Moss Rose by Susan Black Stayman
Made in 1853 according to family history.
Collection of the Spencer Museum of Art at the University of Kansas
Gift of Miss Mary Stayman
The pattern is indexed in my Encyclopedia of Applique on page 119 as #37.293
Mary Stayman of Leavenworth, Kansas, donated the quilt with several other family pieces. She was an acquaintance of Carrie Hall who pictured the quilt under the family name Moss Rose in her 1935 book The Romance of the Patchwork Quilt. Mary's mother Susan Black Stayman made the quilt in Illinois in the early 1850s, according to the family story.
Distinctive as the quilt is, there are others. The one below was recorded in the Iowa Quilt Project and pictured in the Quilt Index.
I took the photo above at an American Quilt Study Group seminar in Washington several years ago.
The quilt belongs to a museum in Yakima.
For a view of the whole quilt click here:
These quilts have so much in common we have to assume the quiltmakers passed a pattern around. Aside from the four-block format the quilts have similar details. The roses all have reverse-appliqued slashes to give them depth.
Slashed roses aren't that unusual. Here's a late 19th-century version.
Other more distinctive details: Stems on the 4-Block Roses often include thorns. The rosebuds have detailed, feathery edges. Some of the quilts feature split leaves done in yellow and green. The Michigan quilt, which hasn't the split leaves, has both green and yellow leaves.
The Stayman family called their quilt the Moss Rose. Gardeners are familiar with what we call a moss rose today, a short sun lover named Portulaca grandiflora.
But a moss rose to a 19th century American meant a variety of true rose.
Above is a Currier and Ives print, The Moss Rose, featuring two-tone leaves and detailed buds. Victorian gardeners knew the moss rose as a hybrid with sticky, aromatic "moss" on the stems and leaves.
Here's another 19th-century print of a moss rose,
and below a photo showing the "moss" growing around the bud.
We rarely get a glimpse into the names that 19th-century quilters gave their designs. With this distinctive pattern the name Moss Rose seems authentic.
Read more about growing vintage Moss Roses here:
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