamstress had a bedcover business going in the 1830-1850 years. Many nice things were said about Philo, but no one ever mentioned her needlework. _Jones Family quilt, Atlanta History Center_ We also saw this related quilt, related in stylebut also in family.
I happened to have a book at home on the Jones family. _The Children of Pride _is a hefty tome, 2,000 pages of letters from Mary Jones Jones of Liberty County, Georgia and her extended family. It took me weeks to read it (my idea of a good time). Just as I was finishing I realized that Mary Jones and Philoclea Eve had a connection. The Jones family mentioned Philo Eve often. Since there are no footnotes (it would be a 4,000 page book then) you have to figure out who's who on your own. Philo was---Mrs. William J. Eve, the mother of Eva Eve who married Mary Jones's son Charles. We can assume Philo was pronounced _Fill'-oh_ like Philadelphia and philosophy. _Philoclea Edgeworth Casey Eve (1813-1889)__1873 Portrait_
Philoclea Edgeworth Casey was born in Louisville, Georgia and spent much of her life in nearby Augusta. Her father John Aloyisius Casey was a doctor and her mother Sarah Lowndes Casey a daughter of Major John Berrien, Revolutionary War soldier who was a port inspector inSavannah.
Philoclea (love of glory in Greek) was the name of a character in a tragedy written by an Irish playwrightin the 1760s.
_ Berrien family home in Savannah in the 1930s_ Savannah, like other coastal cities with mosquito infestations, was subject to periodic outbreaks of Yellow Fever, which can be fatal to 50% of those who are infected. Dr. John Casey was one of those victims, dying while tending to patients in 1819. Sarah died a few years later leaving Philoclea and her brother Henry Rozier Caseyorphans.
_Savannah's Berrien House today_ Raised by relatives, Philo married William Joseph Eve in 1840 in Sparta. William, about 10 years older than she,was a member of the elite Georgia planter aristocracy, owner of many slaves in Richmond County, Georgia, where they made their home in Augusta. In her obituary Philo was described as "noted for her beauty and her high order of intelligence." She certainly was sociable as she is mentioned by many mid-19th century Southern diarists andletter-writers.
When the Civil War began two decades later Philo and William had three children (two had died as infants). The 1850 census of Richmond County, Georgia credits Planter William Eve with real estate worth $75,000. The 1860 census shows they had 40 slave dwellings on their land with 132 people living there, the county's largest slaveholders. William Eve's plantation, the basis of that wealth, was Goodale on the Savannah River a few miles southeast of town. This decrepit 1799 house remained on the land until recently. Philoclea's family did not live there but her husband may have been born here. As one of the town's wealthiest women Philo enjoyed a social position in Augusta. In 1855 Gertrude Clanton Thomas dropped by a gathering and found "only a small crowd. As a matter of course Mrs William Eve wasthere."
Philo and William's eldest child was Sarah Ponleva Berrien Eve, about 20 then. Everyone called her Eva Eve. _The Moravian Academy is still a school_ Eva had finished her education, attending the Moravian School in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania and one in Georgetown. In 1858 she'd been bridesmaid for cousin Ruth Berrien Whitehead who'd made a good marriage to Charles Colcock Jones, Jr., a Savannah lawyer, son of a Presbyterian minister who owned several plantations in Liberty County, Georgia and well over 100 slaves. She and Ruth kept in touch as the war began and in 1861 she was living at home in Augusta while Ruth was awaiting her second "confinement" (childbirth) in Savannah. Much could go wrong and with Ruth it did. In early July, 1861 a relative wrote her father-in-law: > "I write to inform you of the distressed condition of the > family...After a painful illness of the most violent > character...Julia breathed her last at eight o'clock A.M. of today. > Ruth, the mother, is also critically ill with puerperal fever, > attended with occasional delirium." _Cased photo showing a common family unit in the days of high_ _maternal mortality_ Julia not yet 2 years old died of scarlet fever days after her sister was born and five days later Ruth did too. Charles who'd had everything had nothing left but a very sickly infant he entrusted tohis mother.
Charles Colcock Jones, Jr. (1831-1893) became chief of artillery for the military district of Georgia in the Confederate Army. Letters sent between family members while Ruth lay dying is one of the great passages in_ Children of Pride._ After the terrible series of events life returned to wartime normal in Georgia. Baby Mary Ruth thrived at her grandmother's and Eva Eve's name began to show up in letters by and about Charles, Jr. Eva married Charles in late 1863, one happy event in a year in which both their fathers died. Charles had told his mother around Christmas, 1862: " father "has sunk...the physicians offer no hope of his bodily or mental recovery. She and Cousin Philo are in great affliction." William died in March, 1863 at 59 at their home at 79 Broad Street in Augusta. Charles's father died the same month. _Confederate armies were full of teen-aged__volunteers_
Philo's boys Francis Edgeworth, born in 1844 (known all his life as Edge Eve) and McPherson Berrien Eve (called Berrien), born in 1846, eagerly enlisted, Edge at 16 and Berrien at 14 or 15, which amused hissister:
> "The child is daft, and his uniform is irreproachable. He smiles > blandly and tries to affect dignity." Philo spent some of her time during the war nursing soldiers, like George Knox Miller of the 8th Alabama Cavalry who remembered her as a "glorious Georgia woman" who sent her carriage to the Augusta hospital were he was recovering "and took me to her house" to nurse him inbetter conditions.
