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  • National Quilt Collection
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National Quilt Collection

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American History Museum

The National Quilt Collection, part of the Division of Home and Community Life's Textile Collection at the National Museum of American History, had its beginnings in the 1890s. Three quilts were included in a larger collection of 18th- and 19th- century household and costume items from one Stonington, Connecticut family. From this early beginning, the Collection has grown to more than 400 quilts and quilt-related items, mainly of American origin. Most of the contributions have come to the Museum as gifts, many from the quilt-makers' families. The quilts are part of a lasting material record of the American experience, and are preserved in perpetuity for all Americans. As few of the quilts are on exhibition at any given time, this film provides an overview, in quilt storage, of the behind-the-scenes activities of the staff and volunteers as they work with this rich and interesting collection. 

Quilts were made primarily by women, and have played a large part in revealing evidence of the circumstances of their lives: economic levels, the goods available to them and their increasing consumerism, their thrift and extravagance, the opportunity for self-expression in an acceptable activity, their schooling and family education and instruction, their group activities, personal identity and reward, and skills. 

Some of the quilts reflect very personal interests and concerns; others express political and societal concerns such as patriotism, anti-slavery sentiments, war and peace. Many quilts in the collection have inscriptions that leave us a textile record expressing the interests and feelings of the makers. Others provided the makers an opportunity for artistic expression in a practical endeavor. 

Altogether, the collection shows the progression and notable phases in American quilt-making; provides a history of materials available to the quilt makers and of the techniques practiced; illustrates many social, cultural, technological, and economic influences affecting quilts made and used in America; and contributes to the illumination of American life, family, community, and country. 

The Division of Home and Community Life continues its long term mission to maintain and develop research-based collections that document and preserve American stories through family, community, biographical/individual oral histories and other materials. The quilt collection, for the most part, represents the middle class and affluent of the eastern half of the country, rather than a potpourri of the widely diverse population of the nation. We should like to encourage viewers to come forward with quilts and other needlework, to donate or to be recorded, with histories that contribute to our awareness of the rich diversity of the people who came to live here, the traditions they brought and carry on, and the ways in which they adopted the endeavors already here.

Videos

This virtual tour was made possible by a grant from Patty Stonesifer and Michael Kinsley through The Seattle Foundation. The gift was made in honor of Mrs. Frances Quigley. 

Watch the video series


1750 - 1800 Copp Family's Indigo Wool Quilt

1760 Eve Van Cortlandt's Quilted Whitework Counterpane

1790 - 1795 Martha Soule's Crewel Embroidered and Pieced Quilt

1790 - 1795 Martha Soule's Crewel Embroidered Quilt

1790 - 1799 Esther Wheat's Wool Quilt

1790 - 1810 Copp Family's "Nine-patch" Pieced Quilt

1790 - 1810 Clara Harrison's Resist-dyed Cotton Quilt

1790 - 1810 Copp Family's Framed Center Pieced Quilt

1792 - 1810 "Treaty of Pillnitz" Pieced Quilt

1795 M. Campbell's Reverse Applique Quilt

1800 - 1815 Taunay Family's Framed Center Quilt Top

1800 - 1815 Indigo Wool Whole Cloth Quilt

1800 - 1820 Brown-Francis Family's Patriotic Quilt

1800 - 1850 Pieced Quilt with a variety of block patterns

1800 - 1850 Mary Jessop's Appliqued Quilt Top

1806 Charlotte Roe's Child's Quilt

1812 - 1814 "Pinwheel" Quilt

1820 - 1840 Achsah Goodwin Wilkins's Appliqued Counterpane

1825 - 1835 Betsy Totten's "Rising Sun" Quilt

1825 - 1835 Abbie Corey Brackett's Whole Cloth Chintz Quilt

1825 - 1840 Susan Strong's "Great Seal" Quilt

1825 - 1850 Silk Quilt

1825 - 1850 Rachel Burr Corwin's Framed-Center Pieced Quilt

1825 - 1850 Jane Winter Price's "Carpenter's Wheel" Quilt

1825 - 1850 Rachel Burr Corwin's "Feathered Star" Pieced Quilt

1825 - 1850 Annis Curtis's Pieced Quilt

1830 Violet Alexander's "Flowering Tree" Appliqued Quilt

1830 Jane Valentine's "Irish Chain" Quilt

1830 - 1850 Williams Family's Heptagonal "Sunburst" Quilt

1830 - 1850 Mary Willcox Taylor's Fort Dearborn Quilt

1830 - 1850 Stenciled Child's Counterpane

1835 Jessy Anderson's Stuffed-Work Quilt

1835 - 1845 Quaker Trousseau Pieced Quilt

1839 Frances M. Jolly's Quilt Top

1840 Eliza Hussey's Masonic Symbols Quilt`


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