
Kentucky had a reputation for "fine and costly quilts" after 1840 or so. Twenty-three year old Eliza Trigg Brents seems to have been among the most skillful and productive of the makers. Above the black-bordered hexagon is a typical Kentucky show quilt but not by Eliza. We have no surviving quilts attributed to her. But we have evidence in fair records that she made many award-winning quilts over the years.
Prize records Kentucky State Fair in 1863(Eliza's name is Brents with an S.)
She won premiums for a silk quilt and a worsted (wool) quilt plus
a piece of embroidery that year.

Again two entries: a silk comfort and a patch-work
woolen quilt

Perhaps her worsted quilt looked like this one
attributed to Mary Redman Parris of Cynthiana, Kentucky by Jeffrey Evans Auction.
There certainly was a Kentucky style. Much mosaic piecing and added embroidery...

Attributed to Sallie Pinnick of Columbia, Kentucky,
Recorded by the Florida project and the Quilt Index.
....Until crazy quilt fashion took over in the 1870s and changed
the emphasis from piecing over paper templates to crazy randomness.
Kentucky style still favored the embroidered border.

This may be Eliza with her husband and children about 1870
in front of the house her father bought her as a wedding gift.
When the Civil War began in April 1861 32-year old Eliza Trigg Brents was 5 or 6 months pregnant with her first (recorded?) child although she'd been married for 7 years to 43-year-old Samuel Worley Brents.
His first wife had died after childbirth leaving two surviving children. At War's beginning Eliza's stepchild Mary Elizabeth was about 12 and Samuel II about 8 years old.


Eliza Trigg, a native of Barren County, Kentucky, had lived in the county seat Glasgow all her life. She was from a wealthy family; the Trigg National Bank with the arch is pictured above in the early 20th century. When she lived there Glasgow had about 500 citizens, a good many of them enslaved by the Trigg family as the 1860 census Slave Schedule shows:
TRIGG, A(lanson) (farmer): 1 male 60, 1 male 55, 1 female 49, 1 female 48, 1 female 32, 1 female
35, 1 female 17, 2 females 1, 1 female 12, 1 female 9, 1 female 5 (unnamed born 15 Apr
1855), 1 female 7, 1 female 6 (Agnis born 1 Aug 1854, daughter of Permelia), 1 female 5,
1 female 3, 1 female 2 (unnamed born 1858), 1 female 3, 1 male 13, 1 male 10, 1 male 9,
1 male 8, 1 female 4, 1 male 12, 1 male 8, 1 male 5 (unnamed born 15 Mar 1855), 1 male
1, 1 male 3, 1 male 23, 1 male 21, 1 male 20, 1 male 18, 1 male 16.
Samuel and Eliza were probably also slave holders. A reference to a boy who died in 1853:
"BRENTS, Linsey, age 12 yrs, male, slave, born and resided Barren Co, Samuel Brents owner, died of unknown cause 1853."
Linsey might have been an early victim of the worldwide cholera epidemic of 1853-4, which was fatal to people enslaved by the Triggs as this schedule of African-American deaths in 1854 Glasgow shows.
TRIGG, Aggy, female, age 70 yrs, born VA, slave of A(lanson) Trigg,1 Apr 1854,old age
TRIGG, Aggy, female, age 62 yrs, born VA, slave of A Trigg, cholera 25 Oct 1854
TRIGG, Anderson, male, age 5 yrs, slave of A Trigg, 15 Apr 1854, scarlet fever.
TRIGG, Barney, male, age 50 yrs, born VA, slave of A Trigg, 23 Oct 1854, cholera
TRIGG, Fanny, female, age 5, slave of A Trigg, 1 Aug 1854, consumption
TRIGG, George, male, age 75 yrs, born VA, slave of A Trigg, 1 May 1854, old age
TRIGG, Joe, male, age 8 yrs, slave of A Trigg, 15 June 1854, consumption
TRIGG, No First Name, female, age 3 months, slave of A Trigg, 15 Apr 1854, flux

Alanson Munson Trigg (1795-1873) bought this house,
which still stands, for Eliza in 1854.
Late-19th-century quilt with initials of Emily G. Marks (1839-1923) in the center.
Morgan Brents spent much of his adult life in Seattle. He was named for the famous guerilla but the Confederate raiders did not occupy Glasgow until the end of 1862---a name change?