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12024-05-02T12:17:56-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e2887645116116plain15197262024-07-08T10:25:27-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876On April 11, 2024, the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild held the monthly meeting in the Fellowship Hall of the Jonesborough United Methodist Church, located at 211 West Main Street. While the official meeting time is at 10:00 a.m., several members arrived at 9:00 for fellowship and also set-up.
Vice-President, Jackie Rose, had a table at the front complete with lectern, which was draped with a Hexy runner. Two quilts, c1930s-40s, made by Rose’s grandmothers, were draped over each side of the table: on the left, a scalloped bordered Scrappy quilt, made by Julia Elizabeth Paxton, and on the right a Double Wedding Ring, made by Mollie Franklin Hensley, also with a scalloped border. The boxgracing the center of the table, filled with quilting ephemera, belonged to Rose’s maternal grandmother, Mollie Franklin Hensley. Two long tables were filled with quilts for Isaiah House, and another table held various pieces of material left by a guild member who had recently passed away.
The program for the day included a representative of Isaiah House, who shared information about this ministry. Rose presented “Suitcases and Shoeboxes,” describing the contents of the boxes and speaking lovingly of her grandmother’s quilting expertise, and the importance of heirlooms. This theme was continued during Show and Tell when various guild members shared heirloom quilts. The Archives of Appalachia was represented to conduct research for a digital exhibit. The business meeting followed with announcements of a Sit and Sew from 1:00 to 4:00 that day, numerous upcoming events: Fall Quilt Sale during the October Storytelling Festival, quilts on display in the Jonesborough Library, a quilt challenge, upcoming “sew-ins” and Mystery Quilt event, and the monthly presentation of birthday gift and door prizes to members. The number of upcoming events was quite impressive!
Thirty of the 40 members were present at the meeting. Of 18 people surveyed, 14 were retired. Of the 14, five were educators. Also included in this group were: homemakers, a social worker, a behavioral scientist, and a registered nurse. The youngest member of the group was 24, and an electrical engineer. The average age was 73, with one member, Polly Reed, proudly announcing she was 88! Before her retirement, Polly was an educator, teaching at University School at ETSU. She owned Tennessee Quilts in Jonesborough for ten years, and now conducts an annual quilting camp, May through November, at Buffalo Mountain. She is a third-generation quilter, and a charter member and co-founder of the Jonesborough Old Town Quilt Guild, which began in 1992. With no notion of slowing down, she is currently working on a flour sack quilt!
When asked the reason for quilting, the consensus was that quilting is a relaxing, meditative, creative, and interactive outlet that produces a sense of accomplishment that is tangible and enduring. There were mixed answers as to whether or not the quilting tradition will continue due to careers and the obsession with technology, but the overall consensus was positive that, yes, the tradition will continue. Reasons for this optimism were more opportunities to learn how to quilt through in-person classes or online videos, more artistic license and self-expression, long-arm technology, and even the introduction to quilting in schools. The Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild is a warm, welcoming, skilled, and enthusiastic group, whose sole purpose is to carry on an enduring tradition through meetings and activities that provide a venue for expert quilters to continue their craft, while graciously offering assistance and teaching the art and craft of quilting to any and all, and to give back to the community.
SHOW AND TELL QUILTS
Instructions on how to make a crazy quilt is demonstrated by the women of Sulphur Springs in the Broadside Television Collection, housed in the Archive of Appalachia, and accessible here: Sulphur Springs Quilting Bee.
The Step Around the Mountain Quilt (above) presented by Vickie Lilly at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024, was also made by her grandmother Florence LaFollette. One of Lafollette’s quilts was featured on page 18, in the book Quilts of Tennessee, Images of Domestic Life Prior to 1930, available in the Archives of Appalachia.
Lilly, taking great pride in this fact, had frames made for family members featuring the book cover and description.
