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1840 - 1860 Paulding Family's "Tyger" Quilt

American History Museum

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  • quilt, detail

    Object Details

    maker

    unknown

    Description

    “I have a quilt that has been in my husband’s family for generations . . . It is supposed to have been slept under by Martha Washington . . .” was the claim when it was offered in 1974. While the quilt was probably made in the mid-19th-century, the fabric that was used made the quilt exceptional. It is a copperplate-printed cotton produced in 1785 by Bromley Hall, England’s largest eighteenth-century textile printing firm.
    Copperplate-printing is a process, developed after 1760, by which a pattern is etched on a flat plate, color applied by brush with the excess removed by a scraper, and then the plate and fabric passed through a flat printing press. The pattern found on the fabric of this quilt is labeled “Tyger” in the Bromley Hall pattern book. It features a wide variety of classical and pastoral motifs such as two boys riding leopards, architectural ruins, a dancing shepherdess, peacocks, parrots, sunflowers, and dragonflies, among many others.
    Both the front and back of this quilt are composed of pieces of fabric copperplate-printed in brown. Each side has its own lining (one of cotton, one of linen), with a layer of cotton wadding between the two linings. A block-printed border is used for edging both layers and the two sides are whipstitched together. Most likely the "Tyger" fabric and block-printed trim were from an early set of bed furniture. The quilting consists of widely-spaced Vs, worked in crooked lines with uneven stitches, plus or minus four stitches per inch.
    The quilt was from the William Paulding family of New York . William Paulding Jr. (1770-1854) was a lawyer and active in politics. He served in the War of 1812, and as mayor of New York City 1824-1826. In 1838 Paulding, along with architect Alexander Jackson Davis, designed and built a country villa named “Knoll” (“Pauldings Folly” by his critics). The house is known today as “Lyndhurst” in Tarrytown, N. Y. A National Trust Historic Site, it remains one of the extravagant examples of 19th-century Gothic Revival mansions along the Hudson River.

    Location

    Currently not on view

    date made

    1840-1860

    ID Number

    TE.T17289

    accession number

    314087

    catalog number

    T17289

    Object Name

    quilt

    Physical Description

    fabric, cotton, linen (overall material)
    thread, cotton (overall material)
    filling, cotton (overall material)

    Measurements

    overall: 89 in x 73 in; 227 cm x 185 cm

    place made

    World

    See more items in

    Home and Community Life: Textiles
    Government, Politics, and Reform
    Textiles
    Domestic Furnishings
    Quilts

    Data Source

    National Museum of American History

    Subject

    Quilting

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a3-c14b-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_556539

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    Quilt made of colorful patches of various sizes, fabrics, and patterns. Quilt is trimmed with shiny red fabric

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