Name quilt in the collection of Maryland's
Washington County Historical Society attributed to
Ellen Carver Mobley (1827-1899)
Overall view (photo manipulated)
This seems likely as the pattern (similar to BlockBase+ #2442)
required some piecing skills and the blocks all look to be by the
same hand.
When the Civil War began and Ellen was collecting names she was in her mid-30s. She'd been married since she was 16, and a mother 11 months later to a family of boys that eventually totaled ten, two of whom died as an children.
It's not as bad as it sounds. It's more like the jail was in their house,
a stone building the county built in 1858.
Col. Edward Mayberry Mobley (1825-1906)
Ellen's husband had suffered a neck wound but recovered. By June 1865, both had returned home.
Ellen gave birth to one more son in July, 1866.
The elder Edward had been a carpenter/cabinet maker before the war, specializing when they first married in furniture and later in carriage building. Ellen's husband spent his post-war years active in politics and local government, particularly active in the fire department and the veteran's organization, the GAR. The Mobleys were the middle-class mechanics, clerks and retailers of late-19th-century Hagerstown life.
Ellen died at the age of 72 in this brick house at 525 North Locust Street, survived by 8 of her sons. Son Lewis inherited the house. Her quilt descended in son Harry's family, who wound up in Mississippi. Ellen's great-grandchildren donated the quilt to the historical society in 1980.
Ten years ago Heritage Auctions offered a collection of Edward's Civil War possessions, including a photograph album.
Ellen & Edward II?
Local historian Justin Mayhue has written a book on Colonel Edward M. Mobley, 7th Maryland Infantry.
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