Monday, March 6, 2023

All the Techniques, Patterns and Materials used in Making the Quilted Book

Presenting the Completed Book to the Elmira Piecemakers Guild Meeting in Feb 2023

Here I am presenting the book to my guild.  I wanted to reflect on all the patterns, series quilts techniques and materials used in making the book - there was a LOT!

Louise’s “Scrap” Book of Quilts

Series Quilts Represented:
Quaddy Quiltie / Bear Paw – Ruby Short, 1916
Roly Poly Circus / Churn Dash – Ruby McKim, 1923
Memory Bouquet – Eveline Foland
Old English – Margaret Techy, Cleveland Plain Dealer
Golden West – Mary Erckenbrack
Flower Garden – Ruby Short McKim
Grandmother’s Flower Garden – Nancy Page (Florence LaGanke, Ann Kerven)
Modernistic Flower – Cecil B. Mullen, 1933
Flowers of Fort Worth / Log Cabin – Lois Clayton DeRaine
Nursery Rhyme Quilt – Philadelphia Inquirer, 1920-21 (Helen Baxter, Jeannette McDowell)
Quilt of Birds – 1938 Nancy Page (Florence LaGanke, Ann Kerven)

Other Patterns Used:
Bear Paw
Churn Dash
Log Cabin
Wagon Wheel with Rooster and Cat from Hide and Seek – Feeding Bib Design by Grace. B. Cross, 1908
Cluster of Lillies – Kansas City Star, 1934
1862 A Comic Patchwork – Arthur’s Home Magazine and The Family Friend
Sunbonnet Sue – Eveline Foland
Ladies Art Co – Letter “C” for Cat
Crazy Quilt Block:
  Horn Blowing Rooster – John L. Salter Trademark, 1883
  Grasshopper – Mrs. Farnham’s Home Beautiful, 1884
  Owl and Moon Man – J.F. Ingalls Stamping Patterns Catalogue, 1886
  Initial “L” – Peterson’s 1880
  Spotted Fish – Godey’s Lady’s Book and Magazine, 1861
The Calico Tree – Nancy Page (Florence LaGanke, Ann Kerven)
Tittens the Curious Kitten (Cat Fishing in a Fish Bowl) – John S. Piper Stamping Patterns Catalogue, 1892
Flower Initials – Ruby Short McKim
Rainbow Quilt Block Company – William Bray Pinch
Patchy Gus – The Patchy Zoo by G. Selma Sauer, 1931
Mouse – Louise D. Tessin, The Beatsie Party (illustrated poem), 1922
1948 Graduation Quilt – designed by my Grandmother, Yvonne Charlebois Welburn
Random Faces – designed by my son Walter
Plus my own designs

I was nearing the end (page 34+) and still had a lot of things I wanted to include. One thing they had in common was elephants, hence, a Basket of Elephants:
  A Jolly – Circus Ruby Short McKim, 1921
  Slumberland – Lockport Batting Co
  Patchwork Zoo – Prudence Penny (Seattle Post-Intelligencer), Bernice Redington and Maxine Buren
  Circus Quilt – Detroit Press (big elephant in center)
  Big Top Circus – Omaha World Herald, Harry Rasmussen
  Patchwork Circus – Spring 1928 McCall’s
  May Day Baskets – Hurbert Ver Mehren

Techniques Used (in addition to standard machine piecing):
Hand and Machine Applique
Hand and Machine Quilting
Mud Cloth Painting
Hand Embroidery
Beading
Fiber Couching
Seminole Piecing
Needle Felting
Random Piecing
Shaving Cream Dyed Fabric
Bobbin Embroidery
Paper Piecing
English Paper Piecing
Sashiko
Fabric Markers
Crazy Quilting
Water Color Effect with Sharpie Markers
Yo-Yo’s
Wool Applique
Ribbon Embroidery
Tatting (vintage piece)
Crochet (vintage piece done by my mom)

Materials used:
Used both vintage/antique fabric/blocks along with new ones.
Cotton - Fabric, DMC Floss, Thread
Blue Jeans
Silk - Fabric, Floss, Thread
Huck Towel
Wool - Fabric, Roving
Linen
Various Content – Home Dec Fabric Samples
Digitally Printed (Text and NYS Map)
Fabric and Ribbon from a box of Valentine’s Chocolate
Poly Batting, Fusible Interfacing, Thread (including poly/cotton blends)
Tractor Cab Packing Felt

 

Tuesday, February 28, 2023

Louise's "Scrap" Book of Quilts

 

Louise's Scrap Book of Quilts - Overview

The above is an overview of a quilted book I made for a quilt challenge. There are 40 quilted pages representing events in my life an my love of quilt history.  I designed the book without any real knowledge on how I was going to assemble it.  I had seen several "books" made by quilters, but they only had a few pages, and were small enough to fit into the throat of a standard domestic sewing machine.  I knew mine would not, as the Pages were going to be 10-inches square, and with the text and connector fabric, the Page Sets would be 24-inches long.

As I grappled with that, I continued making the Pages.  I thought about old books, and how their pages were thread bound together and glued in the back.  Gluing was not an option for me.  I watched youtube videos on how to bind books with blank papers - and the stitching involved in the process.

I had an eureka moment one morning when I woke up - I would thread bind the Page Sets to a Spine.  Originally I thought the pages would need to be about 3-eights of an inch apart, but then realized they would need to be 0.5-inch apart since each Page would be quilted.  Using the eyelet stitch on my sewing machine, I placed 7 eyelets equal distanced apart in the center Joining Fabric on each Page Set.

Eyelets were made in the Spine fabric to correspond with the ones on the Page Sets.  One of my Lamb to Loom guild members had some very heavy felt that was used to protect the cab of a tractor during shipping.  It was just the right material to use for the spine and book covers.  It is equivalent to about three layers of heavy weight interfacing.  It was a breeze to sew through. 

I started making pages on August 10, 2022, with the last one done on December 10, 2022 - just in time for our guild meeting.  I received a Ruby Crown for my efforts.  It took another month to get all the pages quilted, and then until February 7, 2023 to get it fully assembled.

There were a couple of date errors noted, so I "X'd" out the text and embroidered in the corrected dates.

Here are the page sets:

Page Sets 1, 2, and 3

Page Sets 4, 5, and 6

Page Sets 7, 8 and 9

Page Sets 10, 11 and 12

The journey is complete, and Walter, your mom finally has a book!

