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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: 2021 BOM LADIES AID NEW YORK SAMPLER 2021 BOM Ladies Aid New York Sampler. Quilt attributed to Susannah Butts Adsitt Boots. Dutchess County, New York. International Quilt Museum. Sampler applique quilts were the fashion all over the U.S. in the. 1840-1870 period. Quilt made for James Humeston. Found in the New York quilt project. New Yorkers were caught up in the fad. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: LADIES' AID SAMPLER #2: PRIZE COWS 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: CHARLESTON'S AFRICAN-AMERICAN SEAMSTRESSES 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: 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: HOSPITAL SKETCHES: PATTERN POSTS HOSPITAL SKETCHES 2019. Nine Popular Mid-19th Century Applique Blocks. By Barbara Brackman & Becky Brown. Here's a list of all the pattern posts for the nine blocks of the Hospital Sketches applique Block of the Month. Patterns were posted here on the last Wednesday of each month from January to September, 2019. INTRODUCTION. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 49 YANKEE PUZZLECOMMON QUILT BLOCKS PUZZLEYANKEE PUZZLE QUILTYANKEE STADIUM JIGSAW PUZZLEYANKEE STADIUM 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: 27 IRISH CHAINQUILT IRISH CHAINIRISH CHAIN QUILTS FOR SALEOLD IRISH CHAIN QUILTSIRISH CHAIN QUILTS PINTERESTIRISH QUILTS FOR BEDTRADITIONAL IRISH QUILTS 27 Irish Chain. Irish Chain by Becky Brown. The Irish Chain remembers the Irish Brigades. 150 years ago this week my great-grandmother Elizabeth Daly was born in Ireland, so it's a good week to recall the 140,000 Irish soldiers who fought for the Union during the American Civil War. Irish Brigade soldiers and chaplains in Virginia. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 19 MISSOURI STAR 19 Missouri Star. Missouri Star by Gloria Clark. Missouri Star can remind us of Mattie Lykins Bingham who represents well the torn loyalties of the people of Missouri. Wife of two Union sympathizers, she maintained her Confederate allegiances to her death in 1890.Mattie about 1875.
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2020CIVIL WAR QUILTS BLOGSPOTCIVIL WAR QUILTS BLOGCIVIL WAR QUILTS HISTORYCIVIL WAR QUILTS BARBARA BRACKMANCIVIL WAR QUILT BLOGAUTHENTIC CIVIL WAR QUILTS Brown's Marble Hotel where Southern politicians boarded in Washington City was a lively place in the late 1850s. At a time when Senators were appointed rather than popularly elected most of the Southerners were from moneyed political families, committed to 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: 2021 BOM LADIES AID NEW YORK SAMPLER 2021 BOM Ladies Aid New York Sampler. Quilt attributed to Susannah Butts Adsitt Boots. Dutchess County, New York. International Quilt Museum. Sampler applique quilts were the fashion all over the U.S. in the. 1840-1870 period. Quilt made for James Humeston. Found in the New York quilt project. New Yorkers were caught up in the fad. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: LADIES' AID SAMPLER #2: PRIZE COWS 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: CHARLESTON'S AFRICAN-AMERICAN SEAMSTRESSES 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: 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: HOSPITAL SKETCHES: PATTERN POSTS HOSPITAL SKETCHES 2019. Nine Popular Mid-19th Century Applique Blocks. By Barbara Brackman & Becky Brown. Here's a list of all the pattern posts for the nine blocks of the Hospital Sketches applique Block of the Month. Patterns were posted here on the last Wednesday of each month from January to September, 2019. INTRODUCTION. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 49 YANKEE PUZZLECOMMON QUILT BLOCKS PUZZLEYANKEE PUZZLE QUILTYANKEE STADIUM JIGSAW PUZZLEYANKEE STADIUM 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: 27 IRISH CHAINQUILT IRISH CHAINIRISH CHAIN QUILTS FOR SALEOLD IRISH CHAIN QUILTSIRISH CHAIN QUILTS PINTERESTIRISH QUILTS FOR BEDTRADITIONAL IRISH QUILTS 27 Irish Chain. Irish Chain by Becky Brown. The Irish Chain remembers the Irish Brigades. 150 years ago this week my great-grandmother Elizabeth Daly was born in Ireland, so it's a good week to recall the 140,000 Irish soldiers who fought for the Union during the American Civil War. Irish Brigade soldiers and chaplains in Virginia. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 19 MISSOURI STAR 19 Missouri Star. Missouri Star by Gloria Clark. Missouri Star can remind us of Mattie Lykins Bingham who represents well the torn loyalties of the people of Missouri. Wife of two Union sympathizers, she maintained her Confederate allegiances to her death in 1890.Mattie about 1875.
