The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Formerly enslaved woman’s Bible Quilt hangs in Smithsonia­n.

- By Rebecca Mccarthy

—Years ago, quilting friends Sandy Benjamin-hannibal and Peggy Hartwell came to Gospel Pilgrim Cemetery on Fourth Street, looking for the grave of Harriet Powers, an African American quilter buried in 1910. Because the handmade marker they had found during a previous visit was gone, they were relying on memories to guide them through an overgrown tangle of vegetation.

The lack of permanent commemorat­ion bothered the two women. “I thought something’s got to be done,” Benjamin-hannibal said.

She and Hartwell reached out to historian, curator and quilter Carolyn Mazloomi, founder of the Women of Color Quilting Network. The members responded, raising money for a granite headstone for the graves of Harriet and her husband, Armstead.

Born enslaved in 1837 on a plantation in neighborin­g Madison County, Harriet Powers married her husband in 1855, moved to Clarke County and started a family, eventually having nine children. Three of them survived into adulthood.

On Saturday, quilters from across the country, and non-quilters from Athens, gathered in the cemetery for a “recommitta­l and dedication ceremony” to celebrate and honor the Powers couple with a new granite headstone. The event’s organizers said they were “shocked” at the number of people — about 100 — who came to the ceremony. Mazloomi said she was expecting only 10.

Two attendees were Lynette Warren and Marikay Waldvo

gel, who came from Marietta and Tennessee. Gloria Larkin and Peggy Martin came from the Brown Sugar Stitchers in Dekalb County. Others came from Chicago and Houston.

Scripture readings

Journalist­s and photograph­ers from various quilting publicatio­ns also were there, snapping photos and talking to quilters. The ceremony included a rendition of “We Are Climbing Jacob’s Ladder,” scripture readings, prayers and a litany honoring “ALL Black women for the contributi­ons they have made and continue to make.”

Washington, D.C., resident Alyse Minter, Harriet and Armstead Powers’ great-great-great granddaugh­ter, spoke to the crowd about what she had learned from researchin­g her ancestors: that she comes from a long line of strong women and that her Powers ancestors loved each other deeply. Her mother, Linda Minter, says she didn’t know anything

about her family history until Alyse started doing genealogic­al research a few years ago. She said the day’s events left her feeling overwhelme­d.

Scholars consider Powers to be the most important American artist in the story quilt tradition, though only two of her creations survive: The Bible Quilt is in the Smithsonia­n Museum and the Story Quilt is in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. Many quilters consider the Bible Quilt to be the most significan­t American quilt.

“Powers is one of the most important women artists, ever,” says Jennifer Swope, the David and Roberta Logie Curator of Textiles at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. “What she’s presenting is a cosmology.” She believes the two quilts are the artist’s masterwork­s. Powers herself called the Bible Quilt “the darling of my brain.”

Featuring both hand and machine stitches, it’s made up of 11 panels, each illustrati­ng a story

from the Old or New Testament, including the creation story, Cain murdering Abel, Jacob’s dream, Satan amidst seven stars, the Crucifixio­n and the Holy Family.

Entered county fair

Historian Kyra Hicks of Arlington, Va., is the author of “This I Accomplish: Harriet Powers Bible Quilts and Other Pieces.” She said Powers made the Bible Quilt in 1886 and entered it in a county fair in Athens. Jennie Smith, an art teacher at the Lucy Cobb Institute, initially wanted to buy the quilt, but Powers wouldn’t sell it until she and her husband fell on hard times. Before releasing it, she told Smith what each of the panels meant, and Smith wrote down her explanatio­ns.

Smith also allowed Powers to come visit the quilt, which was later displayed at the Atlanta Cotton Exposition in 1895. The executor of Smith’s estate kept the quilt for 20 years before giving it to the Smithsonia­n. “He apparently fell in love with it,” Hicks said.

After seeing the Bible Quilt at the exposition, some faculty women from Atlanta University were so taken with it that they commission­ed Powers’ Story Quilt as a gift for a trustee, the Rev. Charles Cuthbert Hall, president of New York’s Union Seminary. This work has 15 pictorial panels, which tell Bible stories “that illustrate her beliefs with stories that were told to her,” Mazloomi said.

Powers documents with fabric an eclipse in 1780, an 1833 meteorite shower and a cold day in 1895, as well as Jonah being swallowed by a whale, Christ being baptized with the spirit landing like a dove, and Mary and Martha at the cross of Jesus.

“It’s difficult to find a textile piece made by a named enslaved person, which is one reason Harriet’s quilts are so revered, and to have documentat­ion,” Hicks said. “It’s just phenomenal that she is still able to share her faith more than 100 years after she passed away. Phenomenal.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY NELL CARROLL FOR THE AJC ?? The Athens community gathered to celebrate the recommitta­l and dedication of a new headstone for Harriet and Armstead Powers on Saturday. Scholars consider Harriet Powers to be the most important American artist in the story quilt tradition, though only two of her creations survive.
PHOTOS BY NELL CARROLL FOR THE AJC The Athens community gathered to celebrate the recommitta­l and dedication of a new headstone for Harriet and Armstead Powers on Saturday. Scholars consider Harriet Powers to be the most important American artist in the story quilt tradition, though only two of her creations survive.
 ?? ?? Sandy Benjamin-hannibal visited the Gospel Pilgrim Cemetery in Athens years ago, looking for the grave of African American quilter Harriett Powers, who was buried in 1910. When she and a friend found no permanent commemorat­ion, “I thought something’s got to be done,” Benjamin-hannibal said.
Sandy Benjamin-hannibal visited the Gospel Pilgrim Cemetery in Athens years ago, looking for the grave of African American quilter Harriett Powers, who was buried in 1910. When she and a friend found no permanent commemorat­ion, “I thought something’s got to be done,” Benjamin-hannibal said.

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