This page has paths:
12024-05-02T12:12:09-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876Quilting Societies in AppalachiaArchives of Appalachia23plain15184652024-05-09T11:28:04-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876
12024-05-06T12:16:46-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876Sulphur Springs Home Demonstration ClubArchives of Appalachia49plain15195992024-06-17T12:23:05-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876
12024-05-06T06:36:57-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876Sulphur Springs Quilting Bee - Crazy QuiltArchives of Appalachia20Broadside Televisionplain15197282024-06-17T12:23:32-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876
12024-05-06T12:19:39-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876Ora Watson and The Log Cabin QuiltArchives of Appalachia23plain15201922024-06-17T12:24:26-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876
12024-05-08T08:03:37-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876Framing a QuiltArchives of Appalachia22Broadside Television Footageplain15197272024-06-17T12:25:06-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876
12024-05-08T12:42:13-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876AcknowledgementsArchives of Appalachia6Recognition of Contributors to the Exhibit.plain15203692024-06-17T12:26:19-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876
12024-05-08T12:46:23-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876SourcesArchives of Appalachia11plain15202822024-06-17T12:26:52-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876
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12024-05-02T12:12:09-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876Quilting Societies in Appalachia23plain15184652024-05-09T11:28:04-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876
12024-05-06T12:16:46-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876Sulphur Springs Home Demonstration Club49plain15195992024-06-17T12:23:05-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876
12024-05-06T06:36:57-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876Sulphur Springs Quilting Bee - Crazy Quilt20Broadside Televisionplain15197282024-06-17T12:23:32-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876
12024-05-06T12:19:39-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876Ora Watson and The Log Cabin Quilt23plain15201922024-06-17T12:24:26-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876
12024-05-08T08:03:37-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876Framing a Quilt22Broadside Television Footageplain15197272024-06-17T12:25:06-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876
12024-05-08T12:42:13-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876Acknowledgements6Recognition of Contributors to the Exhibit.plain15203692024-06-17T12:26:19-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876
12024-05-08T12:46:23-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876Sources11plain15202822024-06-17T12:26:52-07:00Archives of Appalachiafd81101222c39f89c61f93d59b8033a391e28876
This page references:
1media/JQG_JPR_06_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T10:42:11-07:00Crazy Quilt7This Crazy Quilt was presented by Jackie Paxton Rose at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024. Made by Rose’s grandmother, Mollie B. Franklin Hensley, this quilt features her initials, MBF, her mother’s initials, ESG, Elizabeth Sara Gentry, and the name of her husband, Roscoe Hensley. The unique features of a crazy quilt are the irregular shaped pieces with embroidered edging and images.media/JQG_JPR_06.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:00:08-07:00
1media/JQG_WJT_25_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T11:25:09-07:00Crazy Quilt7This Crazy Quilt, with a sheet backing, presented by Wendy-Jo Thibodeau at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024, was made by her maternal grandmother Yvonne Martin Soucy, born in 1902 in Quebec, Canada, She married in 1918 in Wilton, New Hampshire. Soucy worked in a mill where wool fabric was made from 1916 to 1967.media/JQG_WJT_25.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:00:36-07:00
1media/JQG_JPR_07_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T10:44:19-07:00Double Wedding Ring Quilt5This Double Wedding Ring with scalloped edging and double rows of quilting, was presented by Jackie Paxton Rose at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024. The quilt was hand-quilted by her grandmother, Mollie Franklin Hensley in the 1930s-40s.media/JQG_JPR_07.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:02:37-07:00
