Quilt No.51GPM - Griffith Pioneer Park Museum

Griffith Pioneer Park Museum
Owner: 
Griffith Pioneer Park Museum
Location: 
NSW Riverina
Maker
Maker: 
Edna Richards
Made in
AUSTRALIA NSW
Date: 
1941 - 1970
Description: 
Quilt, machine sewn, has one side of floral cretonne, red floral on cream background. Other side is of fawn cotton knit, irregular shaped pieces with a mixture of straight and curved edges, edges are turned under and the top stitched together. Padding appears to be old blankets, possibly with other material sandwiched in between as it is lumpy.
770 x 340mm
History: 

The quilt was made by Mrs Edna Richards (born Holland), of 'Holmelands', Merriwagga (between Goolgowi and Rankin Springs), c.1950. Donated to Griffith Pioneer Park Museum, NSW, by Edna's daughter Lorraine Richards.

Story: 

"The rugs were made by Lorraine's mother, Mrs Edna Richards, nee Holland, around the 1950s when the family were farming at 'Holmelands', Merriwagga.
Mrs Richards, now 83 years old, was born in my old home territory of Grenfell. She met her husband, Arthur, when she came to Griffith to work at the hospital in 1935. Arthur had moved here from Sydney with his parents 1922.
'Holmelands' was a sheep and wheat property, and was originally very isolated, 'with no roads or anything'. Most of the services we take for granted, like electricity, only arrived after the Richards had moved into town in 1974.
The home had six bedrooms, including sleepouts, and Mrs Richards made waggas, not only for the beds of her own seven children, but also spares for shearers and others who stayed at the house from time to time - at least a dozen Lorraine reckons.
They were used as a top cover over grey army blankets and hot water bottles. � the Australian sleepout, with its gauze walls, now almost a thing of the past - but all those who remember sleeping in one know how cold they could get in winter!
The two waggas donated by Mrs Richards are both single bed size, and stuffed with old jumpers. Three sides are covered with single pieces of cloth. The fourth one is made up from oddly shaped pieces, all of the same material, neatly overlaid and machine sewn, like crazy patchwork. Lorraine and I surmised such oddly shaped pieces may have been scraps left over from dressmaking."
[Robyn Oliver curator Griffith Pioneer Park Muaseum, article in the Area News 29.7.94]

Related Quilts:

Yvonne Hamdorf
Wholecloth pram quilt with a top of pink cotton sateen, and the reverse is a more finely woven, ivory, fabric. All over quilting design as main feature, with stylised hearts, leaves and cross hatching. The padding is cotton batting. 870 x 660 mm.
John Tomkin
Hand stitched, cotton, appliquéd, quilt in a flower pattern on a plain background. Colours are shades of green, apricot and browns. This quilt was known as a 'Bride's Quilt'. Padding is thought to be layers of white fabric raised almost like a wadding. The backing is cotton material. 2470 x 2020 mm.
 Cynthia Mayes
Wholecloth quilt of fine cream homespun embroidered with red and white stranded cotton. It is a cross stitch design of roses pre stamped on the material. The quilting consists of a fern pattern medallion in the centre, straight lines and a fern pattern border. The padding is fine wadding and the backing is white sheeting with a small floral pattern,
2160 x 1650mm
Maria Kirke
Wholecloth quilt made from deep pink satin. The quilting pattern is a centre circle with a stylised flower surrounded by crescent shapes. This is set in a square and there is a fan design in each corner. Parallel lines create a border. There is a frill on all sides of the quilt. The padding is raw cotton.
2000 x 1770 mm
The Embroiderers' Guild of S.A.Inc Museum
Yellow and white cotton Durham quilt with centre panel of patchwork blocks in counterchange design called 'Plate'. There is a wide yellow border and square white corner blocks. It is padded and there is a yellow backing. It is quilted all over following the patchwork pattern in the centre panel. Feather pattern border.
2120 x 1720mm
Dulcie Williams
Wholecloth quilt, the cover made of blue and red paisley cotton cretonne, and filled with feathers. The cover is reversible. The machine quilting is a simple pattern of 2 diamonds, one within the other, in the centre, with 3 rows of stitching around the edge of the quilt, forming a wide border.
2033 x 1474mm