The first photo is of a sampler made by Henriette Quast, my
great great grandmother. She was born 27 Nov 1832 in Leopoldsfahrt bei
Landsberg am Warte, Prussia. On 5 Nov 1861, she married my great great
grandfather, Gustav Wilhelm August (Robert) Alexander Schwarz. In late 1862,
they emigrated to the U.S.
The sampler has '1850' stitched into the center, along with
her initials, "H Q'. She would have been about 17 years old when she made
it. Perhaps she was required to make it as a school project or perhaps she made
it for her 'hope chest.'
I found the sampler amongst the items left to me by my great
aunt Edna. It was wrapped in a sheet of old German newspaper which I quickly
removed and saved. Unfortunately, I can't locate it just now. I'd like to know
what the date of the newspaper is and what town it was published in,
information that never seemed all that important until I decided to write about
the sampler. There is a family story that says that a ship they were on was
beset by a storm, the mast broken and in an effort to save the ship, all cargo
lashed on the deck was pushed overboard. The trunk containing all of Robert and
Henriette's possessions was among those lost. How did the sampler survive? Did
Henriette carry it with her or was it sent from Germany later on after they had
safely arrived? Since that story has been recounted to me, the ship they
travelled to the U.S. on in 1862/3 has been identified as the Senator Iken. I
have found no mention of such a storm in the history of that ship so wonder if
they travelled to Bremen on another ship before boarding the Senator Iken. I'd
like to see if the newspaper holds a clue, but I guess I will have to wait and
hope it resurfaces.
The second photo is of a sampler made by my great
grandmother, Ottilie Augusta (Della) Schwarz, youngest daughter of Robert and
Henriette. She was born at Ft. Vancouver, Washington Territory on 4 Jul 1871
and would have been only 11 or 12 years old when she made the sampler. It's
interesting to see that she used the same patterns as her mother, but the
placement and interpretation is entirely different and while Henriette bordered
hers with the alphabet and numbers, Della chose a garland of flowers. The two
samplers were also made using different techniques. I believe the first is
called cross-stitch and the second is needlepoint. Della's sampler is in the
possession of a granddaughter, Gloria Van Horn James.
Update as of 25 Feb 2018: I have located the old newspaper
that the sampler was wrapped in. After closer inspection, I don't believe it's
a newspaper at all. There is no information as to where the item might have
been published, but both pages bear a page number, 174 or 175 and the heading "Erste
Kammer. Sechzehnte Sitzung am 27. Januar 1852". When translated, this is "First
Cabinet (or Chamber). Sixteenth Hearing on 27. January 1852". It is
definitely the report of a discussion that would be fascinating to decipher on
a rainy day. The paper has been cut down to match the size of the sampler and it
appears that the sampler was actually sewn to the paper at some point. There
are needle holes on all four sides of the paper and a bit of thread is still in
one of them. Perhaps it had been framed. For now though, I'm really no closer
to learning how the sampler survived.

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