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2020 Brown's Marble Hotel where Southern politicians boarded in Washington City was a lively place in the late 1850s. At a time when Senators were appointed rather than popularly elected most of the Southerners were from moneyed political families, committed to CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2021 PIECED BOM: HANDS ALL AROUND 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: 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: HOSPITAL SKETCHES: PATTERN POSTS HOSPITAL SKETCHES 2019. Nine Popular Mid-19th Century Applique Blocks. By Barbara Brackman & Becky Brown. Here's a list of all the pattern posts for the nine blocks of the Hospital Sketches applique Block of the Month. Patterns were posted here on the last Wednesday of each month from January to September, 2019. INTRODUCTION. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: YANKEE NOTIONS #12: T QUILT Yankee Notions #12, The T Quilt by Dorry Emmer. The T quilt seems to have represented Temperance, a national reform movement but one many Southerners resisted until the latter part of the 19th century. The last Yankee Notions block can stand for a variety of female reform notions. Lula Barnes Ansley (1861-1914) of Georgia was active. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: CASSANDRA'S CIRCLE #9: SALLY "BUCK Cassandra's Circle #9: Sally "Buck" Preston's Lost Love. Buck Preston was the star among the young women in Mary Chesnut's circle in Richmond and Columbia. "All men worship Buck. How can they help it, she is so lovely," wrote Mary. Buck must have received dozens of proposals during the war when she was in her early twenties. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: POTHOLDER QUILT: ANY HOLDER BUT A SLAVE The image of a dancing couple was familiar in the 19th century. They were stitched in front view and rear in potholders with a pun. "Any holder but A Slave holder". St Croix Wisconsin Historical Society Collection. Shown on Patricia L. Cummings's webpage. The image is seen as an offensive stereotype today, but in the mid-19th century the"humor
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 19 MISSOURI STAR 19 Missouri Star. Missouri Star by Gloria Clark. Missouri Star can remind us of Mattie Lykins Bingham who represents well the torn loyalties of the people of Missouri. Wife of two Union sympathizers, she maintained her Confederate allegiances to her death in 1890.Mattie about 1875.
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2014 CIVIL WAR BLOCK OF THE MONTH for an important place in the story of the network that assisted slaves on the road to freedom. We'll explore true stories of people who lived in slavery, escaped on CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2020CIVIL WAR QUILTS BLOGSPOTCIVIL WAR QUILTS BLOGCIVIL WAR QUILTS HISTORYCIVIL WAR QUILTS BARBARA BRACKMANCIVIL WAR QUILT BLOGAUTHENTIC CIVIL WAR QUILTS Brown's Marble Hotel where Southern politicians boarded in Washington City was a lively place in the late 1850s. At a time when Senators were appointed rather than popularly elected most of the Southerners were from moneyed political families, committed to 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: 2021 BOM LADIES AID NEW YORK SAMPLER 2021 BOM Ladies Aid New York Sampler. Quilt attributed to Susannah Butts Adsitt Boots. Dutchess County, New York. International Quilt Museum. Sampler applique quilts were the fashion all over the U.S. in the. 1840-1870 period. Quilt made for James Humeston. Found in the New York quilt project. New Yorkers were caught up in the fad. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: LADIES' AID SAMPLER #2: PRIZE COWS 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: CHARLESTON'S AFRICAN-AMERICAN SEAMSTRESSES 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: 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: HOSPITAL SKETCHES: PATTERN POSTS HOSPITAL SKETCHES 2019. Nine Popular Mid-19th Century Applique Blocks. By Barbara Brackman & Becky Brown. Here's a list of all the pattern posts for the nine blocks of the Hospital Sketches applique Block of the Month. Patterns were posted here on the last Wednesday of each month from January to September, 2019. INTRODUCTION. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 49 YANKEE PUZZLECOMMON QUILT BLOCKS PUZZLEYANKEE PUZZLE QUILTYANKEE STADIUM JIGSAW PUZZLEYANKEE STADIUM 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: 27 IRISH CHAINQUILT IRISH CHAINIRISH CHAIN QUILTS FOR SALEOLD IRISH CHAIN QUILTSIRISH CHAIN QUILTS PINTERESTIRISH QUILTS FOR BEDTRADITIONAL IRISH QUILTS 27 Irish Chain. Irish Chain by Becky Brown. The Irish Chain remembers the Irish Brigades. 150 years ago this week my great-grandmother Elizabeth Daly was born in Ireland, so it's a good week to recall the 140,000 Irish soldiers who fought for the Union during the American Civil War. Irish Brigade soldiers and chaplains in Virginia. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 19 MISSOURI STAR 19 Missouri Star. Missouri Star by Gloria Clark. Missouri Star can remind us of Mattie Lykins Bingham who represents well the torn loyalties of the people of Missouri. Wife of two Union sympathizers, she maintained her Confederate allegiances to her death in 1890.Mattie about 1875.
