Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Petticoat Press BOM: Links to the Free Patterns





Civil War reporting was man’s domain but we find bylines from several female journalists who we recall in the Petticoat Press Block of the Month for 2025. The 12 monthly blocks are based on an "X" seam structure. See the posted free patterns below and click on the links.


 #1 Olivia's Chronicle by Jeanie Wyrick

#2 Sarah's Favorite by Sara Reimer Farley

#3 Pathfinder by Heidi Kapszukiewicz

#4 Starry Path by Erica Cannon


#5 Twin Sisters by Denniele Bohannon

#6 Old Maid's Ramble by Brenda Douglass Esslinger

SETS & INTRODUCTION

13 X blocks and 12 sampler blocks
The "Official" set alternates a simple X block. You need 12 sampler blocks and 13 of the alternate block.


Or
 13 sampler blocks & 12 alternate blocks.
Readers have their own ideas:

Blocks 1-3 in a set by Jean Etheridge

Denniele's alternate blocks

Here's our Facebook group: PetticoatPressQuilts: 

Wednesday, June 11, 2025

Petticoat Press# 6: Old Maid's Ramble For Kate Field

Petticoat Press# 6: Old Maid's Ramble For Kate Field by
Jeanne Arnieri

"Old Maid" was an insult when single women were considered a threat to domestic order.
Women of marriageable age were urged to "settle" rather than face spinsterhood.

Mary Katherine Keemle Field (1838 – 1896) 
She never married.

Old Maid's Ramble by Becky Brown

Kate Field was born in St. Louis to a pair of actors. In her mid-teens they sent her to live with her mother's sister Cordelia Riddle Sanford who'd married wealthy Boston textile manufacturer Milton H. Sanford. After boarding school the Sanfords took her to Europe. Precocious Kate in her teens began writing columns about her travel for the influential Springfield Republican under the penname Straws, Jr., after a pseudonym her father had used with his published poetry.


Old Maid's Ramble by Elsie Ridgley

As the Civil War approached Kate and her Uncle Milton differed in opinion on many topics from John Brown's terrorism to whether girls like Kate should be writing for the public. He threatened to cease supporting her unless she promised to cease writing. She did not acquiesce. Her 1861 memoir of a European friend poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning was published in the Atlantic Monthly.

When the Civil War began Uncle Milton increased his fortune by manufacturing blankets for the Union Army, money he invested in horse racing. Kate earned her own living writing about topics such as the 1864 Metropolitan Sanitary Fair in New York to raise funds for Union soldiers' aid.

"General Fremont and Mrs. Fremont were there, he looking very intensely out of that eagle eye, and she the embodiment of a strong, brilliant, impulsive woman. General McClellan also was there, creating a little curiosity and indeed a vastly interesting study to the impartial critic. It were not possible for such a head and face to save a country."
The Metropolitan Fair

Old Maid's Ramble by Denniele Bohannon

For five years in the first half of the 1890s, Kate published Kate Field's Washington.

Kate, like many political commenters, was not always on the side of the angels. She was caught up in anti-immigrant hysteria in the years when your great-grandparents and mine were escaping wars and famine.

My European grandparents from Ukraine and Belarus
who came here about 1890.
Nazis killed their parents in the 1940s.
"I said I failed to see the virtue of opening our arms to the scum of Europe and of closing them to the Chinese, who never get drunk, who do their work and don't vote, and ask nothing in return except to live." A speech at the 1893 World's Fair.
She took some rather eccentric positions such as opposing the Statue of Liberty. After trying the stage for a short career she spent time in Utah studying Mormonism to write about her opposition to polygamy.

Old Maid's Ramble by Denniele Bohannon

At the end of the century she traveled to Hawaii, advocating U.S. acquisition of the Sandwich Islands, and perhaps hoping to find relief from an unspecified health problem. She died there of pneumonia in 1896 at 57 to national shock.

1896

The Block

Old Maid's Ramble BlockBase 2338a

Half done with #6. Here's Becky Collis's setting alternating
a neat nine patch in black and white and red all over.

Read issues of Kate Field's Washington here:

https://books.google.com/books?id=5Q0-AQAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=kate+field+washington&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiB_-zl1--EAxUyC3kGHT7hAnQQ6AF6BAgIEAI#v=onepage&q=kate%20field%20washington&f=false


Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Liberty's Birds #3: Cardinal

 




Liberty's Birds #3: Cardinal by Denniele Bohannon

Cardinals live year round in Kansas. We usually see them in pairs; males a flash of red, females less brilliant. Sara Lawrence Robinson may have enjoyed seeing their bond as she had made a life-long pairing herself.

Sara Tappan Doolittle Lawrence at about 20 years old

In her teens Massachusetts-born Sara attended Salem Academy where she fell on the stairs and hurt her back, injuring her enough that she returned home to Belchertown where she was bedridden and, so the story goes, afflicted with a "sympathetic blindness." A novice doctor who specialized in homeopathy and other innovative practices was called in and he decided it was a case for electric shock therapy.


