Wreath quilt attributed to Emma Hardin Burris (1855-1902) of
York County, South Carolina. Her granddaughter brought 5 of Emma's
quilts for the South Carolina project to record.
Emma is buried in the Olivet Presbyterian Church Cemetery.
She was daughter and wife to farmers in rural York County up by the North Carolina line in the Piedmont region, living near various settlements such as Bullocks Creek where she and husband John T. Burris (1853- 1924) were recorded in the 1880 census farming and caring for 2-year old daughter Mabel. Other names associated with the area were McConnells or McConnellsville and Olivet. Hardins and Burrises were numerous.
McConnellsville a few years after Emma died in 1902
In 1875 Moore & Burris were still hoping to collect on old debts.
Southern retailers typically kept accounts for customers who
paid annually at the end of the year. "Pay Up."
In 1871 members of the local Klan went on trial for terrorizing Black and white people in York County. Witness/defendant William Johnson testified:
"Visit of the Ku-Klux," Frank Bellew, Harper's, 1872
Bob Burris gathered nearly 20 vigilantes into a "Klan."
Emma's Bow-Tie quilt that looks to have been made for cover but
Southern woven cottons give it an almost elegant look.
February, 1902, Yorkville Enquirer
Read more about the activities of the Klan in York County here:
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