Celebrations Today – October 29
Holidays and observances
- Christian feast day:
- Coronation Day (Cambodia)
- Cyrus the Great Day (Iran)
- National Cat Day (United States)
- Republic Day (Turkey) or Cumhuriyet Bayramı
- World Stroke Day
Celebrations Today – USA: October 29
National Cat Day
National Oatmeal Day
National Hermit Day
International Internet Day
World Psoriasis Day
World Stroke Day
Today in US History: October 29
Quilting
African-American folk artist Harriet Powers, nationally recognized for her quilts, was born in rural Georgia on October 29, 1837. Using a traditional appliqué technique, Powers recorded local legends, Bible stories, and astronomical events on her quilts. Considered among the finest examples of nineteenth-century Southern quilting, Powers’ work is on display at the Smithsonian Institution and is featured in the online exhibition Seven Southern Quilters.
In 1938, one hundred years after Powers’ birth, Mayme Reese shared her own memories of quilting in turn-of-the-century South Carolina with a Federal Writers’ Project interviewer. Just as the beauty of Powers’ work transcended race and class, Reese’s recollections suggest fine quilting was a skill that Southern women of all classes appreciated. Reese remembered:
Sometimes rich white women would hear that such and such a person had won the prize for pretty quilts, they’d come and ask that person to make them a quilt…Sometimes they’d make it and sometimes they wouldn’t…If they did make it, they’d get around five dollars…Sometimes they’d furnish the scraps and sometimes they wouldn’t. Most of the time, though, they’d buy pieces of goods and give it to the person who was making the quilt to cut up.”Mrs. Mayme Reese,” New York City, September 21, 1938.
American Life Histories: Manuscripts from the Federal Writers’ Project, 1936-1940
Although prized for their beauty, quilts were necessities of life for pioneer families. Quilts not only adorned beds, but also served as makeshift doors, windows, and cloaks. Patching quilts to keep large pioneer families warm was one of many housewifely duties. Writing about newly wed Anne Janette Kellogg, Gerald Carson characterized the lot of the early Michigan wife:
Thus began another woman’s life in pioneer Michigan—the hanging of the almanac from the clock shelf, the childbearing, the round of baking, sewing, washing, canning, threading dried apples on strings, the interminable making of carpet rags; quilts and comforters; filling bed ticks with oat straw; of ironing, patching and mending.Gerald Carson, Cornflake Crusade, pages 85-86.
Pioneering the Upper Midwest: Books from Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, ca. 1820-1910
During the Depression, the handcrafting of quilts from scraps and surplus materials helped rural Southerners survive hard times. Photographers of the Farm Security Administration documented quilting activities in small towns throughout the United States. These photographs also reveal the social and intergenerational nature of the pastime.
Sharing the work of quilting with friends and neighbors lightened the burden and created an occasion for fun and conversation. New Englander Ella Bartlett recalled the quilting bees of her youth for a WPA interviewer in 1938:
We would think we’d got everybody quilted up, when some mornin’ there’d be a knock at the front door and some boy or girl would be there to say that ‘Ma sent her compliments’ and would I come to her quiltin’ bee, and then we’d know another of the girls had got engaged.”Ella Bartlett,”
Brookfield, Massachusetts,
December 19, 1938
American Life Histories: Manuscripts from the Federal Writers’ Project, 1936-1940
Contemporary quilters continue to carry on this American craft tradition, creating quilts in the classic patterns and developing innovations as well. The online collection Quilts and Quiltmaking in America, 1978-1996 contains materials from American Folklife Center field projects documenting quiltmaking as it is practiced in the United States today. The collection includes 181 sound recordings of quilters talking about their work and their quilting methods.
- Search the collection Quilts and Quiltmaking in America, 1978-1996 on quilt patternssuch as star, flower basket, and log cabin. The special presentation The Lands’ End All-American Quilt Contest highlights the work of contemporary quilters. Also featured are biographies of quilters from the Blue Ridge and a Gallery of Photographs.
- Additional American Memory pictorial collections with photographs of quilts and quilters include:
- Search the American Life Histories: Manuscripts from the Federal Writers’ Project, 1936 – 1940 on the word quilt for a variety of references to quilting as a social activity. See especially the narratives of Addie Patterson, Ella Bartlett, and Sarah Bonds. Read “Customs and Traditions” for reminisces of quilting “frolics” in South Carolina.
