Ladies' Aid Sampler #11 Dog by Becky Brown
The next-to-last block recalls working dogs in New York where sampler albums often featured canines and occasionally canines carrying baskets.
Album in the Fenimore Cooperstown Museum
Mary Van Houten's block
The Elizabeth Griffiths quilt at the
Orangetown Museum
has a poem to accompany it.
Sixty-two members of the Middletown Baptist Church where Elizabeth's husband Joseph Griffiths was pastor made the quilt for them. Eliza Cooper wrote poetry for the presentation party. For this block:
"Little, Miss Mary Van Houten
Made a dog, would set you shouting,
He is going with his basket, quiet
I do not think, he means to try it."
A good dog carrying a basket [full of something edible?] and he is not going to try it. What might be in those baskets?
Robyn Revelle Gragg
Perhaps some strawberries.
https://www.internationalquiltmuseum.org/quilt/20070010002
Our block was inspired by one in a
sampler attributed to friends of Susannah Butts Adsett Boots in the collection
of the International Quilt Museum. The album may have been made by Susannah's
New York relatives for her second marriage. Born in Dutchess County she and first husband Hiram Adsett left for Green County, Ohio in 1833. He died about
fifteen years later and in 1854 she married again in Ohio to Jesse Boots.
MC initialed a dotted dog carrying a
striped basket....
Striped fabric maybe to show the splints in a handmade basket, the kind often used to carry fruit.
English fruit seller with her strawberry baskets
Strawberries were traditionally sold in conical baskets called pottles in England. The baskets were returnable and refundable and a signature of fruiterers like Eleanor Ogle whose business card is in the British Museum (see lower right corner.)
The fruit was an important New York crop. People made the most of the short season, selling berries to City customers and celebrating locally with Strawberry Festivals, a popular fundraising event.
1862 Philadelphia, July
By Denniele Bohannon
Were dogs trained to help out in the harvest?
Harvesting strawberries in Ulster County, New York about
1900
June, 1863 fundraiser hosted by
Buffalo's
Ladies' Christian CommissionStrawberry Festivals were only possible for a few weeks in June and early July. A charity-minded citizen might get a surfeit of strawberries in a short time. But the events were usually for a good cause. The opinionated editor of the
Brooklyn Eagle thought they were a better way to raise money than Ladies' Fairs...
....those "pious and respectable swindles for emptying the pockets of susceptible gentlemen of their loose change."
A Buffalo writer agreed that a Strawberry Festival was more efficient. The ladies would not have to "be at work two or three months making preparations....Strawberries don't require to be worked in worsted."
Philadelphia Museum of Art
Dog with a basket in an 1853 quilt made for Richard H. Mosher
I modified the pattern to look more like my dog Pheobe O'Shea
who is rather short and has perked up ears.
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Detail from an 1870s painting by William P. Chappell featuring a Strawberry Pedlar
followed by a dog. He has a pottle-carrying apparatus.
A strawberry wreath