Quilt

Quilt Description:

White linen, commercially produced single bed sheet, that has been subsequently autographed and embroided to make a quilt or coverlet. All embroidery is in two gauges of white cotton embroidery thread. Unless otherwise stated the embroidery is in stemstitch, with a small amount of chainstitch. All the autographs would have originally have been written in pencil before being over-embroidered. The top edge of the quilt has a 6cm deep hem edged with drawn threadwork. Beneath it, in satinstitch, is a decorative scroll of grapes, vine leaves and tendrils. The hem and scroll were part of the original bed sheet. Beneath this is hand stemstiched lettering 'Rylstone Autograph Quilt'. The main body of the quilt is covered with numerous embroidered autographs bordered by a wide variety of embroidered shapes. The shapes include stars, flowers, circles, and five large multi-facetted circular shapes. The central circular shape bears the cypher of King George V and 'FOR OUR DARDANELLES AUSTRALIAN WOUNDED 1915'. Two of the other circles bear the names 'A.C. ROBBINS A.H.FREEMAN' and 'J.D. SANDSTROM' (Robbins and Freeman were Rylstone district Gallipoli casualties). The other two circles bear the names of well known Australian commanding officers killed on Gallipoli, 'Genl Bridges' and 'Cols MacLaurin Braund [and] Onslow Thompson'. The names of 49 soldiers with a Rylstone district connection have been written by the same hand around some of the circles and then embroidered over.

Summary

Autograph 'quilts' were a common method of fund raising in Australia during the First World War, especially in country areas. The idea behind them was that an individual would sign the quilt in pencil and then pay to have the signature embroidered over. In this way funds were raised for the war effort, The Rylstone quilt is unusual in that the signatures and decorative embroidery are in white on a white ground. The majority of quilts were embroidered with red thread on a white ground.

There are over 900 names embroidered on the quilt. They include names of soldiers from the Rylstone district and the signatures of civilians from the Rylstone in New South Wales. As far as can be ascertained , 49 soldiers from the district are listed on the quilt. Work continues to identify the servicemen. All those identified enllisted between August 1914 to July 1915, implying that the quilt was completed by mid-1915.

Source: http://www.awm.gov.au/collection/REL28488/


The quilt is now held by the Australian War Memorial.

Tuesday 28 July 2015

Emily FAIRWEATHER


Emily Fairweather
Photo: Dan Hatton 


Glen Lee , Narrango (domestic duties, 1913 Electoral Roll)

Source: Dan Hatton
 

2 comments:

  1. Emily was born Emily Rose Easter in 1869 in the Mudgee-Gulgong area. Her father was labourer and ex-convict William Easter (who escaped from Van Dieman's Land twice in 1853-55), her mother was Emily Tattersall. Emily Rose Easter had lived in Rylstone after her mother remarried to 'engineer' (probably train engineer) John S Payne. When he died in 1883 her mother remarried E. Brown and the blended family of Easters, Paynes and Browns went to Widden Brook off the Goulburn River valley. In 1885 Emily Rose Easter married James Allen Fairweather and had five sons and a daughter. This marriage broke down around 1913 and Emily Rose moved back to Rylstone with her 8 year old son Hector Fairweather (also on the quilt), living at 'Glen Lee', Narrango (Rylstone district), close to her half-sister Sarah Bird (Payne) living at 'Hillview'. In 1934 Emily Rose Fairweather married William Henry Farrar (who died in Rylstone in 1939) and Emily died there in 1953.

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