1media/JQG_CH_03_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T10:33:26-07:00Double Wedding Ring Quilt5This Double Wedding Ring quilt, pieced by Anderson and made in the 1930s, was presented by Carri Haumiller at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024.media/JQG_CH_03.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:01:30-07:00
1media/JQG_JPR_08_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T10:48:26-07:00Double Wedding Ring with Inner Stitch Pattern4A close-up of the Double Wedding Ring presented by Jackie Paxton Rose at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024, reveals the intricate patterns of stitching. Two cardboard pattern cut-outs were traced onto the quilt, then hand-stitched. The quilt was hand-quilted by her grandmother, Mollie Franklin Hensley in the 1930s-40s.media/JQG_JPR_08.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:03:19-07:00
1media/JQG_SC_14_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T11:05:05-07:00Pink Grandmother's Flower Garden Quilt4This Pink Grandmother’s Flower Garden Quilt was presented by Sandy Countermine at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024. The origin is unknown.media/JQG_SC_14.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:08:18-07:00
1media/JQG_WJT_26_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T11:20:00-07:00Umbrella Ladies Summer Quilt4This Umbrella Ladies Summer Quilt presented by Wendy-Jo Thibodeau at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024, was made by her mother, Cynthia Soucy Miller Delude, born in 1935. She made the quilt while she was home from school due to an illness. This quilt was passed on to Thibodeau around 1989.media/JQG_WJT_26.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:14:11-07:00
1media/JQG_BMS_01_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T10:22:31-07:00Butterfly Quilt4This Butterfly quilt was presented by Barbara McBride Smith at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024. Smith’s next-door neighbor, Della Johnson in Waco, Texas, gave her the quilt in 1963 because she was the first person in her family to attend college, and she was “fluttering away.” Smith referred to Johnson as a “neighbor, caregiver, and faux grandma.” Johnson hand-quilted in the evenings while she listened to her radio. By day, she ran a home laundry for Baylor University Students.media/JQG_BMS_01.jpgplain2024-07-09T03:59:25-07:00
1media/JQG_JPR_09_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T10:51:59-07:00Fan Quilt4This Fan Quilt presented by Jackie Paxton Rose at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024, was also made by Mollie Franklin Hensley.media/JQG_JPR_09.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:03:45-07:00
1media/JQG_GEN_27_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T11:47:50-07:00Give Away Table4This material was left to the Old Town Jonesborough Quilters Guild by Barbara, a member who had passed away.media/JQG_GEN_27.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:05:20-07:00
1media/JQG_VL_18_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T11:13:48-07:00Denim Look Scrappy Quilt4This Denim Scrappy Look Quilt featuring four big squares, presented by Vickie Lilly at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024, was made by her, and Jackie Paxton Rose’s, grandmother, Julia Moore Paxton, in the 1940s.media/JQG_VL_18.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:01:01-07:00
1media/JQG_BMS_02_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T10:27:25-07:00Grandmother's Flower Garden4This Grandmother’s Flower Garden quilt, also presented by Barbara McBride Smith at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024, was given to her as a wedding present in the 1960s. McBride stated that she did not understand the value then and was “waiting to be able to get a nice bedspread.”media/JQG_BMS_02.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:05:44-07:00
1media/JQG_JPR_11_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T10:55:33-07:00Scrappy Quilt with Scalloped Edge3This close-up of the Scrappy Quilt presented by Jackie Paxton Rose at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024, features “ice-cream cones” on the edge which forms the scallop. The quilt was made by her grandmother Julia Elizabeth Paxton.media/JQG_JPR_11.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:12:26-07:00
1media/JQG_CH_05_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T10:40:41-07:00Hexy Quilt with Triangle Edging3This Hexy quilt with triangle edging was presented by Carrie Haumiller at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024.media/JQG_CH_05.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:07:12-07:00