She took in relatives as Union troops overran their homes. Cousin Saida Bird came with Eva Eve Jones from Savannah after Eva & Charles's house was ransacked and their library destroyed in 1864. The loss of the books seems to have saddened the whole family more than anything. _Sarah (Saida) Bird 1848-1922_ "Aunt Philo is very sweet and kind," Saida told her mother," and seems to take my staying here as a matter of course." Saida's home Granite Hill in Hancock County, Georgia As only a 16 year-old can Saida reduced Confederate defeat to apersonal hardship:
> "I was having such a happy, happy time....I had begun to know so > many nice people and had so many delightful books. Cousin Eva was > such a darling and Cousin Charlie so nice, though such a tease.... > Now everything is broken up." _Sherman's troops occupying Savannah 1864_ > "Cousin Eva says she consoles herself with the thought that they > can't do her much more harm." Philoclea Eve was confident enough in her opinions to offer advice to Confederate President Jefferson Davis; an 1861 letter survives with her suggestion that CSA troops needed more identification on their uniforms to avoid shooting at each other. Augusta's Confederate Monument, dedicated in 1878, was near the Eve home on Broad Street. Philo was fortunate. Her sons were not killed. Berrien Eve survived physically at least. The fourteen-year-old soldier seems to have been one more veteran whose post-war life was a continuing battle. He died at 39 in 1884 of "congestion of the liver," leaving his pregnant wife with four young children. Francis Edgeworth Eve (1844-1908) Brother Edge also made it through the war, enduring five saber wounds and a "knock in the head," according to a biography in _Confederate Veteran _magazine. In July, 1865 Eva told her mother-in-law: > "Poor brother Edgeworth feels his glory departed, and lays aside the > captaincy with a sigh as he opens an up-country store. He goes > bravely to work, and says he'll gain an honest livelihood...These > times try men's souls---and women's too." Both boys married in 1866. _Philoclea E. Eve's postwar pardon._ The Eves and Joneses took the oath of loyalty to the Union. Eva Jones, husband Charles and daughter left the South in December, 1865, moving to New York City in hopes of improving Eva's health and regaining some financial security as Charles practiced law. Philo went with them to help care for Mary Ruth and Eva's son Edgeworth CaseyJones born in 1866.
Soon after the war Eva's sister-in-law Mary Mallard had gossip from her mother who was visiting son Charles in his "very nice house." When Charles's mother arrived Eva and Philoclea went to Newport, Rhode Island "for benefit of sea-bathing....I have heard from Augusta that Mrs. Eve is reported to be married to a Mr. Haywood of Carolina. I do not vouch for the truth of the report."It did not happen.
After a decade in New York with both goals accomplished the family returned to Georgia settling in Summerville, west of downtown Augustain the sand hills.
_The Jones bought this home __Montrose__ in Summerville, 2249Walton Way._
_Library of Congress HABS photo, 1936__
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Philo Eve's post war years were filled with grandchildren and charity work, most notably her position with the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association where she was the Vice-Regent for Georgia, traveling regularly to Washington for meetings. Here she is at Mount Vernon on the far right in 1873, perhaps a little weary of the whole group photoprocess.
Philoclea Edgeworth Casey Eve died in 1889 at Montrose._Montrose today_
Her bookplate
Philo's quilt, like the city of Augusta, survived the war withoutserious damage.
Next week one more person remembers Philoclea, William and Eva Eve. Published letters from Philo's many cousins: _The Granite Farm Letters: Civil War Correspondence of Edgeworth and Sallie Bird,_ John Rozier, 1988. _The Children of Pride : A True Story of Georgia and the Civil War, _Robert Manson Myers, 1973. Posted by Barbara Brackman at 6:00 AM3 comments:
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Subscribe to: Posts (Atom) HOSPITAL SKETCHES: BLOCK 7 TENNESSEE ROSE Click on Lisa's block to see the pattern. HOSPITAL SKETCHES BLOCK 6 Click on Lisa's block to see the pattern for the Mountain Laurel. HOSPITAL SKETCHES BLOCK 5 Click on Mark's block to see the pattern for Pineapple. HOSPITAL SKETCHES BLOCK 4 Click on Becky's block to see the pattern for Cockscomb & Currants.. HOSPITAL SKETCHES BLOCK 3 Click on Marty Webster's block to see the pattern for Love Apple.. HOSPITAL SKETCHES BLOCK 2 Click on Karen's block to see the pattern for the Virginia Cockscomb. HOSPITAL SKETCHES: BLOCK 1 Click on Bettina's Periwinkle Wreath to see the pattern. HOSPITAL SKETCHES INTRODUCTION Click to see a post on fabric, set and a pieced border. PHOTOS OF YOUR BLOCKS Click on the images below to see sites with pictures from the QuiltAlong series.
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CIVIL WAR SAMPLER
Fifty quilt blocks originally posted on this blog and made by you readers. You can still buy an actual book from C&T. Click to see. QUILTS FROM THE CIVIL WAR Patterns & history from my first book on the topic. I still have new copies of the bound books in my Etsy shop. I'll sign it. Click to seemore.
CIVIL WAR WOMEN
Focus is quilts and how women used them during the War for fundraising, patriotism and practical bedding. I have new copies in my Etsy shop. Click to see more BORDERLAND IN BUTTERNUT & BLUE Sampler Quilt to Recall the Civil War Along the Kansas/Missouri Border. A BOM with 14" traditional blocks and lots of history. I'm out of books but check Amazon by clicking on the link below. BORDERLAND IN BUTTERNUT & BLUE FACTS & FABRICATIONS Traditional blocks to "Unravel the History of Quilts and Slavery." Click here to see print-on-demand & digital editions. Go to Amazonbelow to see more.
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