The Ruby Jubilee Challenge - A Quilted Book

 

Louise's "Scrap" Book of Quilts

Back in June 2022, the Elmira Piecemakers quilt guild issued a Ruby Jubilee Challenge to celebrate the guild's 40 year anniversary.  Members were given a 10-inch square of red fabric to make a quilt to be displayed at the December 2022 meeting.  That day, I decided to make a forty-page quilted book using designs from my favorite newspaper series quilt patterns.  The following day I started outlining what was to be included.  

I have an outline embroidery book in my collection designed by S. Agnes Putnam in 1895 and while doing research on that I found another cloth book by Louise Bourgeois called "Ode รข l'Oubli" or Ode to Forgetting.  I always thought that someday I would like to make a cloth book too.

Inspired by these cloth books I started on my journey.

It took a while to actually start stitching on the book as I had a speaking commitment at the National Quilter's Hall of fame at the end of July.  I presented on my research on Ann Kerven, the artist behind the Nancy Page columns written by Florence LaGanke Harris. Florence was the 2022 Legend Inductee to the Quilter's Hall of Fame.  While there I got to meet Eleanor Burns, who got me started quilting back in 1999 with her PBS quilt show.  Eleanor presented information on Florence and the Nancy Page Quilt Club columns.

The first page was started on August 10, 2022.

I went through my sewing room and pulled out anything that was an orphan - something done at a guild meeting or quilt class that never went anywhere.  I had a baggie of Hexies of various sizes, a Bobbin Embroidery sample, some embroidery I did back in the 1970s, things my mother had made, several baggies of scrap triangles, etc.  You get the drift.

I piled up selections of fabrics that might go together, found some vintage blocks and fabrics and started assembling them into pages.  One of the hardest blocks I made was in honor of my mother - I used some of her needlework pieces I saved from the flood of 2011, right before she passed.  A swan Huck Towel and a floral doily she had crocheted the edging on.  Cutting into them was very nerve racking. 

I also struggled with the memory block for our son Isaac who passed in 2009.  I had an old bib of his that I was able to darn a bit so it could be added to the book.  I tried to use everything from my stash, but did end up buying a little silver trumpet charm and trumpet fabric for his page.  

Walter, for whom this book is for, also provided inspiration.

For an art project in middle school, Walter made a drawing, then a painting based on the drawing. I scanned and printed it out on fabric, then used fabric markers to color it in.  I tried to use a similar color scheme as in his, with the markers I already had.

Years ago I made him an angler fish embroidered applique picture.  Armed with a baggie of snowball block triangle remnants, I made a sea of triangles to house a new angler fish.  I couched some fibers to make him some sea grass to hide in.

Too Many Quilt Patterns, Not Enough Pages

Along about page 34, I realized I had way more ideas than pages left.  I wanted to add May Day Baskets and several more quilt designs.  I studied all of them that I wanted to include and realized they all had one thing in common - elephants.  Trying to get all the elephants into one basket proved to be quite a challenge.  The May Day Basket pattern had 32 to choose from.  Once I chose one, I had to eliminate the handle to fit them all in.  After the elephants were completed and the backgrounds chosen, I embroidered the basket in coordinating colors.  The math fabric is a bonus (to me at least) since I was an engineer for close to 20 years prior to being a full time mom.

The Last Block is Quilted January 9, 2022

I used many different methods in designing the book.  I did most of the page layouts in PowerPoint since I was space constrained to a 10-inch square.  Images were scanned in or drafted first, than altered to fit the page.  I used everything from an 1862 pattern (Comic Patchwork), to a technique offered in September 2022 by Catherine Redford, the Scenic Route, and everything in between. 

I sent pictures of the progress for each block to several of my quiltie friends - and friends I have known all my life, but do not quilt.  Even my sister-in-law got the texts.  It was a lot of fun going back through all of them and seeing the comments they sent back. 

I will post the Page Sets next.  It was a joy to make, now my husband asks if there will be a volume two?  Not right now, as I am gathering fabrics and ideas to make a quilted coat.  I will be taking Rachel Clark's quilted coat class this coming summer at Quilting by the Lake.  It's so much fun being retired!

 




Tuesday, May 3, 2022

Series Quilts – A New Look

Series Quilts – 15 years later
Back in 2007, when I first started this blog, I put together a listing of Newspaper Series Quilts that I was aware of.  Since then, many more sources have become available and have allowed me to make additions to the listing.  I have many of the original newspaper clippings, blocks, tops and quilts in my collection and continue to add when I come across new items.  The listing, by group, is sort of chronological.  The Italics text indicates new information

Ruby Short McKim/McKim Studios – Syndicated
Quaddy Quiltie or Bedtime Quiltie  (based on Thornton W. Burgess characters)
Mother Goose Quiltie
A Jolly Circus 
Nursery Rhyme
Alice in Wonderland Quiltie
Roly-Poly Circus
Child Life Quilt 
Peter Pan
Colonial History
Bible History
Bird Life or Audubon Quilt
Flower Garden
Farm Life
Patchwork Sampler
Patchwork Parade of States (A series of 48 individual quilt patterns representing the 48 states)
State Flowers
Fruit Basket
Toy Shop Window
Wildwood Flowers
Three Little Pigs
Flower Basket
Rhyme Land Quilt
American Ships

Nancy Page (Florence LaGanke - author / Ann Kerven - artist) – Syndicated (Publisher’s Syndicate)
Grandmother’s Flower Garden
Noah's Ark Wall Hanging
Kitchen Fruit Stencils (not a quilt design, but a series of stencils) 
ABC Quilt
Magic Vine
Leaf Quilt
Wreath Series
Garden Bouquet
Snowflake Quilt
Old Almanac / Zodiac Quilt
French Bouquet
Brother Sister Quilt
Festoon Quilt (pictured in Successful Farming 1935)
Many Stars
Crossed Arrows (pictured in Successful Farming 1935)
Star & Sprig 
Laurel Wreath
Garden Fruit Linens (pictured in Successful Farming 1935)
Georgian Rose Quilt (not really a series quilt, based on an antique quilt)
Calendar
Peasant Embroidery Design (not a series quilt, pictured in Successful Farming 1935)
Summer Garlands
Ships at Sea (pictured in 1941 Capper’s Farmer)
Falling Leaves 
Buckle My Shoe 
Picnic Cloth (vegetables)
Quilt of Birds 
Tyrolean Table Cloth 
Hearts & Flowers
Mother Goose Quilt (small illustrations, need to send 3c for full size patterns)
The Calico Tree (not a series quilt, described in 1932 column, pictured in Country Gentleman 1939)
Our Blue Ribbon Quilt (not a series quilt, pictured in Country Gentleman 1940)
   
Margaret Techy (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
Fruit Quilt
All-Sports
Old English (copyrighted by Margaret Techy and the Plain Dealer Publishing Co)
Medieval Quilt
Ohio Flower 

