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Many of the quilt patterns, the barns, and the
buildings that are a part of Kentucky's Quilt Trails have fascinating stories
behind them, and many of these stories have been documented by Community
Scholars. Community Scholars are graduates of a six-day training program
sponsored by the Kentucky Folklife Program at different locations around the
state. Participants learn to use the tools of the folklorist to identify and
document traditions in their own communities through oral history interviews
and documentary photography. Here are two examples of quilt trail stories by
Community Scholars.
Interview with
Johnda Barker of Louisa,
Kentucky by Community Scholar Gwenda Lynn
Huff
Kentucky Route 32 winds through creek bottoms, past steep pasture land and through a hardwood forest.
Redbuds, dogwoods, service berry and native wildflowers welcome you in spring and beckon
you in the fall to experience Mother Nature's wondrous wardrobe.
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This scenic road takes you to Martha, Kentucky. In the early 1800s, Emmett Barkers great-grandparents left Pound Gap, Virginia and settled on a farm in Martha, Kentucky. Along with them, G.W. & Elizabeth Branham brought a wooden trunk stuffed with family treasures. Recently, Emmett and his wife Carol searched through that trunk. They found a quilt square that had traveled in the trunk from Virginia.
We loved the quilt square idea from the start and talking Mom and my cousin, Deanna, into working on the square |
was easy. Mom really took the time to pick a different square along with one being a part of our family history. The barn at her family farm was a great selection due to so many of her brothers serving in World War II and the Korean War along with other family members who have been in the military,” said Emmett’s and Carol’s daughter, Johnda Barker.
I dont know what the pattern is, but it was the one we chose because it had to be Emmetts grandmother who pieced the square, Carol said.
A dirt driveway leads to the brightly hued quilt square mounted on a red barn. The barn was built sometime in the 1960s, Emmett said. It was used mostly for tobacco and cattle. We stored hay in the loft.
The shadow doesnt fall upon the quilt square, instead the light and dark of evening shadows highlight the path that leads to the quilt square posed in a spotlight created by natures sun beams.
Johnda says, I have lots of our familys quilt collection, including quilts handmade by several great-grand and grandmothers. My prize quilt is a cathedral window made by my grandmother with material from the dresses four or five generations of us have worn. It is like a walk down memory lane for me because I remember my mom making the dresses and us wearing them and my grandmother making the quilt from them. |
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Inside the small house each antique bed is covered with a handmade quilt. I make quilts and so did everyone else in my family. My mom made everything from curtains to bedspreads,” said Carol as she talked about the house that was built prior to the Civil War.
We dont live here, we live in Louisa. Coming here is like going back in time. It is home. It will always be home, Emmett said. We come here every weekend. Its our getaway and our connection to the past.
You know where to find me for the rest of our lives....at Johnny and Martha Barkers farm in Martha, Kentucky! There is still no place like Papaw and Mamaw's even at my age! Its my little wide spot in the road, Johnda added.
PHOTOS IN ORDER OF APPEARANCE:
"Crown of Thorns," photograph by Gwenda Lynn Huff, Lawrence County Quilt Trail
Family quilt square that had traveled in the trunk from Virginia, photograph by Gwenda Lynn Huff
Interview with Dr. Deann Allen an James Allen of Manchester, Kentucky by Community Scholars Jennifer Rose & Alfredo Escobar
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Jennifer and Alfredo can see the Rose of Sharon quilt block on the big, black barn before they turn in the drive. Deann is waiting for them at a garden table outside. She takes Jennifer into the house while James shows Alfredo the barn. Inside, Deann unpacks a bag of heirlooms from Jame's family, including a collection of family letters dating back into the 1800s and an old quilt with the Rose of Sharon pattern, fragile after years of use but no less amazing in its precision stitching.
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JENNIFER: So who is the maker of this beautiful old quilt?
DEANN: Mary Baker, in the Civil War. Weve got some letters from her that she wrote to her son
(looks through papers and old letters) six generations back. James' sister Carolyn, who is the one that restored this, has provided us with the patterns so that when (our daughter) Mary Jewel gets a little older, she can recreate it.
JENNIFER: What made you decide to do a quilt piece on your barn?
DEANN: Hope Smith and Debbie Hacker (from work) were talking about it and I thought it was a neat project. My grandmother was a quilter; James' mother was a quilter, so its just a piece of heritage. Weve got a group of students working on about ten patterns to put in and around the city. The city bought the materials. Were trying to get the kids involved in picking out patterns that were their parents, or a pattern that had meaning.
JENNIFER: So what do your kids think of it?
DEANN: They like it. Their friends drove by and helped paint; our neighbors helped paint; one of the art teachers came over and helped us mix paints and get the colors. Carolyn had done all these to-scale pieces so we just adjusted to make it fit the board. We rotated this one to the side cause when you look at this quilt it really is in a diamond.
JENNIFER: What made you choose this quilt to make the block from?
DEANN: This is the oldest quilt that we have in James' family, and in honor of his sister because she was diagnosed with cancer right about the time we got started on this project.
JENNIFER: What kind of hardware did it take to put the quilt block up on the barn?
JAMES: I put 90-degree metal angles at each corner, just to hold the frame together. Then we got a bucket truck from the electric company volunteer to come out and put it in with 3/8 inch light bolts.
ALFREDO: The frame is treated lumber?
JAMES: Heavily painted with exterior acrylic latex to my knowledge acrylic latex is about as durable as anything you can get, and you can get the colors you want.
ALFREDO: How long has it been up?
JAMES: About a year.
DEANN: It has weathered well.
Everyone walks out to the barn again. A few more photos are taken and James convinces Jennifer to ring the big dinner bell at the end of the driveway before saying goodbye. The rearview mirror reflects a quilt pattern that has held meaning for generations brightening the top of a barn on a farm with a long and meaningful history.
PHOTO: "Rose of Sharon," photograph by Alfredo Escobar, Clay County Quilt Trail
For more information about the Kentucky Folklife Program's Community Scholars Program, visit: http://history.ky.gov/sub.php?pageid=63§ionid=15
The Kentucky Folklife Program is an interagency program of the Kentucky Arts Council and the Kentucky Historical Society.
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