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History of Quilting:

The dictionary defines a quilt as a bed cover made of two layers of cloth with a layer of wool or down between them. The layers are held together and the filling kept in place by stitching. In truth a quilt means warmth and comfort. The knights of old wore quilted vests under their suits of armor. Chinese peasants wore quilted jackets to keep out the cold. Some where a woman, her family facing a long cold winter with few blankets, stitched together scraps of worn clothing to make a warm cover, and Patchwork quilting came into being.

To bring some small measure of beauty into their homes, women made their patchwork into decorative patterns. The patterns were named for events in their lives, and became a historical record, not only of their own lives, but of our country.

Patchwork patterns were named for every aspect of daily life. Birds in Air, Bear's Paw, Broken Dishes, Grandmother's Fan, Dresden Plate, Railroad Crossing, Wild Geese, and Turkey Tracks are only a few examples.

Sailor's wives who made quilts during months of waiting and worrying, named their blocks Ocean Wave, Captain's Wheel, Storm at Sea, Mariner's Compass and World Without End. Some appliquéd blocks depicted sea tragedies and mass drowning.

By the 1700's there was more leisure time and commerce was flourishing. Materials were used more lavishly and with more and more expertise. The quilting bee came into being. One journal described a quilting bee that lasted 10 days. Taxes imposed by the British caused an American boycott against imports and by 1750 ninety percent of American Farmers fabricated their own clothing. During the War for Independence, women of every class made quilts. The Quilt patterns, Burgoyne Surrounded and Washington's Quilt, reflect that period of history. 

Weaving mills came to New England in the 1820's. The farm girls who came to work in the mills were happy to be self supporting. They worked a 14 hour day, six days a week. They lived in dormitories and sent money home to their families. When prices for woven goods went down, the mills increased the speed of the machines, and reduced pay so that they worked twice as hard for less pay.

Album quilts were made of signed quilt squares. The squares were made from scraps of clothing by friends and family. They were comforting reminders of home.

In 1830, Northern women began to speak out against slavery. The Mill girls, feeling a kinship to the dark women slaving in the South, added their signatures to petitions to abolish slavery. 

In the South, four year old girls became house slaves to tend to new babies. Many of the beautiful quilts passed down as family heirlooms were made by house slaves. Both slaves and quilts were the property of the family who owned them. 

Harriet Powers life as a slave is recorded in her African tradition quilt. Banned from using their own language and practicing their religion slaves preserved their heritage in their quilts and their music. After working in the fields all day, many women quilted at night using worn out clothing for scraps and using bark and plants to dye those scraps. These quilts were a necessity because slaves were only given one blanket every 3 years. 

Independent Hog was a code word for escaped slaves. Slaves who were caught faced imprisonment, torture and death. The underground railroad used quilts to identify a network of safe houses for runaway slaves. Quilts were hung on clothes lines as a signal. Underground quilts were maps for the slaves to follow on their way North. Quilts became a protest against oppression. The names used were Jacob's Ladder, Deliver Me, Underground railroad, North Star and Harriet Philadelphia. Harriet Tubman had escaped to Philadelphia by way of the Underground Railway.

Women of the North made quilts and sold or raffled them to raise money for the Abolitionist cause. Their motto was "May the use of our needles prick the conscience of the slave holders." Elizabeth Keckley was a slave who supported the family who owned her by her skill with a needle. The father of her son was her master. Angry that her son was also treated as a slave, she borrowed they money from her clients to buy her freedom. She moved north to the White House and became the dressmaker for Mary Todd Lincoln.

Quilts with the symbols of hearts and hands and inscribed with patriotic messages were sent off to war with soldiers from both sides. The Troop needed uniforms and blankets. The women sent masses of uniforms, quilts and bandages. The women of the North established the United States Sanitary Commission. They provided food, clothing and medical supplies to the troops at the front. The New York Branch alone sent twenty six thousand quilts to the front.

When the war ended, Elizabeth Keckley made a quilt of elegant silk scraps with an eagle in the center. A quilt was made of remnants confederate uniforms. One woman made a quilt inscribed with 47 battles her husband and fought in and survived.

The growing country reached out for more land and more space and to many men the prospect of owning their own land was irresistible. Log Cabins seemed quaint and romantic. In 1865 immigrants traveled to the West to build new communities and start new lives. Wives had no choice but to follow their husbands or be left behind. So packing their dishes in their quilts, and leaving behind family, friends, and all but the basic necessities, they traveled to the land of the future. At the end of a long hard journey they found a one room mud and stick hut, and a life of hardship and loneliness in their log cabin. 

These women decorated their walls with the same quilts that padded their dishes on the trip, used them for doors to their home, and hung them between beds for privacy. Often they buried their babies in the quilts they had stitched to welcome them.

Log Cabin Quilts are a great favorite to this day. The square center of the block is usually red and represents the heart and hearth of home. This square is surrounded by strips that represent the stacked logs of a log cabin. As the country became more settled, there were neighbors and then friends. A quilt maker's journal records that there were fifteen to quilt. Friendships grew as women talked about their lives and problems. They traded scraps left from garments. The Log Cabin Quilt variations grew. Barn Raising, Light and Dark, Straight Furrow, Courthouse Steps, Pineapple, Windmill Blades, Streak of Lightening. Selling chances on quilts raised money for a new church roof, books for a library.