Eveline Foland (Kansas City Star primarily, patterns copyrighted by KCS)
Santa’s Parade 
Memory Bouquet - offered in papers other than KCS
Horn of Plenty 

Cecil B. Mullen
Nursery Rhyme Quilt (Syndicated, copyrighted by Cecil Mullen and Fielding Lemmon)
Noah’s Ark (Syndicated) *assumed*
Modernistic Flower (copyrighted by Cecil B. Mullen)

Aileen Bullard - Cox Features
Happy Childhood 

Omaha World Herald Artists
State Birds and Flower Quilt (Nadine Bradley, Woman’s Dept Director; Merriam Lieb, artist)
Covered Wagon States (Unknown, not signed by artist)
Nursery Rhyme (Laverne Bartos)
Costumes of Nationalities (Laverne Bartos)
Big Top Circus (Harry Rasmussen) 

Mary Erckenbrack - Syndicated
Golden West 
Old Glory 
Vanity Table Runner (series of 5 motifs)
All American Quilt *assumed* 

Jane Alan - John F. Dille Co.
Flower Basket 

Lois Clayton DeRaine (Fort Worth Star-Telegram)
Flowers of Ft. Worth Texas 

Helen Baxter (Philadelphia Inquirer) – illustrated by Jean McDowell 
Many quilt/bedspread/crib cover patterns, plus many other needle art designs were published.
Bonnet Girls, Sep-Oct 1920, 2 part pattern
Nursery Rhyme, Nov 1920 - Sep 1921, 15 motifs
Noah's Ark, Oct 1922 - Jan 1923, 18 animals and ark motifs
Hexagon flowers, Aug 1923, 3 motifs
Floral designs, May 1924, 2 motifs
Bo Peep, Dec 1924 - Jan 125, 3 designs
Boy Blue, Mar 1925, 3 designs
The Nursery Bedspread, Jan 1926, 4 motifs
The Circus Parade, Apr-May 1927, 3 designs
Patchwork Quilt, Jan-Feb 1930, 6 pieced blocks
Owl and Rose Tree & Butterflies, June 1930, 2 blocks
Boy and Girl with Balloons, Oct 1930, 2 motifs

Clara Tillotson / Aunt Martha’s – Syndicated (NEA Service, Inc)
Parade of Nations – also appeared in Aunt Martha’s Workbasket, Vol 1, No 1-12, 10-1935 to 9-1936

Bernice Orpha Redington - Head of the Prudence Penny Dept, Maxine Buren - Artist
Prudence Penny's Patchwork Zoo (Seattle Post-Intelligencer) 

Designer/Artist Unknown
Mother Goose (Detroit News) – Banner underneath each motif
Circus Quilt (Detroit Free Press) – 20 patterns, large central elephant plus 14 animals

These are series quilt designs that appeared in the newspapers and a few magazines.  Several magazines offered series quilts to their readers, with an early one being the Mother Goose quilt from 1908 with 20 motifs, offered by Farm and Home magazine in 4-block installments, either as pre-printed blocks or perforated patterns.  

Monday, August 24, 2020

The Bird Trap Quilt - May be New to Me, But Has Been Around Since the 1870s

 

The Bird Trap Quilt – May be new to me, but has been around since the 1870s

While doing my browsing of quilt articles on Chronicling America, I found a full page article from 1906 that showed a woman with a quilt on her lap with many different block patterns listed.

“Many Old Patterns - Among the designs in which the patchwork pieces were placed in the quilt were rising sun, goose chase, three-pieced rhomboid, honeycombed hexagons, Star of Bethlehem, diamond and cube, winding blade, trap and nine patch, Philadelphia pavement; oakleaf and orange, flower vase, willow chair, cravat, basket of fruit, plain basket, swallow at the window, nine patch, ocean wave, whig rose, king's diamond, six-pointed star, double swallow, evening star, daisy bird-trap (usually with log cabin alternate patches), sunlight and shadow, friendship center, devil's wall, star and circle, star and compass and Roman stripe.”

I was familiar with most of them, but had never heard of a “bird trap” design and that piqued my interest, especially since it was mentioned with log cabins – one of my favorites in quilt research.

I have done quite a bit of gathering of log cabin mentions, pattern mentions and fair premium awards given for quilts using the log cabin design. One of these days I will post about it.

In the meantime, while researching the quilt pattern called “Bird Trap” I found several references to the quilt pattern in folklore sources. In the 1933 article Quilt Names in the Ozarks by Vance Randolph and Isabel Spradley, the pattern is mentioned along with some 250 quilt patterns described to them.

“Some quilts have geometrical names, or other names ... , Blue Bird, Bird Trap, Bird's Nest, Bird in a Tree ... Rider, Square Log Cabin, Spool Bed, Pickle…”

In 1978, Sally E. Weatherford wrote about a quiltmaker Nellie Virge (aka Verge) from Murfreesboro, Tennessee in the Tennessee Folklore Society Bulletin, where she gives this description, along with an illustration of the “Bird Trap” design. (More on Nellie later.)

“The “Bird Trap” (illustration #1) is an individual block or square. Of the quilts viewed, several were in this pattern. Each block is different both in makeup and colors, but the general pattern is the same. The entire quilt s pieced of this same block design. A small inside square is banded with strips pf alternating colors which forms the “Bird Trap.” The pattern itself is quite similar to one found in several quilt books and referred to as “log Cabin,” in which a small square is banded in strips. With the “Log Cabin,” however, light and dark strips are arranged in a manner so that the completed block has an overall pattern as well as the individual patterns of the blocks. These overall designs may appear has horizontal zigzags, diagonal stripes or concentric diamonds, among others. The “Bird Trap” does not use this arrangement of light and dark. The block illustrated is executed in blue, red, white, and brown and white checked strips surrounding a green center square.”

On the web site Folklife in Louisiana (www.louisianafolklife.org), an interview by Susan Garrett Davis in the Quilting section, of two quilters Turlie Richardson and Lillie Payton, the Felicianas – “Lilly Payton only recalled the name of one of the patterns she used, a "Bird's Trap," which resembled the traditional log cabin pattern.”


Pecolia Warner, 1983 WCA (Woman’s Caucus for Art) honor award recipient, bio indicates “The artist’s designs spring from many levels of her experience. Some of her quilts have been inspired by memories of her mother’s quilts, by dreams, by introspection, by patterns seen in books, by household objects or by things remembered from her life in farming. Designs she calls “Pigpen” and “Bird Trap” reflect her memories of objects she watched her brother build as a child. … Two of her better known quilts she pieced from blocks containing the letter “P” – as in Pecolia.”