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2020CIVIL WAR QUILTS BLOGSPOTCIVIL WAR QUILTS BLOGCIVIL WAR QUILTS HISTORYCIVIL WAR QUILTS BARBARA BRACKMANCIVIL WAR QUILT BLOGAUTHENTIC CIVIL WAR QUILTS Brown's Marble Hotel where Southern politicians boarded in Washington City was a lively place in the late 1850s. At a time when Senators were appointed rather than popularly elected most of the Southerners were from moneyed political families, committed to 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: 2021 BOM LADIES AID NEW YORK SAMPLER 2021 BOM Ladies Aid New York Sampler. Quilt attributed to Susannah Butts Adsitt Boots. Dutchess County, New York. International Quilt Museum. Sampler applique quilts were the fashion all over the U.S. in the. 1840-1870 period. Quilt made for James Humeston. Found in the New York quilt project. New Yorkers were caught up in the fad. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: LADIES' AID SAMPLER #2: PRIZE COWS 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: CHARLESTON'S AFRICAN-AMERICAN SEAMSTRESSES 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: 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: HOSPITAL SKETCHES: PATTERN POSTS HOSPITAL SKETCHES 2019. Nine Popular Mid-19th Century Applique Blocks. By Barbara Brackman & Becky Brown. Here's a list of all the pattern posts for the nine blocks of the Hospital Sketches applique Block of the Month. Patterns were posted here on the last Wednesday of each month from January to September, 2019. INTRODUCTION. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 49 YANKEE PUZZLECOMMON QUILT BLOCKS PUZZLEYANKEE PUZZLE QUILTYANKEE STADIUM JIGSAW PUZZLEYANKEE STADIUM 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: 27 IRISH CHAINQUILT IRISH CHAINIRISH CHAIN QUILTS FOR SALEOLD IRISH CHAIN QUILTSIRISH CHAIN QUILTS PINTERESTIRISH QUILTS FOR BEDTRADITIONAL IRISH QUILTS 27 Irish Chain. Irish Chain by Becky Brown. The Irish Chain remembers the Irish Brigades. 150 years ago this week my great-grandmother Elizabeth Daly was born in Ireland, so it's a good week to recall the 140,000 Irish soldiers who fought for the Union during the American Civil War. Irish Brigade soldiers and chaplains in Virginia. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 19 MISSOURI STAR 19 Missouri Star. Missouri Star by Gloria Clark. Missouri Star can remind us of Mattie Lykins Bingham who represents well the torn loyalties of the people of Missouri. Wife of two Union sympathizers, she maintained her Confederate allegiances to her death in 1890.Mattie about 1875.
