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Elizabeth Pitman's Sampler

American History Museum

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    Object Details

    maker

    Pitman, Elizabeth

    Description

    The lettering on Elizabeth’s sampler is in black silk, and the whole sampler is framed by vines with leaves and flowers worked in various pulled thread patterns. She included the inscription:

    "Elizabeth Pitman in
    her 12th year 1802
    And am I born to die, to lay this body down
    And muf[s]t my trembling f[s]pirit fly into a world
    unknown"
    (Most of the verse had disappeared; however it is a standard verse on samplers of the period, Hymns for Children (1763) by Charles Wesley.) Charles Wesley wrote over two thousand hymns during his lifetime, and Elizabeth Pitman chose one that was often used on samplers on the imminence of death. The sampler is stitched with silk embroidery thread on a linen ground with a thread count of warp 44, weft 44/in. The stitches used are cross, rice, Algerian eye, eyelet, outline, stem, and pulled thread. Elizabeth’s sampler came to the Smithsonian in very poor condition, but is important for research because of the pulled thread work on it and because it is a rare Southern sampler.
    Elizabeth Pitman was born on November 30, 1790, to Andrew and Francis Frankey Pitman in Harrisonburg, Virginia. She married Isaac Mytinger on July 16, 1807, and sometime after his death on May 26, 1814, she married Anthony Huffman (1784-1861). They had seven children - David (1815-), Frances C. (1816-), John Morgan (1821-), Caroline Matilda (1825-), Edward (1828-), Ann Elizabeth (1830-), and Asburina Cornelia (1833-). She died on September 3, 1870.

    Location

    Currently not on view

    Credit Line

    Gift of Mrs. Eleanor Goodnight Morrison

    date made

    1802

    ID Number

    TE.T12180

    catalog number

    T12180

    accession number

    233455

    Object Name

    embroidery, sampler
    sampler

    Physical Description

    cotton (ground material)
    silk (embroidery thread material)
    linen (embroidery thread material)

    Measurements

    overall: 15 in x 12 3/8 in; 38.1 cm x 31.4325 cm

    See more items in

    Home and Community Life: Textiles
    Samplers
    Textiles

    Data Source

    National Museum of American History

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a4-aea4-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_639740

    Discover More

    Embroidery of the alphabet above a house with trees and a partially fenced lawn.

    American Samplers

    Embroidery of the alphabet above a house with trees and a partially fenced lawn.

    American Samplers

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