Most recently, in 2013 blogger Sophie showed her version of a “Bird Trap” quilt. She was inspired by a “Bird Trap” quilt she saw in the Belger Arts Center collection.

These are the more recent, i.e. after 1900 mentions of the “Bird Trap” quilt patterns, but what about the 1800s? I was on a quest and found several mentions in the 1870s along with several interesting images of bird traps made with twigs.

What About the 1800s?
At the October 1871 Giles County Fair in Tennessee, in the Floral Hall “A satin and velvet quilt made by an old lady in Gallatin in 1868, compelled the praises of all. It was an elegant hexagonal, put together with hexagons and diamonds, lined with silk, bound with satin and edged with cords, which cords terminated at each end into two rich tassels. There was also a bird-trap quilt, made of silk that was greatly admired.”

Later, at the West Tennessee Agricultural and Mechanical Association Fair in Jackson, Tennessee, the Floral Hall had quilts. “The quilts and counterpanes on exhibition showed considerable ingenuity and skill. One of the latter made of silk of the bird trap pattern, had 10,200 pieces in it, a monument to the patience and industry of the maker.

In the Dalton of North Georgia Fair Association, Fourth Annual Fair held in October 1873, Mrs. Thomas A. Harris entered two quilts, a silk bird trap and a worsted log cabin.

“QUILTS, COVERLETS AND SPREADS. Mrs. ME Harkins’ quilt attracted universal attention; while it is showy it is not dashy. Miss Euphine Higgins has one that was made of 5,500 pieces. Mrs. C.C. Fulsome one of the Rock Mountain patterns. Mrs. Thomas A. Harris a silk quilt of the bird trap pattern; also, a worsted one of the log cabin pattern. While these were all beautiful, and attracted marked attention, the diamond figured quilt made by Miss Celeste Conner, aged twelve years, (a grand-daughter of Judge Towns,) was the one which all examined. The sprightly Miss received many honest compliments and she deserved them all.”

Theft of Bird Trap Quilt – More than one?
Yes, I found two references of “Bird Trap” Quilts being stolen. The first one was in Danville, Kentucky, in 1876 according to the Kentucky Advocate, May 5, 1876. There were a rash of robberies, and a quilt was stolen.

“The neighborhood between Perryville and Nevada seems to be infested by one or more thieves, who are becoming quite daring, and which will probably end in someone getting into business. The houses of Peter Hamilton and Mrs. Peach, were robbed some time back. A short time since, Wm. Moss’ was entered and a lot of things taken. Last Sunday seek, while Squire J.C. Barkley and family were away from home, entrance was obtained, his papers searched, it is supposed for money, and carried away a few things. On last Thursday, during the absence of the family, the residence of Chas. Gray was entered, a table drawer broken open and a pocket-book containing forty dollars were found, but in searching the pocket-book a ten-dollar bill was found that the thief had overlooked, making Mr. Gray’s loss in money about $30. There was also taken a worsted quilt, black and red, of the log-cabin or bird-trap design, with blue buttons sprinkled over it. We hope that everyone seeing this notice will be on the look-out for the quilt, -- as the finding of it may lead to the detection of the thief.”

The second mention of a stolen Bird Trap Quilt was reported in The Tennessean on February 19, 1897.

“INTERESTING CASE. Eva Smith Found Not Guilty of Stealing a Quilt. A very interesting case was heard yesterday afternoon by Justice Jake Levine, at his office on North Cherry street. It was that of Eva Smith, colored, alias Jane Smith, who was prosecuted by Albert White for the larceny of a quilt. Albert White was rooming in the house of the defendant, and claims that when he went to his new lodging house he carried eight quilts, among which was a "bird-trap" one. He said he folded and packed all eight of the quilts between the mattresses of his bed. He then went off for a few weeks, and upon his return, claims he found the "bird-trap" quilt missing. One of his witnesses, a woman, claimed that Eva Smith hid it in a straw mattress, but the house was searched in vain by a Constable. The case was dismissed on this evidence, and the prosecutor taxed with the costs.”

Log Cabin Blocks Have Light and Dark Sides – Except One
Most of the log pattern quilt designs dictate that there should be a dark side and a light side, save for one. In the 1884 booklet by the Patten Publishing Company called How to Make the Home Beautiful says that “Shading may be done in a variety of ways – diagonally or straight across, or there may be no shading attempted, but the colors placed hit or miss, which makes a really pretty patchwork when it is not convenient to have colors enough to handsomely shade a quilt.”

This design option was what quilters Nellie Verge, Pecolia Warner and Sophie from Block Lotto used to make their “Bird Trap” quilts.

Actual Bird Traps
In Pecolia Warner’s bio, she mentions she was inspired by her brother building a “Bird Trap” when she was younger. It got me thinking as to what a bird trap looked like. I found some good images in W. Hamilton Gibson book on Camp life in the Woods.

“The Coop Trap. …the first thing to be done is to cut four stout twigs about an inch in thickness and fifteen inches in length and tie them together at the corners,…This forms the base of the coop. Next collect from a number of twigs of about the same thickness, and from them select two more corresponding in length to the bottom pieces. … proceed to lay the two selected sticks across the ends of the uppermost two of the square, and directly above the lower two. Another pair of twigs exactly similar in size should then be cut and laid across the ends of the last two, and directly above the second set of the bottom portion, thus forming two squares of equal size, one directly over the other. The next pair of sticks should be a trifle shorter than the previous ones and should be placed a little inside the square. Let the next two be of the same size as the last and also rest a little inside of those beneath them, thus forming the commencement of the conical shape which our engraving presents. By thus continuing alternate layers of the two sticks cob-house fashion, each layer being closer than the one previous, the pyramid will be easily and quickly formed.… proceed to build up the sides until the opening at the top is reduced to only four or five inches across. The square board will now come into play.

This description pretty much describes the quilt pattern used by Mrs. Nellie Verge. You can see an actual bird trap made using this method done by Christopher Nyerges. He calls it the Arapuca bird trap, and ancient and primitive method for capturing birds.

I also found an etching done by German artist Konrad Grob, where an older gentleman is constructing a bird-trap while two youngsters watch intently. The steel engraving was printed in the August 1879 volume of the Art Journal of London.

Now back to Nellie Virge (Verge)
The Tennessee Folklore Society Bulletin was the only place I could find an illustration and description of what a “Bird Trap” quilt looked like. There were many descriptions and illustrations of log cabin quilts from the mid-1870s, and mentions as early as 1862. In the early 1870 references there was a distinction made between log cabins and bird trap designs, and that was evident in the 1906 article.