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2020 Brown's Marble Hotel where Southern politicians boarded in Washington City was a lively place in the late 1850s. At a time when Senators were appointed rather than popularly elected most of the Southerners were from moneyed political families, committed to CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2021 PIECED BOM: HANDS ALL AROUND 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: 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: HOSPITAL SKETCHES: PATTERN POSTS HOSPITAL SKETCHES 2019. Nine Popular Mid-19th Century Applique Blocks. By Barbara Brackman & Becky Brown. Here's a list of all the pattern posts for the nine blocks of the Hospital Sketches applique Block of the Month. Patterns were posted here on the last Wednesday of each month from January to September, 2019. INTRODUCTION. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: YANKEE NOTIONS #12: T QUILT Yankee Notions #12, The T Quilt by Dorry Emmer. The T quilt seems to have represented Temperance, a national reform movement but one many Southerners resisted until the latter part of the 19th century. The last Yankee Notions block can stand for a variety of female reform notions. Lula Barnes Ansley (1861-1914) of Georgia was active. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: CASSANDRA'S CIRCLE #9: SALLY "BUCK Cassandra's Circle #9: Sally "Buck" Preston's Lost Love. Buck Preston was the star among the young women in Mary Chesnut's circle in Richmond and Columbia. "All men worship Buck. How can they help it, she is so lovely," wrote Mary. Buck must have received dozens of proposals during the war when she was in her early twenties. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: POTHOLDER QUILT: ANY HOLDER BUT A SLAVE The image of a dancing couple was familiar in the 19th century. They were stitched in front view and rear in potholders with a pun. "Any holder but A Slave holder". St Croix Wisconsin Historical Society Collection. Shown on Patricia L. Cummings's webpage. The image is seen as an offensive stereotype today, but in the mid-19th century the"humor
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 19 MISSOURI STAR 19 Missouri Star. Missouri Star by Gloria Clark. Missouri Star can remind us of Mattie Lykins Bingham who represents well the torn loyalties of the people of Missouri. Wife of two Union sympathizers, she maintained her Confederate allegiances to her death in 1890.Mattie about 1875.
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2014 CIVIL WAR BLOCK OF THE MONTH for an important place in the story of the network that assisted slaves on the road to freedom. We'll explore true stories of people who lived in slavery, escaped on CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2020CIVIL WAR QUILTS BLOGSPOTCIVIL WAR QUILTS BLOGCIVIL WAR QUILTS HISTORYCIVIL WAR QUILTS BARBARA BRACKMANCIVIL WAR QUILT BLOGAUTHENTIC CIVIL WAR QUILTS Brown's Marble Hotel where Southern politicians boarded in Washington City was a lively place in the late 1850s. At a time when Senators were appointed rather than popularly elected most of the Southerners were from moneyed political families, committed to 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: 2021 BOM LADIES AID NEW YORK SAMPLER 2021 BOM Ladies Aid New York Sampler. Quilt attributed to Susannah Butts Adsitt Boots. Dutchess County, New York. International Quilt Museum. Sampler applique quilts were the fashion all over the U.S. in the. 1840-1870 period. Quilt made for James Humeston. Found in the New York quilt project. New Yorkers were caught up in the fad. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: LADIES' AID SAMPLER #2: PRIZE COWS 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: CHARLESTON'S AFRICAN-AMERICAN SEAMSTRESSES 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: HOSPITAL SKETCHES: PATTERN POSTS HOSPITAL SKETCHES 2019. Nine Popular Mid-19th Century Applique Blocks. By Barbara Brackman & Becky Brown. Here's a list of all the pattern posts for the nine blocks of the Hospital Sketches applique Block of the Month. Patterns were posted here on the last Wednesday of each month from January to September, 2019. INTRODUCTION. 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 PUZZLECOMMON QUILT BLOCKS PUZZLEYANKEE PUZZLE QUILTYANKEE STADIUM JIGSAW PUZZLEYANKEE STADIUM 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: POTHOLDER QUILT: ANY HOLDER BUT A SLAVE The image of a dancing couple was familiar in the 19th century. They were stitched in front view and rear in potholders with a pun. "Any holder but A Slave holder". St Croix Wisconsin Historical Society Collection. Shown on Patricia L. Cummings's webpage. The image is seen as an offensive stereotype today, but in the mid-19th century the"humor
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 19 MISSOURI STAR 19 Missouri Star. Missouri Star by Gloria Clark. Missouri Star can remind us of Mattie Lykins Bingham who represents well the torn loyalties of the people of Missouri. Wife of two Union sympathizers, she maintained her Confederate allegiances to her death in 1890.Mattie about 1875.
