From
the mid-18th through the mid-19th century, the creation of
an ornamental needlework sampler was an essential element
of a well-to-do girl's education. While all women, rich and
poor alike, were expected to know plain sewing in order to
keep house, ornamental sampler making constituted an accomplishment
appropriate specifically to the upper classes. Girls learned
the skill in private schools and female academies along with
other "lost" decorative arts (quilling, wax-work,
shell-work), dancing, and foreign languages.
Samplers
fall into a few general categories, with infinite variations
on the basic themes: marking samplers, comprising only an
alphabet or a short verse (see Hannah Storer's sampler); pictorial
samplers featuring pastoral scenes, views of important local
buildings, or biblical scenes; coats of arms; and mourning
samplers, such as the one shown here, by Lydia Little of Scituate.
According
to Betty Ring, a leading scholar in this field, mourning samplers
came into vogue after 1800, inspired by memorials produced
upon the death of George Washington. While some samplers recall
historical figures, others memorialized members of the student's
own family. Lydia Little, to whom this sampler is attributed,
was born in Marshfield, Mass., on October 10, 1790, to Capt.
James and Lydia (Young) Little. The sampler incorporates classic
elements of mourning artthe willow tree, an obelisk
inscribed "Capt. James Little Aet. 45," and grieving
family membersas well as a ship (presumably Captain
Little's) sailing in the background. The figures probably
represent Lydia, her brother James, and sister Lucy.
Lydia
created this piece after 1803the year her father died-when
she was in her early to mid teens. Worked in silk threads
on a silk background, it also features watercolor highlights
and painted details; typically, the student would do the embroidery,
with painted details added later by her instructor. The excellent
workmanship on this sampler demonstrates that Lydia, who married
Elisha James in 1808, achieved a high level of accomplishment
in her education, although it is not known which school she
attended.
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