I was lucky enough to get a copy of the 1978 Profile of a Murfreesboro Quiltmaker and Her Craft article by Sally E. Weatherford. I was fascinated by the quilter Mrs. Nellie Virge, age 96 when her story was written and decided to do a bit of research on her. Her parents were Jim and Sophia Humes of Mooresville, Alabama. In 1989, Nellie Verge passed at the ripe old age of 107 (See Age Note). Right there, the story was similar, but the spelling of the name was a bit different. It turns out the spelling changed back and forth on several documents before finally resting on Verge.

At the time of Nellie’s death, February 14, 1989 she was survived by 4 sons and 3 daughters, 40 grandchildren, 75 great-grandchildren and 21 great-great grandchildren and is buried in Stones River Cemetery, Murfreesboro, Tennessee. She was born to freed slaves and was one of 10 children (her youngest sibling was actually a granddaughter to her parents per 1920 census). At age 19 she married a sharecropper named Athey Verge. Her husband passed in 1959 and Nellie, being retired, and having a good supply of fabric from her sons who worked at a factory in Murfreesboro, began quilting as a hobby.

On March 5, 1989 following her death, Kelly Anderson, News Journal Lifestyles Writer penned a tribute to Nellie with the help of two of her daughters, Mrs. McGowan and Irean Hughes. I want to share her story with you.

Sunday, March 5, 1989, Murfreesboro, Tenn; LIFESTYLE, Sunday News Journal
Nellie Verge: 107 years of good material
By KELLY ANDERSON, News Journal Lifestyles Writer

Jim and Sophia Humes greeted their squalling baby into a world of oppression in sweltering Mooresville, Ala., July 14, 1881. For the next 107 years of her life, Nellie Verge learned to use her God-given abilities to get she and her family through rough times. Mrs. Verge's last few years were spent with her daughter, Mrs. Lizzie McGowan. On Valentine's Day this year, Mrs. Verge died in bed of old age. Born to freed slaves and married to a sharecropper named Athey, Mrs. Verge had never known a time until her last few decades that hadn't been lean and hard. "We were poor," Mrs. McGowan, Mrs. Verge's daughter, explained. “But we never really knew it. We always had food, clothing and a roof over our heads. "Since daddy was a sharecropper, there were good years and bad ones. When there was a bad year, we didn't have nothing. I don't know how we all made it. As a child, you don't understand the poorness. Now I look back and wonder how we survived." Mrs. McGowan and her 11 brothers and sisters survived and grew up to be optimistic, a quality they attribute to their, mother's survival instincts, wisdom and old folk knowledge. Using the vegetables they grew on their plot of land, Mrs. Verge would always provide a meal for her children. I’m sure she worried about whether we were getting a well-balanced meal, Mrs. Irean Hughes, another of Mrs. Verge's daughters, commented. But she never let us know about these problems she faced." Sugar and flour sacks were utilized by Mrs. Verge for her children's clothes and shoes. "All our dresses and panties were made from sacks," Mrs. McGowan said. "Since we were too poor to buy elastic, all our clothes had drawstrings, including our panties. "To make the little houses we lived in look more homey, she'd paper the house with magazines ' and newspapers," Mrs. McGowan related. "It looked good. She'd always make it so the newspaper could be read. The Verge children were also treated to Bible readings by their father and ghost stories by their mother at night. I remember the women with, their burnt front legs from working in front of the fireplace all the time," Mrs. Hughes recalled. "Mom, with her burnt legs, would sit in front of the fireplace at night and tell us ghost stories right before we went to bed. “It's such a vivid memory for me. I remember those stories like they were told yesterday." To keep her children warm on frigid Tennessee nights, Mrs. Verge made quilts and quilt pieces. These weren't ordinary quilts. They were quite extraordinary. So extraordinary that Mrs. Verge's designs were featured by Sally E. Weatherford in the September 1978 "Tennessee Folklore Society Bulletin. “Mrs. Weatherford wrote: “With over 100 quilts to her credit during her lifetime, Mrs. Verge admits she started piecing quilts as a child of 7 or 8. Quilting back then, she is quick to remind, was for practicality rather than beauty. As one of 10 children, she soon learned to pitch in and help provide the large family with patch-quilted coverlets. "Of course, these were made out of whatever fabrics were available. Worn-out coats, pants, dress skirts (the skirts wore out quicker than the bodices) and anything else too ragged to wear, but too good to throw away were used for quilts. Mrs. Verge can show how an “old- britches” quilt (as she-calls it) was made from heavy wool overcoats and pants, and patched in almost a ‘crazy quilt’ manner." Quilting for Mrs. Verge changed from necessity to hobby after her husband died of cancer in 1959. Instead of material from old clothes, Mrs. Verge now had the luxury of fabric supplied by two of her sons, who got leftovers from a factory in Murfreesboro where they worked. Mrs. Verge possessed another skill which assured healthy children a knowledge of folk medicinal remedies. One such remedy suggested taking a wad of snuff and soot, kerosene, turpentine and sugar and mix it with spider webs and apply it to your child's heel when a nail has been stepped on. That's exactly the remedy Mrs. Verge put on her daughter's heel. "We didn't go to the doctors when we were little Mrs. McGowan said. "If we fell ill, she'd cure us. It always worked. "Sardine juice was also wrapped - up in a cloth and tied around the head for ailments. Other cures included sheep shap tea and chicken cap tea for measles, bruised gypsum leaves as an ointment, sagegrass and peachtree bark tea for fever and mare’s milk for whooping cough. "She didn't believe in doctors right up until she died," Mrs. McGowan related. "She believed in her home remedies." However, Mrs. Verge did resign herself to a fairly lengthy hospital stay when she threw a blood clot into her lungs in 1981. “The doctor told her that condition would kill most people in seconds," Mrs. Hughes recalled. "Momma lived more than seven years with it. "Even in the hospital she wanted a can of sardines," Mrs. Hughes related with a smile. "When she finally got a hold of a can, she gulped the sardines and juice down. I suspect she thought that would cure her." Mrs. Verge died fulfilling 107 years of life. She left behind her one sister, Sophia Lewis of Huntsville, Ala.; three daughters, Lizzie McGowan, Effie Verge and Irean Hughes of Murfreesboro; four sons, Floyd Verge and the Rev. R.C. Verge of Murfreesboro, Jimmy J. Verge of Nashville and Willie Verge of Detroit, Mich.; 40 grandchildren; 75 great-grandchildren and 21 great-greatgrandchildren. "I can't ever remember her being unhappy," Mrs. Hughes said of her mother. “The only time I can recall her crying was when our little brother, Joe Robert, died of spinal meningitis. If it were me and my children in her world, I would have been in the pits of depression." What do her daughters attribute as the reason for her long life? "She was a very religious woman," Mrs. Hughes reasoned. "Both she and daddy were very religious. She was a member of Stones River Primitive Baptist Church for 21 years." Before joining Stones River," Mrs. Verge professed her faith and joined Mt. Zion. Her family's religious convictions can be traced even further back, however "I remember her talking about how her parents would have to meet in a cabin in secret for religious services," Mrs. Hughes explained. "It had to be very secretive so the ol’ master wouldn't find out." But Mrs. McGowan has another answer to this puzzling question: "I guess she was made out of good material."