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2020CIVIL WAR QUILTS BLOGSPOTCIVIL WAR QUILTS BLOGCIVIL WAR QUILTS HISTORYCIVIL WAR QUILTS BARBARA BRACKMANCIVIL WAR QUILT BLOGAUTHENTIC CIVIL WAR QUILTS Brown's Marble Hotel where Southern politicians boarded in Washington City was a lively place in the late 1850s. At a time when Senators were appointed rather than popularly elected most of the Southerners were from moneyed political families, committed to 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: 2021 BOM LADIES AID NEW YORK SAMPLER 2021 BOM Ladies Aid New York Sampler. Quilt attributed to Susannah Butts Adsitt Boots. Dutchess County, New York. International Quilt Museum. Sampler applique quilts were the fashion all over the U.S. in the. 1840-1870 period. Quilt made for James Humeston. Found in the New York quilt project. New Yorkers were caught up in the fad. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: LADIES' AID SAMPLER #2: PRIZE COWS 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: CHARLESTON'S AFRICAN-AMERICAN SEAMSTRESSES 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: HOSPITAL SKETCHES: PATTERN POSTS HOSPITAL SKETCHES 2019. Nine Popular Mid-19th Century Applique Blocks. By Barbara Brackman & Becky Brown. Here's a list of all the pattern posts for the nine blocks of the Hospital Sketches applique Block of the Month. Patterns were posted here on the last Wednesday of each month from January to September, 2019. INTRODUCTION. 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 PUZZLECOMMON QUILT BLOCKS PUZZLEYANKEE PUZZLE QUILTYANKEE STADIUM JIGSAW PUZZLEYANKEE STADIUM 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: POTHOLDER QUILT: ANY HOLDER BUT A SLAVE The image of a dancing couple was familiar in the 19th century. They were stitched in front view and rear in potholders with a pun. "Any holder but A Slave holder". St Croix Wisconsin Historical Society Collection. Shown on Patricia L. Cummings's webpage. The image is seen as an offensive stereotype today, but in the mid-19th century the"humor
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 19 MISSOURI STAR 19 Missouri Star. Missouri Star by Gloria Clark. Missouri Star can remind us of Mattie Lykins Bingham who represents well the torn loyalties of the people of Missouri. Wife of two Union sympathizers, she maintained her Confederate allegiances to her death in 1890.Mattie about 1875.
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2020 Brown's Marble Hotel where Southern politicians boarded in Washington City was a lively place in the late 1850s. At a time when Senators were appointed rather than popularly elected most of the Southerners were from moneyed political families, committed to CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2021 PIECED BOM: HANDS ALL AROUND 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: 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: YANKEE NOTIONS #12: T QUILT Yankee Notions #12, The T Quilt by Dorry Emmer. The T quilt seems to have represented Temperance, a national reform movement but one many Southerners resisted until the latter part of the 19th century. The last Yankee Notions block can stand for a variety of female reform notions. Lula Barnes Ansley (1861-1914) of Georgia was active. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: CASSANDRA'S CIRCLE #9: SALLY "BUCK Cassandra's Circle #9: Sally "Buck" Preston's Lost Love. Buck Preston was the star among the young women in Mary Chesnut's circle in Richmond and Columbia. "All men worship Buck. How can they help it, she is so lovely," wrote Mary. Buck must have received dozens of proposals during the war when she was in her early twenties. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: POTHOLDER QUILT: ANY HOLDER BUT A SLAVE The image of a dancing couple was familiar in the 19th century. They were stitched in front view and rear in potholders with a pun. "Any holder but A Slave holder". St Croix Wisconsin Historical Society Collection. Shown on Patricia L. Cummings's webpage. The image is seen as an offensive stereotype today, but in the mid-19th century the"humor
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 19 MISSOURI STAR 19 Missouri Star. Missouri Star by Gloria Clark. Missouri Star can remind us of Mattie Lykins Bingham who represents well the torn loyalties of the people of Missouri. Wife of two Union sympathizers, she maintained her Confederate allegiances to her death in 1890.Mattie about 1875.
CIVIL WAR QUILTS: FEBRUARY 2011 Raw cotton went North to be processed into printed calicoes. With wartime trading stopped, cotton prices escalated and cotton fabrics became impossible to find, particularly in the Confederacy. This week's block is a variation of one published as the Cotton Boll quilt in the Kansas City Star in 1941. CIVIL WAR QUILTS: 2014 CIVIL WAR BLOCK OF THE MONTH for an important place in the story of the network that assisted slaves on the road to freedom. We'll explore true stories of people who lived in slavery, escaped on SATURDAY, MARCH 14, 2020 EPHRENA WAGNER'S EAGLE QUILT Eagle with an anchor and a snake, wool embroidery on cotton. Attributed to Ephrena or Elphrena Hennings Gerhard Wagner (1841-1922) of Skippack Township, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania._82" x 84"_
The quilt, in the collection of the Goschenhoppen Historians in southeastern Pennsylvania, was recorded in their quilt project several decades ago as having been made by Ephrena when she was recovering from scarlet fever as a girl, according to her granddaughter who thought it might have been made before 1860 when the maker was a teenager. My first thought was that the patriotic display might be a Civil-War quilt and Ephrena had done the embroidery slips (separate embroidery to be attached) when she was a child and stitched them to alater quilt.