Sara recovered her mobility and her sight. It might have been Doctor Charles Robinson himself who was the cure. They married eight years later. Sara was his second wife. His first, another Sarah, was Sarah Adams Robinson whom he married in 1843. By 1846 Sarah Adams Robinson and their two infants had died.  
From Family Search

During the goldrush Charles traveled overland to California where he was jailed for his radical views on slavery, land distribution and civil disobedience but elected a state representative. 

Sara Lawrence and Charles Robinson married in October, 1851
when she was about 24 and he about 33. A few months later they began
 an antislavery newspaper in Fitchburg. 

Fitchburg in 1867

The Liberator, the premiere abolitionist paper, occasionally
noticed them.

They sold the Fitchburg News after a year.

Cardinal by Susannah Pangelinan
Susannah's set is part of her background. The applique
glides over the seam lines.

Charles and Sara seem to have been a devoted, loving couple. Patricia Michaelis wrote an article about ten years ago touching on their relationship: "Lawrence in Perspective: A Love Story." As archivist at the Kansas Historical Society, Pat read many of their letters, written during their frequent trips back east when one or the other was feeling neglected.
"If you know how my heart yearns for your presence, & how much of the time my thoughts are with you, you would not think me too cold.... I do love you most fervently & will try in future to make you realize it at all times. I hope to leave for Kansas this week if I can get through in Boston. In the mean time I am your own loving husband." 
Charles to Sara, September, 1857
Cardinal by Elsie Ridgley

There's only one cardinal here but you know he has a mate close by.

The Block

The Inspiration



Two sheets this month.

Cardinal by Becky Collis
Read More:
Patricia Michaelis, "Lawrence in Perspective: A Love Story."
https://lawrencebusinessmagazine.com/2016/07/10/lawrence-in-perspective-a-love-story/


Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Petticoat Press #5: Twin Sisters for the Footes

 

Petticoat Press #5: Twin Sisters for the Footes by
Denniele Bohannon


Katherine Foote Coe (1840-1923) and Harriet Foote Hawley (1831-1886)
The Footes---not twins--- but a close pair in a family of ten who were
first cousins to Harriet Beecher Stowe.

Twin Sisters by Becky Collis

Harriet was the oldest child of Eliza Spencer & George Augustus Foote of Guilford, Connecticut. She married Joseph R. Hawley at Christmas, 1855. Joseph later edited the Hartford Evening Press before enlisting in the Union Army.

Colonel Joseph Roswell Hawley (1826-1905) of the 7th
Connecticut Infantry

After her husband was assigned to the offshore Carolina islands Harriett joined him in Beaufort where she found thousands of now-free people abandoned by the plantation owners and living in degradation. Always one to see a need and organize assistance she did what she could in Beaufort, later in Florida and in Washington at the Armory Square Hospital. Sister Kate joined her in Beaufort and other posts during the war.

When Joseph went to Florida in 1863 they followed him to Saint Augustine. Over the next year or so Harriet published seven articles about the South and the War.

1864: Freed people and Union Soldiers at the Provost Marshal's House
in Jacksonville by Sam Cooley

Hartford Evening Press, April, 1863

Joseph's army success led to a political career. The Foote sisters moved first to Hartford when Joseph was governor and then to Washington when he became Connecticut's senator. There the sisters turned their attention to Native American rights.


Harriet was badly injured in a wagon accident shortly after the Civil War and Kate seems to have been at hand to care for her. After her sister's death at 54 in 1886 Kate took over the Senator's social hostess duties until he remarried.



Becky Brown added triangles in the center.

Kate, a single school teacher for most of her life, found her calling as a journalist after the war. She was Washington correspondent for New York's Independent and her reporting appeared in other periodicals such as The Atlantic and Century magazines. She was wed briefly to Connecticut judge Andrew Jackson Coe who died soon after their 1895 marriage.

The 1870 census counted only 35 women working as reporters and editors. The Foote sisters were typical of their time in that they were free-lancers who had other work such as teaching and keeping house. By 1900 the census listed 2,193 female newspaper workers---again probably just a fraction of women getting their writing published.

The Block

Twin Sisters by Jeannie Arnieri


Twin Sisters is the oldest published name...
From the Ladies' Art Company


Twin Sisters by Elsie Ridgley
Read More:
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/37926088/harriet-hawley

Foster, Sarah Whitmer (2004) "Historic Notes and Documents: Harriet Ward Foote Hawley: Civil War Journalist," Florida Historical Quarterly: Vol. 83: No. 4, Article 6. Available at: https://stars.library.ucf.edu/fhq/vol83/iss4/6 

 Paul E. Teed, Joseph and Harriet Hawley's Civil War: Partnership, Ambition, and Sacrifice