Age Note: Nellies’ age varies from record to record. Her obituary and follow-up story indicate a birth in 1881 or July 14, 1881, respectively. The Social Security gives December 14, 1888 as her date of birth. The census records also vary – along with the spelling of her last name, using Virge or Verge depending on the year. The earliest census record for her is in 1900, and listed her as 2 year old daughter of James and Sophy Humes. By the 1910 census, she was listed as the 14 year old daughter of Jim and Sophia Humes, with a birth year of 1896. By the 1920 census, she was married to Athey, with an age of 23, a birth year of 1897. The 1930 census indicates 35 year old Nellie was born in 1895, and finally the 1940 census has her at age 50 with a birth year of 1890. Her most likely date of birth was 1896, making her 93 at the time of death and 82 when the Folklore article was written.

Image 1 Sources:
FASHION ADOPTS THE GAY PATCH WORK QUILT by Sarah Williamson; The San Francisco Call, December 30, 1906

Quilt Names in the Ozarks by Vance Randolph and Isabel Spradley; American Speech, Vol. 8, No. 1 (Feb., 1933), pp. 33-36, Published by: Duke University Press

The Tennessee Folklore Society, June 1978; Profile of a Murfreesboro Quiltmaker and Her Craft by Sally E. Weatherford, Cover and pages 108-114

The Daily News-Journal (Murfreesboro, Tennessee), 13 Apr 1979, Page 2; Library Report

Nashville Banner (Nashville, Tennessee), 01 Oct 1959, Page 53; Athey Verge

The Tennessean (Nashville, Tennessee), 16 Feb 1989, Page 31; Nellie Verge

Image 2 Sources:
Women's Caucus for Art, 1983 WCA Honor Awards; National Woman’s Caucus for Art Conference, Philadelphia, February 15-18, 1983

Pecolia Warner 1982, Photo by Maude Wahlman

P Quilts: Pecolia Warner of Yazoo City

Pig Pen Quilt (Log Cabin Variation) by Pecolia Warner

Pecolia Warner (1901-1983) in 1975 with one of her "P Quilts"

Signs and Symbols: African Images in African-American Quilts by Maude Wahlman, 1993
FOUND INSIDE – PAGE 55
Bird Trap quilt by Pecolia Warner, Yazoo City, Mississippi, 1982; 83"x68"
“Made of twelve different squares, each composed from her own combination of a Log Cabin pattern and triangles”

Bird Trap w/Block Lotto Birds

The Box Trap: An Ancient, Simple Method for Capturing Birds, Christopher Nyerges, March 27, 2017

Camp life in the woods and the tricks of trapping by W. Hamilton Gibson; 1881

Image 3 Sources:
The Art Journal: New series - Volume 5, 1879, Page 386. THE BIRD-TRAP. Original Etching by Konrad Grob

Nashville Union and American, October 14, 1871, Image 3
Nashville Union and American, November 03, 1871, Image 1
The Weekly Constitution, Atlanta, Ga., October 07, 1873, Image 8
Kentucky Advocate (Danville, Kentucky), May 5, 1876, Fri, Page 2

The Ladies Treasury for 1876
American Agriculturist, 1978, Volume 37, Page 146
The Peterson Magazine, December 1880, Volume 78, Page 465
The Home Needle by Ella Rodman Church, 1882, Page 117
How to Make the Home Beautiful, Patten Publishing Co, 1884
The Prairie Farmer, January 3, 1885
The Prairie Farmer, November 1887
The Billings Gazette, September 9, 1904
The evening Star, Washington, DC, May 16, 1927

Other Sources:
Folklife in the Florida Parishes: People and Their Crafts (www.louisianafolklife.org)
Turlie Richardson and Lillie Payton, the Felicianas by Susan Garrett Davis

AFRICAN-AMERICAN QUILTS 'WHOOP' WITH COLOR, 
by GEOFF GEHMAN, The Morning Call

The Tennessean (Nashville, Tennessee), 01 Oct 1959, Page 51; Athey Verge
The Daily News-Journal (Murfreesboro, Tennessee), 05 Mar 1989, Page 21, 23; Nellie Verge
The Tennessean, Nashville, Tennessee, February 19, 1897, Page 5
Census data from 1910, 1920, 1930 and 1940
Various newspaper articles/obituaries on the Verge and Humes families

Wednesday, July 22, 2020

While Searching for Hexagons I found a Calico Pie

While Searching for Hexagons – I found a Jolly Calico Tree
As I continued my search for the embroidered hexagon quilt pattern source, I stumbled upon a curious image of a quilt – one I had not seen before, but it seemed familiar as it reminded me of applique quilts designed by Florence LaGanke Harris in the 1930-40s.  So I googled “The Calico Tree Quilt” and found out that Florence did indeed have a quilt called that – and several sources led me to the January 1939 issue of the Country Gentleman.  A few days later, there it was – the Calico Tree – just like the image found on the September 22, 2013 Busy Thimble posting ( http://busythimble.blogspot.com/2013/09/ ) of a 1940s catalog.

The Home Sewing Fashion World Catalog offered patterns for clothing, furnishings and quilts according to the post, and was mailed to Mrs. Rust of Auburn, Maine.  The Calico Tree quilt, V-11199 is described as “a cheery and highly effective design for applique.”  Transfer pattern, color suggestion chart and complete instructions on how to make the quilt could be ordered.

What brought me to the site was, V-11208 Dutch Children for embroidery…in addition pattern includes 15 animal designs, suitable for embroidery on children’s clothes, nursery linen…etc.  Alas, the Dutch girl did not have braids like the one on my quilt – but this got me thinking about Florence’s alter ego Nancy Page.  Did this quilt ever come up in one of her columns?