https://goschenhoppen.pastperfectonline.com/webobject/2C4DFB48-FA6F-4D41-9ACF-713548796750 See: Nancy and Donald Roan's book. _Lest I Shall be Forgotten. Anecdotes and Traditions of Quilts._ The fabrics could be as old as the Civil War; solids are so hard to date. Parts are hand-appliqued, parts machine-appliqued. The blues are deteriorating in the strange fashion that Prussian blue dye does. I remember visiting the Goschenhoppen project and wondering with Nancy Roan what was going on here. Dye migration? I don't think indigo does this. Reverse appliqued seeds in the fruit around the edge revealing a double pink print. Looking at the photos closely now I wonder just when it was made. Someone counted the stars on the flags and came up with 38, the number in 1876 when Colorado became the Centennial state. This might more likely have been a Centennial quilt than a Civil Warquilt.
I haven't found another thing out about Ephrena, an unusual name also spelled Ephrina, Elphrena. The 100th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence caused a flurry of interest in quiltmaking., this one from Sotheby'sauction
ten years ago. The celebration fair was in Philadelphia not far fromEphrina's home.
_Quilt from the Fenton Museum in Danbury Connecticut._ _ Connecticut project & the Quilt Index_ _Maria Whetsone Hallett_ _from the Ohio project's book_ _Anchors in a quilt signed Mary Haddy, from Cape Cod._ _Collection of the New England Quilt Museum_ _Along the top it says Centennial 1876_ Posted by Barbara Brackman at 6:00 AMNo comments:
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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 2020 YANKEE NOTIONS #3: WATER WHEEL_Yankee Notions #3_
_Water Wheel by Denniele Bohannon_ Water wheels represent the Yankee Notion of industry. Two styles of water wheels that use a moving stream to power machinery, technology suited to New England'stopography.
Steam and then electricity replaced water wheels as a power source. _ #3 Water Wheel by Becky Brown_ _Northern view of the pre-War division of labor in the South_ Many essayists have discussed Yankee notions contrasting Northern culture with Western, Midlands and especially Southern culture. One sees the cultural conflict in newer states like Illinois settled by people from North and South who now lived side-by-side. > "Southerners enjoyed a relaxed work ethic, which both amused and > miffed Yankees, who sported a finely tuned work ethic, one that > never seemed to rest." James E. Davis gives you an overview summarizing the clash of ideas concerning the use of time: https://www.lib.niu.edu/2009/iht09150211.html Some pre-Civil-War Southerners suggested their economy might benefit from a few Yankee notions. > "An infusion of a little Yankee industry and capital into the > arteries of Virginia will produce a beneficial effect." enthused the > _Richmond Enquirer_ in 1845. But even after the War when it was clear that the plantation economy was no longer viable there was a resistance to change. > "Why are we as poor as Lazarus while they roll in wealth? I will > tell you. Because there is hardly a town in New England...where you > do not hear, all day and night, the buzz of machinery, the panting > of the steam engine, the whirr of the driving wheel; and because in > our towns, this music of industry and thrift is with few exceptions, > never heard." _Southern Farm & Home _ On the other hand, fans of the whippoorwill's song might not consider all that buzzing, panting and whirring desirable. _Water Wheel by Dorry Emmer (12 inch version)_ Waterwheels below the factories powered machinery with pulleys and belts... that ran pistons that moved the shuttles. _Lewis Hine photo of a mill girl preparing the yarns for the loom,_ _ "drawing in" about 1910. __Library of Congress.__
_
The noise was deafening.THE BLOCK
_Water Wheel by Denniele Bohannon__Her 18" version_
This nine patch with many ways to shade it was called Water Wheel by _Farm Journal_ and the _Chicago Tribune's_Nancy Cabot column.
