Yankee Notions #2 Schoolhouse by Becky Brown Last month we discussed Yankee Notions about education. Even after the Civil War, notions about free public education continued to divide North and South. Hoople, North Dakota, 1899 From the early days of the United States the federal government granted new states acreage to be sold to fund public schools. Western states responded with thousands of one-room, rural schools that became an American icon. Pieced schoolhouse quilts were quite popular after 1880 or so when the schoolhouse image emphasized education's importance. Many patterns were published in the early 20th century. Ruth Finley, writing in 1929, was not a fan of these figurative designs, calling them "Appealing yet absurd." She viewed the whole idea of pictorial piecing as a milestone on civilization's post-1880 downhill slope. She seems to have been in a pessimistic mood finishing up that book Old Patchwork Quilts. Schoolhouse by Dorry Emmer We, however, find them quite appealing. Album quilt top from Oak Ridge, Missouri, dated 1898 American Museum of Folk Art Collection This top seems obviously a Little Red Schoolhouse but some of the patterns were called cabins or homesteads at a time when nostalgia for the old days of rugged pioneers captured the hearts of Americans---The days of one room schools and log cabins. Snokomo School in Waubunsee County, Kansas, 1930s Quilt embroidered with name "The Old Homestead," online auction. "The Old Schoolhouse" in a crazy quilt dated 1904 Old Log Cabins and Little Red Schoolhouses evoked the past but the one-room school icon also was used to encourage improvements in education at a time when classroom innovations and stricter standards were suggested. The image was two-sided: A view of past virtues and a vision of future improvements. Schoolhouse by Denniele Bohannon How red were the actual rural schoolhouses? Jonathan Zimmerman in his book Small Wonder: The Little Red Schoolhouse in History and Memory notes that most one-room schools were white. An 1890 Ohio survey found only 2 of 132 schools were red. Red was a popular color in New England, thus a Georgia woman advocated white paint for a Georgia school, he notes. The Yankee Notion valuing education remains important. In this recent ranking of public schools 4 out of the top five are New England states: Massachusetts, New Jersey, Connecticut, New Hampshire, & Vermont. Virginia is sixth. States Ranked for their School System Quality, Adam McCann for WalletHub The Block I chose this version (BlockBase #864) as it seems to make for efficient cutting & piecing. However, the model makers did not agree. Becky says: Take just a scosche (how do you spell that word?) off the 1-7/8 strips or your house will be too big for its lot---Zoning problems, I guess. Dorry cut them 1-1/2" wide. Schoolhouse by Dorry Emmer Text on the roof I say: If it's too big cut off the edges and blame the architect. If it's too small add a strip of sky or an addition to the side. As my brother-in-law, the genius carpenter used to say: "You can't see it from the road." And it's a good thing we are not doing a whole subdivision. 12" Block A - Windows.Cut 10 strips 1-7/8" x 4-1/2". B - Walls. Cut 3 strips 1-7/8" x 7-1/8". C - Chimneys. Cut 2 strips 1-7/8" x 2-1/2". D - Sky. Cut 1 strip 3-1/8" x 5-7/8". E - Sky. Cut 2 rectangles 2-1/2" x 3-1/8". F - Gable end. Cut 1 rectangle 3-3/8" x 5". Mark the midpoint along the top and cut a triangle. Or see the templates. G - Rafter. See the templates. Cut 1. H - Roof. See the templates. Cut 1. I - Sky. Cut 1 rectangle 2-3/4" x 3-5/8". Cut in half diagonally for 2 triangles. 18" Block A - Windows. Cut 10 strips 2-1/2" x 6-1/2". B - Walls. Cut 3 strips 2-1/2" x 10-1/2". C - Chimneys. Cut 2 strips 2-1/2" x 4-1/2". D - Sky. Cut 1 strip 4-1/2" x 8-1/2". E - Sky. Cut 2 rectangles 4-1/2" x 3-1/2". F - Gable end. Cut 1 rectangle 4-5/8" x 7". Mark the midpoint along the top and cut a triangle. Or see the templates. G - Rafter. See the templates. Cut 1. H - Roof. Cut 1 strip 4-1/2" x about 13" or 14". See the template for the angle. I - Sky. Cut 1 rectangle 3-3/4" x 5". Cut in half diagonally for 2 triangles. Templates A triangle in an extra strip along the top plus a square---a school bell tower. From Case Antiques in Tennessee, about 1900 February's Tangible Yankee Notion Scissors A good pair of shears has always been an important investment for a seamstress. 18th-c Parisian peddler We can imagine the Yankee peddler might display wares beyond the price range of some of his customers. Like needles and thimbles scissors, a two-bladed tool, go back to antiquity with improvements advertised often in the industrial age: Better metals, better blades, better hinges and more comfortable handles. Queen Victoria's scissors from the BBC To say nothing of added ornament. We take scissors for granted but it's important to remember that a good fabric scissors is expensive. What would quilts look like without them? What if you had only a knife or a very dull scissors? You'd tear your fabrics and right angles would be your options. Album quilt dated 1900 from the Pat L. Nickols collection at the Mingei Museum And here's why scissors look like storks. This may be TMI but the stork scissors were originally clamps used by midwives and then surgical snippers. German scissors made for a midwife Denniele is making an 18" set of blocks. Very graphic. As Sara Farley says: "Go big or go home!"