And the answer is yes!  Back in April – May 1932, in the syndicated Nancy Page column, she refers to a summer spread, using a fine white sheet on which she appliqued a large and jolly calico tree.  On this tree grew flowers and fruit.  Birds and butterflies made of colorfast ginghams added their color to the general scheme.   A border of plain green gingham finished the sides and bottom. She also referred to soft colored tubfast prints – which reminded me of some Sun-Tub dolls I found years ago at a thrift shop.  (As you can see, my mind rabbits around a lot!)

Anyway, I got to thinking of Florence and did a bit of searching on her.  The best recent overview on her is by Wilene Smith (http://quilthistorytidbits--oldnewlydiscovered.yolasite.com/nancy-page.php ).

I did find a nice article on her in the 1937-39ish (undated) volumes called Women of Ohio, plus other details of her life.  Here are the results of my digging.

Florence LaGanke Harris (Mrs. Frederick Aston Harris) of Cleveland, Ohio is a recognized authority on home economics, not only in Ohio but also largely throughout the country by reason of her wide activities in the field and her extensive writings on the subject.  She was a syndicated writer, newspaper woman and home economics expert.  She attended Cleveland schools, then Teacher’s College, Columbia University, where she received a B.S degree.  She became an instructor at Columbia, then supervisor of home economics in schools of Oakland, CA.  Florence entered the newspaper field via the Cleveland Plain Dealer and later became the home economics editor of the Cleveland Press.  During this period she wrote articles that were widely syndicated.

She worked with an artist to design quilts, selling some to magazines and had an interesting collection of 50 quilts, and was extremely interested in home decorations and was an omnivorous reader.

Her first position was that of a hospital dietitian in Cleveland and later she was manager of the lunchroom of the Horace Mann School of Columbia University.  She then became in instructor of home economics at the Flora Stone Mather School and later at Western Reserve University of Cleveland.  She was the supervisor of the economics department of the Teachers College of Columbia University; then supervisor of the home economics in the public schools of Oakland, CA.  When she returned to Cleveland in 1922, she became the home economics editor of the Cleveland Plain Dealer and later of the Cleveland Press and was appointed director of woman’s activities under the title of “Home on the Sky.”

Education and Resume:
She graduated high school in 1904
Pratt Institute 1908-09
Technical Certificate, Teachers College, Columbia University, 1910
Dietician, St. Luke’s Hospital, Cleveland, 1910-12 
1912 Published, The Household Arts Review - Hospital Dietitian (extract from a letter), Florence LaGanke 1910
Director, Horace Mann Lunch Room, Columbia University, 1912-13
Director, Whittier Hall Dining Rooms, Columbia University, Summer Session, 1913
Instructor in Household Administration, College for Women, 1913
Instructor in Household Administration, Western Reserve University, 1913-14
In charge of Haydon Hall Cafeteria, 1914
Instructor in Household Administration, Western Reserve University, 1914-15
In charge of Flora Mather House Dining Rooms, 1915
Secretary-Treasurer Ohio State Home Economic Association, 1915
Instructor in Household Administration, Western Reserve University, 1916-17
Summer Session Instructor, Columbia University, 1917 – Large Quantity Cookery and Household Purchasing
Instructor in Household Administration, Western Reserve University, 1917-18
Columbia University, City of New York, Officers of Instruction, Florence LaGanke, Household Arts, 1918-19
Senior class of 1919, School of Practical Arts, Columbia College, Florence May LaGanke, Cleveland, Ohio
Published in the November 1919 Issue of American Cookery, an article called “Food – After the War”
Supervisor of the Teaching of Household Economics, University of California High School Faculty, 1920-21

In June 1922, the women members of the supervisory department of the Oakland public schools hosted a tea for her.  At the close of the June 1922 semester, Miss Florence M. LaGanke, director of home economics headed back to Cleveland after 3 years in the Oakland Public Schools.

Florence May LaGanke received a B.S. degree from Columbia University during the 1922-23 school year.  She married Frederick Aston Harris in 1923.  Also that same year, she had an article published in the June 1923 issue of The American Food Journal, “The Big Idea in Home Economics” by Florence LaGanke, formerly director of Home Economics, Oakland California.  On June 2, 1926 she led a Home Economics Group discussion at the National Conference of Social Work, held in Cleveland May 26-June 2, 1926.

Nancy Page Syndicated Columns:
1927 Started the syndicated column “Nancy Page” on February 20, 1927 (Brooklyn Times Union)
The paper began announcing the column on February 16, 1927

1928 Nancy Page Quilt Club – Grandmother’s Flower Garden Quilt
Edmonton Journal (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada) November 15, 1928, Page 20

1929 Nancy Page Club – Noah’s Ark Wall Hanging
Altoona Tribune, Altoona, PA; April 08, 1929, Page 6

1932 Nancy Page – Starts a Midweek Pieced Quilt Club, starting with the Building Block Quilt Pattern
May 17, 1932 (Evening Star, Washington, DC and Brooklyn Times Union)

1935 Started seeing the column Nancy Page Hints, latest found was April 17, 1944
January 15, 1935: Nancy Page Hints on Homemaking, had a quilt pattern
(Democrat and Chronicle, Rochester, NY)

1943 March 16, 1943: Nancy Page’s Chats (Democrat and Chronicle, Rochester, NY)
January 1, 1943:  Nancy Page’s Suggestions (Hartford Courant, Hartford, CT

1944 April 17, 1944: Nancy Page Hints (The Birmingham News, Birmingham, AL)

Many of the syndicated columns offered leaflets on the topics discussed, or additional directions for the project presented.  Readers had to send a stamped self-address envelope for the leaflets; and a SASE plus 2-10 cents for each pattern ordered.

While doing her columns, and working at the Cleveland Plain Dealer, she still was able to be the Chairman of the Home Economics in Business Section according to the October 1929 and January 1930 Bulletin of the American Home Economics Association.  In 1935 she was made home economics consultant, and did daily broadcasts over the radio.