_But the pattern is older: This one about 1900_12" FINISHED BLOCK
A - Cut 16 squares 2-1/2". B - Cut 2 light and 2 dark triangles 4-7/8". C - Cut 1 square 4-1/2".18" FINISHED BLOCK
A - Cut 16 squares 3-1/2". B - Cut 2 light and 2 dark triangles 6-7/8". C - Cut 1 square 6-1/2". Dorry's 9-inch blocks feature a Yankee Notion,here a pincushion.
YANKEE NOTION OF THE MONTHPINS
Pins made of bone and bronze go back in history for centuries but hand-hewn metal pins were expensive and labor intensive. Connecticut is proud of Yankee John Ireland Howe who in 1832 manufactured the first practical machine-made pins after watching inmates in a poor house earn their keep by making hand-processed pins. Pins soon were an important New England industry powered by the water wheels of the 19thcentury.
_Connecticut Historical Society_ Today we buy our pins in plastic boxes, not nearly the fun pin dispensers used to be _Pin cubes & Pin Rolls_ _1893 mail order from Carson Pirie Scott_A Pin Ball
A Pin Wheel
Read about the archaeology of pins in Mary Carolyn Beaudry's _Findings: The Material Culture of Needlework And Sewing._Link to a preview:
https://books.google.com/books?id=rvT_aYLCKfIC&source=gbs_navlinks_s_
_
Blocks 1 - 3 Becky Brown's _Yankee Notions_ Posted by Barbara Brackman at 6:00 AM1 comment:
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SATURDAY, MARCH 7, 2020 STOLEN? CONFISCATED? PLUNDERED? QUILT BLOCK_James A. Colehour_
Vicki Wendel called our attention to this little piece of patchwork in a museum in Minnesota, far from Waynesboro, Georgia. It's silk hexagons with a rather crudely inked date of December 4, 1864, probably not the date it was made but the date it was acquired on a battlefield in Waynesboro. The Battle of Waynesboro, Georgia (December 4 &5, 1864) was one of many between Confederates and Sherman's Union troops on their "March to the Sea" after the capture of Atlanta a few weeks earlier. Waynesboro, south of Augusta, Georgia is not far from the Georgia/South Carolina border. James Allison Colehour (1842-1938) seems to have taken a battlefield souvenir and saved it all his life. _There are many ways to spell Wainesborough. The silk scraps_ _are pieced over paper hexagons perhaps cut from letters._ James was one of six brothers and a sister, originally from Pennsylvania, whose family migrated to Mount Carroll, Illinois in 1854. When the Civil War began James and David Colehour joined the 92nd Illinois Infantry. James served in Company 1 under General SmithD. Atkins.
The "Butternut Crackers" From a 1921 reunion that James attended _Lt. David Colehour_ Both David and James were hospitalized with typhoid fever in a Nashville hospital in the spring of 1863. Lt. David Colehour died in March at 24 years old. _Hiram's house, built in 1860, still stands in Mount Carroll_ Their eldest brother Hiram Supplee Colehour came down to retrieve David's body and visit a very ill James. Hiram caught typhoid himself and died in May at 31 years of age, leaving a wife with six children. http://genealogytrails.com/ill/carroll/carrollfamilycolehour.html This all must have been an unimaginable series of disasters for their mother Hannah Richards Colehour (1805-1897) who had lost her husband Henry a few years earlier. Another son Isaac died at the end of theyear.
James survived and rejoined his unit. He fought at the Battle of Chickamauga in September, 1864 where he was shot in the shoulder, one of three wounds he received in the war. But by December he was back with his regiment at the Battle of Waynesboro. The surviving Colehours seem to have been made of strong stuff as mother Hannah lived to be 94 and James to 96. But after the war James was advised that the Chicago atmosphere was too much for him and he moved with many in his extended family to the resort town of Battle Lake, Minnesota up near Fergus Falls. He and his wife built a large house there in the 1880s, a hotel for summer visitors._Prospect House_
_
_ James collected numerous items and was averse to tossing them out. With a large house he didn't really have to. Prospect House and its contents remained in the family. Great-grandson Jay Johnson was thrilled to find letters, diaries and all manner of souvenirs in the house, including this piece of patchwork. Johnson opened a Civil War Museum in Prospect House. http://www.prospecthousemuseum.org/index.php _Waynesboro, Georgia in the 1930s._ Someone in Georgia lost a piece of patchwork in 1864. Vicki tells us that the museum indicates James "took the block from a house as a souvenir of his being there. I doubt he had permission, so I guess 'theft' would be a fair description." _Union soldiers finding the buried silver spoons with a little help_ _from a former slave._ Was the block a theft? Stolen? Stealing implies stealth but it's likely there was no sneaking around the Georgia house. Perhaps a more accurate description would be plundered, pillaged or looted. General William Tecumseh Sherman's army, to which James belonged, was notorious for ransacking Southern homes and plundering valuables. Soldiers were encouraged to "forage liberally on the country duringthe march."