1media/JQG_VL_22_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T11:16:18-07:00Step Around the Mountain Quilt3This Step Around the Mountain Quilt presented by Vickie Lilly at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024, was also made by her grandmother Florence LaFollette. One of Lafollette’s quilts was featured on page 18, in the book Quilts of Tennessee, Images of Domestic Life Prior to 1930, available in the Archives of Appalachia. Lilly, taking great pride in this fact, had frames made for family members featuring the book cover and descriptionmedia/JQG_VL_22.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:13:06-07:00
1media/JQG_JPR_12_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T11:32:35-07:00Main Table Quilt Display3Main Table Display at the Jonesboro Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting arranged by Jackie Paxton Rose. Table features quilts by both of Jackie's grandmothers, as well as a box of quilting ephemera belonging to Mollie Franklin Hensley.media/JQG_JPR_12.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:07:43-07:00
1media/JQG_VL_16_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T11:11:30-07:001920s Scrap Quilt3This 1920s Scrap Quilt presented by Vickie Lilly at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024, was made by her great-grandmother, Ma Householder of Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. Lilly pointed out the tears stating that the quilt has seen much use.media/JQG_VL_16.jpgplain2024-07-09T03:57:28-07:00
1media/JQG_SC_15_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T11:08:32-07:00Pink Stars Quilt3This Pink Stars Quilt was presented by Sandy Countermine at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024. The is origin unknown.media/JQG_SC_15.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:08:44-07:00
1media/JQG_CH_04_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T10:38:49-07:00Flower Garden3This Flower Garden quilt with scalloped edging was presented by Carrie Haumiller at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024.media/JQG_CH_04.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:04:17-07:00
1media/JQG_GEN_28_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T11:48:55-07:00Quilts for Isaiah House3A table filled with quilts for donation to Isaiah House were made by members of the Jonesboro Old Town Quilters Guild. Isaiah House provides a temporary place for children awaiting placement.media/JQG_GEN_28.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:09:17-07:00
1media/JQG_VL_19_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T11:40:35-07:00Quilts of Tennessee Book3At the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024, Vicky Lilly showed this book, Quilts of Tennessee, Images of Domestic Life Prior to 1930, available in the Archives of Appalachia, which features a photo of a String quilt made by her grandmother, Florence LaFollette on page 18, in the book.media/JQG_VL_19.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:10:58-07:00
1media/JQG_JPR_10_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T10:53:25-07:00Scrappy Quilt3This Scrappy Quilt presented by Jackie Paxton Rose at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024, was made by her grandmother Julia Elizabeth Paxton. Scrappy quilts are just as they sound, scraps of leftover cloth made into a quilt. The Scrappy Quilt is thought to originate from the Great Depression when material was dear and every piece counted. This quilt, made in the 1930s-40s, features a scalloped edge.media/JQG_JPR_10.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:11:35-07:00
1media/JQG_VL_21_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T11:15:05-07:00Scrappy Quilt3This Scrappy Quilt presented by Vickie Lilly at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024, was made by her grandmother Florence LaFollette of Pigeon Forge, Tennessee.media/JQG_VL_21.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:12:02-07:00
1media/JQG_SC_13_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T11:06:50-07:00Grandmother's Flower Garden Quilt with Striped Edge3This Grandmother’s Flower Garden Quilt with coordinating striped edges was presented by Sandy Countermine at the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024. The origin is unknown.media/JQG_SC_13.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:06:36-07:00
1media/VL_Quilts of Tennessee Framed_small_thumb.jpg2024-05-13T10:01:14-07:00Tennessee Quilts Framed2At the Jonesborough Old Town Quilters Guild Meeting, on April 11, 2024, Vicky Lilly showed this frame with a copy of the book cover for Quilts of Tennessee, Images of Domestic Life Prior to 1930, available in the Archives of Appalachia. The book features a photo of a String quilt made by her grandmother, Florence LaFollette on page 18.media/VL_Quilts of Tennessee Framed_small.jpgplain2024-07-09T04:13:42-07:00
1media/JQG_VL_23_thumb.jpg2024-05-02T11:46:16-07:00Florence and G. L. Lafollette1Florence Lafollette, with her husband, G. L., in Pigeon Forge, TN, maker of the Step Around the Mountain Quilt.media/JQG_VL_23.jpgplain2024-05-02T11:46:16-07:00