At the time of the Woman of Ohio bio, 1937-39 time frame, she was quite a busy lady:
Belonged to the Epworth Euclid Methodist Episcopal church
Member and Director of the Woman’s City Club of Cleveland
Life member of the Associated Charities
Served on the Board of Directors of the Child Health Association of Cleveland
Belonged to the Home Economics Association – national, state and local
Member of both state and national organizations of American Dietitians
Served on the board of directors of the Needlecraft Guild of Cleveland
Active member of the Cleveland Woman’s Press Club
Member of the Ohio Newspaper Woman’s Association
Member of Columbus Chapter, Theta Sigma Pi
Member of the English Speaking Union

In addition, Florence was widely known as the author of many books:
Patty Pans, A cook book for beginners, 1929
The home economics omnibus, 1935 (with Hazel H. Huston)
Everywoman’s complete guide to homemaking, 1936
Foods, their nutritive, economic and social values, 1938 (with Ruth Adele Henderson)
Flavor’s the thing, 1939 (re issued in 1946 as: Cooking with a foreign flavor)
Pies a-plenty, 1940
Careers in home economics, 1942
Food ‘n’ fun for the invalid, 1942
Victory vitamin cook book for wartime meals, 1943
400 salads, 1944 (with Florence A. Cowles)
The new home economics omnibus, 1945 (updated from 1938)
Let’s Study foods, 1945 (with Ruth Adele Henderson)
Vegetable Cookery, 1952
Young folks at home; home economics for junior high school, 1953 (with Treva E. Kauffman)
Your foods book, 1964 (with Rex Todd Withers)

Florence LaGanke – Nancy Page Series Quilts and other series patterns
(Illustrated by Ann Kerven)
1928-29  Grandmother’s Flower Garden
1929  Noah’s Ark Wall Hanging
1929  Kitchen Stencils
1929, 1931  Alphabet Quilt / ABC Quilt
1930-31  Magic Vine Quilt
1931  Leaf Quilt
1931  Wreath Series
1931-32  Garden Bouquet
1932  Snowflake Quilt
1932-33  Old Almanac Quilt / Zodiac Quilt
1933  French Bouquet
1933  Brother Sister Quilts
1934  Festoon Quilt
1934  Quilt of Many Stars
1934  Crossed Arrows
1934  Star and Sprig Quilt
1934  Laurel Wreath Quilt
1935  Fruit Linens
1935  Georgian Rose Quilt
1935  Calendar Quilt
1935  Spreading Beauty (Dec 1935, Successful Farming – per Wilene Smith)
1936  Summer Garlands Quilt
1936  Ships at Sea
1936-37  Falling Leaves Quilt
1937  One, Two, Buckle My Shoe Quilt
1937  Picnic Cloth
1937  Quilt of Birds
1937  Tyrolean Table Cover
1938  Hearts & Flowers
1938-39  Mother Goose Quilt
1939-40  The Calico Tree (Jan 1939, The Country Gentleman; 1940 catalog; first described in 1932)
1940  Our Blue Ribbon Quilt (Feb 1940, The Country Gentlemen)

Other Projects offered by the Nancy Page Quilt Club or Nancy Page Club (There are many, many more, but this should give you an idea.  Many times, the projects incorporated the same motifs used in the quilts – but were used for household items or clothing embellishments.)

1929  Bluebell Apron Pocket
1929  Handkerchief Monogram
1929  Trefoil Applique Pattern (pillow, guest towel, dress)
1929  Fish Applique Pattern
1929  Swan Needlework Pattern
1929  Star Applique Pattern
1929  Handkerchief Designs
1930  Apple Applique
1930  Bird Applique (pocket)
1930  Tea Time Apron
1930  Calico Flower
1930  The House Goes “Summery”
1930  Quaint Folewr Passepartout (spelled this way in the clipping)
1930  Sturdy Sewing Apron
1930  Dainty Sewing Apron
1930  Practical Porch Pillow
1930  Fish Bath Mat
1930  Fish Towel
1931  Scrap Book
1931  Baby’s Bib
1931  Tray Cloth
1931  Poppy Pillow
1931  Flower Applique
And the list goes on and on…

On another note, while looking for “Calico Tree” I came across a very cute poem from 1871 by Edward Lear in his book “Nonsense Songs, Stories, Botany, and Alphabets” called “Calico Pie.”  I couldn’t help but wonder if Florence knew of this poem while designing her Jolly Calico Tree with flowers, fruit, birds and butterflies, since she was known to be quite a reader.


Sources – Not all, but most:
Cullman Times Democrat, October 2, 1966, Page 2
“I have fourteen versions of the “Rose of Sharon”, but I have not been able to find the “Calico Tree” which I understand appeared in a 1939 issue of the now defunct “Country Gentleman.”

The Busy Thimble Blog, September 22, 2013 – 1940s Catalog “Home Sewing Fashion Catalog”

Nancy Page By Florence La Ganke – Jolly Calico Tree references
The Lincoln Star, Lincoln, NE; April 19, 1932, Page 16
The Akron Beacon Journal, Akron, OH; April 19, 1932, Page 24
Evening Star, Washington, DC; April 19, 1932, Page B-13, Image 29
The Winnipeg Tribune from Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada; April 28, 1932, Page 6
Democrat and Chronicle, Rochester, NY; 04 May 1932, Page 12

Nancy Page Column Starts – Brooklyn Times Union; Introduction – Feb 16, 1932; First Column – Feb 20, 1927

Nancy Page Midweek Pieced Quilt Club Starts – May 17, 1932; Evening Star, Washington, DC; Brooklyn Times Union

Nancy Page Quilt Club – Edmonton Journal, Canada; Nov 15, 1928, Page 20; Grandmother’s Flower Garden Quilt

Nancy Page’s Chats – Democrat and Chronicle, Rochester, NY; Mar 16, 1943, Page 15

Nancy Page Hints – The Birmingham News, Birmingham, AL; Nov 02, 1943, Page 14

Nancy Page, Nancy Page Club, Nancy Page Quilt Club, Nancy Page’s Chats, Nancy Page Hints – various sources

Series Quilts and Other Patterns – various newspapers sources

Books by Florence LaGanke Harris – various online book sources

Nonsense Songs, Stories, Botany, and Alphabets by Edward Lear, 1871 – “Calico Pie”

A Feast of Good Things, 1912; “Hospital Dietitian” by Florence LaGanke, 1910
College for Women: Western Reserve University, Catalog for 1913-1914
College for Women: Western Reserve University, Catalog for 1916-1917
College for Women: Western Reserve University, Catalog for 1917-1918
Catalog of Officers and Students of Columbia College, NY; Catalog 1918-19
Annual Announcement of Courses of Instruction, University of California, 1920
University (of California) High School Journal, January 1921
Catalogue by Columbia University, Volume 1923/1924 – Degrees Conferred 1922-23, BS in Education & Practical Arts
The Journal of Home Economics, 1915; Ohio State Home Economics Association, Secretary-Treasurer
American Cookery, December 1919; “Food – After the War”
The American Food Journal, June 1923; “The Big Idea in Home Economics”
Oakland Tribune, Oakland, CA; June 2, 1923; “Resection Arranged for Miss LaGanke”
National Conference of Social Work, Conference Bulletin, Cleveland, May 1926
American Home Economics Association, October 1929 and January 1930
Women of Ohio; a record of their achievements in the history of the state by Ruth Neely, Ruth, ed; Ohio Newspaper Women's Association (undated – 1937-39?)