Daughters in the family helped with sewing clothes when they were old enough to hold a needle. Many girls had completed a full sized quilt cover by the age of 5. They were also expected to have made all the towels, blankets and bed linen for their own homes, as well as a series of quilt tops, before they married. Traditionally the 13th quilt top was the Bride's Quilt and was meant for the marriage bed. Actually it was a form of final exam in household skills. A wife who could sew well was a real necessity because she supplied the family with clothes. 

A young woman often announced her engagement at a quilting bee, and her friends gathered to help with the quilting of the tops. Unquilted tops that came to light in later years may have been made by women who did not marry.

Turkey red fabric came into being. It was a great favorite for many years. The first Centennial was celebrated with red white and blue quilts. Flag quilts.

In 1852 thousands of settlers headed for Oregon. They traveled by Covered Wagon. Their wives took their patchwork quilts and calicoes with them. 

Abigail Dunaway kept a Journal when she left home for Oregon. She was accompanied by her mother and sister. Her mother died along the way as did many of the immigrants. There was little trouble with the Sioux Indians as the travelers believed that if they did not harm the Indians, the Indians would not harm them. They admired the bold geometric designs woven into the blankets. New patchwork blocks were influenced by Indian designs and were named, Indian basket, Indian teepee, Prairie Sun, Cactus Basket, Feathered Star, Rocky Mountain Road. The travelers passed many graves. The Sawtooth Edge block was influenced by the wearing away of edge of the trail where the immigrants wandered off the path to read grave markers. Many who had gone before them were buried in shallow graves by side of the road. They reached Oregon. More quilt blocks were named. Pine Tree, Dog at the Window, Wedding Ring.

Abigail Married and raised a large family. Abigail wrote " Rise above discouragement" in her journal when her husband was seriously injured and unable to work. Abigail opened a millinery shop to support her family. 

Abigail met Susan B. Anthony, a suffragist, who was concerned with the plight of women who sewed for a living. Abigail started a newspaper and worked for women's right to vote. Together the women demanded an 8 hr workday, and equal pay for equal work. In 1918 Woman won the right to vote, and Abigail Dunaway was the first woman to vote.

The invention of the sewing machine and travel by train increased leisure time. The crazy quilt became fashionable. It was a means to demonstrate needlework skills. Geometric designs were discarded. Working women were considered overtaxed and underpaid. Women who stayed home were frivolous and expensive. 

Women bore the brunt of domestic violence caused by alcohol and banded together in the Women's Temperance Union. Wearing a symbolic white ribbon, the women of Ohio closed 3000 taverns in a month. Quilts were the banners that brought home into politics. Blue and white quilts in the Drunkards Path pattern and the Temperance Goblet pattern influenced social reform. The members of the Temperance Union petitioned to abolish drug and alcohol trade.

In 1900 factory made blocks were sold. There were lots of quilt kits. In 1915 the first book about quilts was published. In 1929 the second book was published. There was a renewed interest in researching blocks, and quilters started labeling their quilts. 

When catalogs started selling blankets and bedcovers, interest in quilting declined. This decline was temporary. The depression in 1929 brought a renewed interest in quilting. Newspapers and magazines reproduced old quilt patterns. New patterns were invented. The themes were patriotic and technological. Art Deco styles came into vogue. Quilting and crafts were encouraged to promote employment under the WPA. 

Quilts were purchased for their beauty and their historical interest. In 1943 "The Victory Quilt" won a National Needlework Competition.

In 1969 Quilters could find few supplies for their craft. Fabric stores were full of synthetics. Even so, a revolution in quilting was beginning. In the 1960 The freedom Quilting Bee in Alabama, and the Mountain Artisans Cooperative in West Virginia was organized. Soon women from these financially deprived areas were earning money by supplying quilts to stores in the cities. The Quilting Boom was just beginning. The Hudson River Quilt, made to raise funds for cleaning up the river, was the first of many community quilts made during the Bicentennial era.

Collecting, dating, and researching old quilts resulted in an interest in reproducing them. Small quilt clubs and groups were beginning to form all over the country. Quilted clothing was gaining popularity.

In 1970, Doug Tompkins, owner of Esprit de corps began collecting quilts that were hung in the San Francisco Company headquarters. The first "Patch in Time" quilt show was organized by Joyce Gross and the Mill Valley Quilt Authority in California. (Joyce Gross will show some of her collection at the Petaluma History Museum during the Great Petaluma Quilt Show.)

During the past twenty years the Quilting industry has grown and flourished. Many young women who had no quilting heritage, began careers in the quilt industry. They became teachers, and published books on quilting. They sold quilts and quilt related products. They invented new tools and accessories for quilters. They developed new designs and new techniques. They designed fabrics and opened Quilt Shops. Quilt shows have become international events. The new world Ave of quilts is ever changing and always fresh and exciting. The ingenuity of the new quilt maker will not

allow the craft to become stale or dated. 

Quilt making is an art form of international interest. Quilt makers no longer copy old patterns. Every design is fresh and exciting. The average new quilt pattern lasts only a few months before it is replaced by something new.

Quilter's enthusiasm is boundless. They travel from Quilt Show to Quilt Show. Vacations follow the trail of Quilt Shops. They carry their work with them. They collect, not only quilts, but patterns, fabrics, and notions. A new fabric is the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, and the modern quilter has been there and back many times. 

Geraldine O'Connor