Washington Whirlwind #3: Lincoln's Platform by Becky Brown
Purple for Mary Lincoln's favorite color, set with black & white for ours.
Lincoln's political platform was enough of a threat to the South
that several states seceded before he was even inaugurated in March, 1861.
President Buchanan tipping his hat beside Lincoln on
the way to Lincoln's inauguration from Harper's, March 16, 1861.
An idealized Lincoln family, Willie with his mother and Robert
and Tad next to their father
Julia agreed, remembering that Tad and Willy were "never accustomed to restraint.” Lincoln's secretaries John Hay and John Nicolay had little patience with the "mischievous" boys who had the run of the White House. Secretarial assistant William Stoddard recalled an episode in their offices, one of which overnight...
"Assumed a suddenly disastrous look...The green cloth cover of the broad table was ink-stained and work-worn, last evening, but it was whole. It is by no means a unit, now. Tad and Willie Lincoln have been here, and they are the happy owners of brand-new pocket-knives. They are sharp knives, too, that will cut outline maps of the seat of war, or of anything else, upon green cloth table-covers.”
Thomas "Tad" Lincoln and indulgent father
William Wallace Lincoln
John Hay in later years recalled Tad, as a "chartered libertine...idolized by both his father and mother...He had a very bad opinion of books and no opinion of discipline...The President took infinite comfort in the child's rude health, fresh fun, and uncontrollable boisterousness."
John Hay (1838-1905) when he began working as a Lincoln secretary.
Lincoln's Platform by Denniele Bohannon
The Block
We have at least 3 published versions of "Lincoln's Platform." BlockBase
shows the simplest as published in Carrie Hall's 1935 book.(BlockBase 1646a)
Oh for heaven's sake! I forgot the pattern. Here it is! Thanks Rina.
Lincoln's Platform by Becky Collis
6 comments:
Hello Mrs Barbara, interesting story as always! But I do t see any measures for the block, and I don’t have Blockbase!
This is Rina, from Italy 🇮🇹
Hello Barbara, I think you left off the little part with the instructions about measurements for the block.
What is it about this design that something to do with Lincoln or his platform? Or "Sherman's March".
I've never seen or figured out why this block has associations with the (American) Civil War.
I see how it resembles a butter churn's paddles, a monkey wrench and maybe even "hole in the barn door" (a smaller, pass-through door in a much larger barn door), but I've never figured out a Lincoln or Sherman connection.
Selling quilt patterns has never been about historical accuracy, I am afraid. I can see this as a wooden platform like a stage where a political candidate might speak but do recall that Carrie Hall who named it was writing 70 years after the Civil War.
Thank you Mrs Barbara, I was trying to make it as regular block size 12”.
Rina☺️
Post a Comment