Saturday, June 3, 2017

Dixie Rose

Block from a North Carolina quilt

The North Carolina Quilt Project discovered several unusual patterns, including this applique design, which local tradition called the Dixie Rose.


Quilt by an unknown maker, mid 19th-century.

Quilt date-inscribed 1855
made for Laura Brown McCallum, Robeson County, North Carolina

The only two versions of the design discovered so far are in these two North Carolina quilts, one
a sampler signature quilt, one a repeat block and both look to be sashed with cording.
A 1910 novel name "A Dixie Rose"

We don't know what Laura McCallum and her friends called the design. The term Dixie Rose is quite a Southern tradition, but seems to be found more towards the end of the 19th century and into the 20th as a given name for Southern babies, etc.

Grave of a woman born in 1924

When Terry Thompson and I started making Civil War commemorative quilts twenty years ago we were quite taken with the pattern and featured a couple of reproductions in our books.

Judy Davis made this one from a pattern I drew,
echoing the use of  fussy-cut paisley cones for the leaves and border
in the quilt at the top of this page.

A simpler version by Ilyse Moore
from another of my patterns.


Terry did a block for her Southern Memorial Quilt.

And designed a variation for her
book Four Block Quilts

Most of these patterns are out of print and hard to find but the pictures may provide inspiration.
Print this out at 200% for a rough 16" pattern.

Here are links to the files at the North Carolina project on the Quilt Index.
Laura McCallum's Sampler:

The repeat block version was once attributed to Sarah Williams but in the book North Carolina Quilts the caption says unknown maker. (See the quilts in book plates 3-14, 5-1, 5-2.)

A post I did several years ago.
http://barbarabrackman.blogspot.com/2011/08/northern-lilysouthern-rose-block-6.html

3 comments:

  1. The Dixie Rose is a beautiful block design. I have never seen it before. I know I don't comment on your blog very often but I still love reading and seeing all the gorgeous pictures. Thank you.

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  2. Commenting not necessary, but thanks.

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  3. That's a lovely appliqué rose and what a darling name for a baby girl, Dixie Rose!
    I like the stories and history too.

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