Southern history of the end of the war still echoes with tales of Sherman's army's cruelty as if it were plain meanness or just bad manners to treat civilians so. We should not miss the point --- and Sherman had a point to make. He was an innovator of the "scorched earth policy," a systematic terrorizing of the civilians so they would demand an end to the war. _"Foragers" Harper's Weekly, April, 1865_ "He sought to utilize destructive war to convince Confederate citizens in their deepest psyche both that they could not win the war and that their government could not protect them from Federal forces," according to a post at Battlefields.org. Read much more aboutSherman's March:
https://www.battlefields.org/learn/articles/scorched-earth Stealing silver, clothing, food and quilts---and parts of quilts---wasa strategy.
"War is hell," as Sherman said. Here's a post on another plundered patchwork. http://civilwarquilts.blogspot.com/2019/12/battle-trophy.html Posted by Barbara Brackman at 6:00 AM1 comment:
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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2020WASHINGTON'S PLUMES
_Carla_
Many central blocks for our _Cassandra's Circle_ BOMhave been stitched
_Christine_
And/or basted
_Lisa_
_McKenna working on a linen background__
_
_Beth---going through her pink stash__
_
_Peggy_
_Karrin_
Rebecca's on a print background. Traditional red, green and yellows updated.A. Helman
Susannah added reverse applique details. Wendy's doing a half-size version so her block is 18" Those 36" blocks go together quickly, which is one reason they were so popular with quilters in the past. You could make 4 more and get a top together in no time. Notice how varied the center shapes are. Posted by Barbara Brackman at 6:00 AM4 comments:
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Subscribe to: Posts (Atom) YANKEE NOTIONS: PIECED BOM 2020 #3 WATER WHEEL Click on Dena''s block to see the pattern. CASSANDRA'S CIRCLE: BLOCK #2 Click on Becky Brown's block to see the pattern for Mulberry Wreath. YANKEE NOTIONS: PIECED BOM 2020 #2 SCHOOLHOUSE Click on Jean's block to see the pattern. YANKEE NOTIONS: PIECED BOM 2020 #1 OPEN BOOK Click on Rita's block to see the pattern: CASSANDRA'S CIRCLE: BLOCK #1 Click on Denniele's block to see the pattern for Washington's Plume. CASSANDRA'S CIRCLE. 2020 APPLIQUE BOM Click on the women to see a post on setting and fabric needs. WHAT IF THE PATTERN PRINTS TOO SMALL? Click on the picture to read the post. You can fix it. BUY BOM PATTERNS AT MY ETSY SHOP. You can buy color pdfs to pirnt yourself or I will print them out in black & white and mail them to you (Mail: US only) HOSPITAL SKETCHES: 2019 PATTERN POSTS Click on Karen's top to see links to patterns for last year's appliqueBOM.
PHOTOS OF YOUR BLOCKS Click on the images below to see sites with pictures from the QuiltAlong series.
CIVIL WAR APPLIQUE FACEBOOK GROUP Click on Louisa's face to see the group. Ask to be added. INSTAGRAM:::HOSPITAL SKETCHES The hashtag is #hospitalsketchesBOM Click to go there. INSTAGRAM #CIVILWARQUILT Stitchers post pictures of stuff they are making from civil-war-era repros, etc. Look at the tag #civilwarquilts too WHY "FOLLOW BY EMAIL"? You get an email with the content every time I post. Just type your address in the spot below.FOLLOW BY EMAIL
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PATTERNS FOR SALE: DIGITAL & PAPER Several of my BOM patterns are for sale in my Etsy Shop. Click on the quilters to see the page. VIRTUAL CIVIL WAR QUILT SHOW Click on the Smithsonian's Stars & Stripes bedquilt to see my Pinterest page with actual Civil War era quilts.VISIT MY ETSY STORE
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MY BOOKS ABOUT QUILTS & THE CIVIL WAR Click on the covers to find these Out-of-Print books in paper ordigital form
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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