Yesterday, just as I was getting ready to rush out to the
International Rose Test Garden with my mother, who is visiting from Maine for three-and-a-half weeks, I received a message on Facebook from a woman from Ranson, West Virginia. It said, "Check out my profile picture. I'm blown away! Maybe you will be, too! Please message me."
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Here is the profile picture from the sender of the message on Facebook |
I thought, "What is this?" And frankly, in my haste to get out the door, I thought it was a picture of the quilt in my collection, thought to have been made by Mary Couchman Small. Or perhaps it was the one documented by the West Virginia Heritage Quilt Search, made by Mary's daughter, Harriet. I replied to Sharon, thinking it was one of the two quilts I knew about, and asked how she got a picture of it.
The two sensational Album quilts from West Virginia were the subject of my "virtual" poster presentation for the American Quilt Study Group in 2010. I blogged about the two quilts when I couldn't attend the AQSG Seminar, and the blog about those two quilts may be found
here.
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These are the two quilts from my "Separated at Birth" blog |
When I got home yesterday and started looking more closely at the picture sent by the woman from West Virginia, I realized I wasn't looking at the quilt in my collection. Then I pulled up the old picture of the two quilts together, from my 2010 blog post, and I realized I wasn't looking at the other quilt either. There was a third quilt! Needless to say, I was absolutely stunned.
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Detail of quilt #3 |
Since I realized there were three quilts, e-mails and messages have been flying back and forth. I've been in touch with Fawn Valentine, author of the West Virginia Quilts book. I've exchanged several messages with the owner of the third quilt, and discovered that it had been kept in storage for many years and was pulled out just yesterday, when her daughter took pictures of it.
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Another detail of quilt #3 |
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Another detail of quilt #3 |
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Another detail of quilt #3 |
I asked about the quilting, and learned it is just the same as the other two quilts - extremely dense echo quilting. This morning, there were some more pictures that showed the quilting. These pictures are a little blurry, but one thing's clear - it's the same style of quilting.
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Detail view of the quilt in my collection - look at the quilting! |
Now that a third quilt has surfaced, there are many more questions to be asked. One of the tantalizing details I got from the owner is there may have been a connection between the maker of the third quilt and the Sperow family. That's the family that had the other two quilts, as the two I'd already discovered had descended through Elizabeth Jane Small Sperow, sister of Harriet Small, maker of quilt #1, and daughter of Mary Couchman Small, presumed to be the maker of the one I own.
As soon as I learn more, I'll post it here. Thought you'd all be interested. The fraternal twins are really triplets!