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Here Flora Reigns

American History Museum

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    Object Details

    sister of maker

    Dexter, Lucy

    maker

    Dexter, Almira

    Description

    After a young lady learned to embroider a sampler, she might attend a female academy to make a silk embroidered picture. This was a more challenging technique that became popular in the early 1800s. Subjects included classical, biblical, and historical scenes, as well as mourning pictures.
    This oval embroidery shows a young woman draping a garland of roses over a monument whose front bears the legend, "HERE FLORA REIGNS" printed on a glued oval of paper. The monument is embellished with flakes of mica. In the foreground are low-growing plants, some of them surrounded by areas of seed-stitching characteristic of embroidery done at Abby Wright's school in South Hadley, Massachusetts. To the left, behind a tall tree, is a painted town com¬posed of white buildings with red or black roofs and doors (another typical motif of this school). The embroidered oval is edged by three rows of silver wire twisted to make a square band. Beyond this band the border is embroidered with a garland of roses across the top, and a garland of lilies, tulips, and daisies across the bottom and up the sides. In the lower right corner, beyond all of the embroidery, is a very faint inscription (in ink?): "Almira D." The picture is stitched on an ivory twilled-silk ground with silk thread. The stitches used are satin, long and short, seed, stem, straight, French knot, and couching.
    This embroidery was not done in South Hadley at Abby Wright’s school, but in Claremont, New Hampshire, with the teacher Sophia Goodrich. Sophia was a half sister to Abby Wright and attended Abby’s school in South Hadley, Massachusetts in 1804. In November 1809, she returned to take over the school. “Here Flora Reigns” is from a poem entitled “Burbage” written by English poet Frances Greensted and published in 1796.
    Almira Dexter was born October 6, 1794, to David and Parnel Strobridge Dexter in Claremont, New Hampshire. Almira married Moses Wheeler in about 1831, as his second wife. She died April 5, 1858. (See her sister Lucy’s embroidery).
    For more information about this embroidery see Piecework, March/April 2007, “Three American Schoolgirl Silk Embroideries from the Smithsonian” by Sheryl De Jong.

    Location

    Currently not on view

    Credit Line

    The Eleanor and Mabel van Alstyne Marsh American Folk Art Collection

    date made

    1809

    ID Number

    TE.T19365

    catalog number

    T19365

    accession number

    261195

    Object Name

    silk picture

    Physical Description

    silk (ground material)
    silk (thread material)

    Measurements

    overall: 22 3/8 in x 29 1/4 in; 56.8325 cm x 74.295 cm

    place made

    United States: New Hampshire, Claremont

    Related Publication

    Ring, Betty. Girlhood Embroidery, American Samplers & Pictorial Needlework
    PieceWork

    See more items in

    Home and Community Life: Textiles
    Embroidered Pictures
    Textiles

    Data Source

    National Museum of American History

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746ac-4b0b-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_1096460

    Discover More

    Greetings from New Hampshire 37 cent stamp.

    Explore America: New Hampshire

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