- The American Memory collection Pioneering the Upper Midwest: Books from Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, ca. 1820-1910 examines the experience of settling this region in the nineteenth century. The collection’s 138 volumes contain many references to the importance of quilts as a staple of the pioneer household. Search the full text on quilt or quilting bee to read about the place of quilts in everyday life and the opportunity for socializing quilting provided.
Carl Schurz
The sun has risen bright and clear, and the view spread out before me presents so cheerful and sweet a picture that I am distinctly encouraged to hope we shall be very happy here.Carl Schurz to Margarethe Meyer Schurz,
October 29,1855,
Intimate Letters of Carl Schurz, 1841-1869.
Pioneering the Upper Midwest: Books from Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, ca. 1820-1910
On October 29, 1855, recent German immigrant Carl Schurz wrote his wife, Margarethe Meyer Schurz, expressing hope for their future happiness. A political refugee from the tumultuous revolutions of 1848, Schurz soon gravitated toward political life in the United States. Exactly five years later, Schurz corresponded with his wife from Lincoln’s presidential campaign trail.
Although Schurz initially supported William H. Seward for the Republican nomination, he welcomed the prospect of a Lincoln presidency and assured the nominee that
. . . I shall carry into this struggle all the zeal and ardor and enthusiasm of which my nature is capable. The same disinterested motives that led me and my friends to support Gov. Seward in the Convention, will animate and urge us on in our work for you, and wherever my voice is heard and my influence extends you may count upon hosts of true and devoted friends.Carl Schurz to Abraham Lincoln,
May 22, 1860
Abraham Lincoln Papers at the Library of Congress
Schurz’s efforts on behalf of Lincoln and his commitment to the nascent Republican Party resulted in his appointment as envoy to Spain. A year later, Schurz returned to America to serve as a brigadier general in the Union Army during the Civil War.
After the war’s conclusion and Lincoln’s assassination, Schurz toured the South on behalf of President Andrew Johnson. In his report to Johnson, the former abolitionist urged extension of the franchise to freedmen as a condition for the South’s readmission to the Union. Johnson ignored his recommendations
After a stint as a journalist, Schurz served as a U.S. senator from Missouri from 1869 to 1875. Over the course of his term, dissatisfaction with the corruption of the Grant administration and disappointment with its Reconstruction policies led Schurz to take an active role in the short-lived reformist Liberal Republican Party. By 1876, however, he was back in the traditional Republican fold advocating the election of Rutherford B. Hayes, who he believed would restore integrity to government.
My country, right or wrong; if right, to be kept right; and if wrong, to be set right.Carl Schurz, speech in the Senate,
February 29, 1872.
A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U.S. Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774 – 1875
As secretary of the interior under Hayes, Schurz had lasting impact on the American environment. For the first time, the Department of the Interior addressed conservation issues. During Schurz’s tenure, the U.S. Geological Survey was officially established as a bureau within the department. Schurz himself urged the creation of forest reserves and a federal forest service. Although these recommendations were not enacted until 1891 and 1905, respectively, Schurz’s administration is considered a turning point in the history of government participation in the American conservation movement.
After leaving government in 1881, Schurz returned to journalism. As an editor for national publications including The Nation and Harper’s Weekly, he continued to influence U.S. opinion and policy and was recognized as perhaps the leading spokesman for German Americans. Never one to place party loyalty before principle, he urged reformist Republicans to vote for Democrat Grover Cleveland in 1884.
Continuing his early advocacy of clean government, Schurz headed the National Civil Service Reform League from 1892 to 1901. Though his anti-imperialism placed him strongly at odds with President Theodore Roosevelt, he lived to see the latter create the Forest Service in 1905 and vigorously expand the conservation policies he himself had advocated. Carl Schurz died the following year at age seventy-seven.
- Search the Abraham Lincoln Papers at the Library of Congress on Carl Schurz to locate correspondence between Schurz and Lincoln.
- Read Intimate Letters of Carl Schurz, 1841-1869, available through the collection Pioneering the Upper Midwest: Books from Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin, ca. 1820-1910.
- In the 1903 article “Can the South Solve the Negro Problem?,” Carl Schurz reflected on his 1865 tour of the South for McClure’s magazine. Printed in pamphlet form, the article is available through the collection From Slavery to Freedom: The African-American Pamphlet Collection, 1824-1909.
- Search on Schurz in the descriptive information for the collection The Nineteenth Century in Print: Periodicals to find articles by and about Carl Schurz.
- To read some of Schurz’s speeches, search on Schurz in the American Memory collections An American Time Capsule: Three Centuries of Broadsides and Other Printed Ephemera and A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U.S. Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774-1875.
- The Evolution of the Conservation Movement, 1850-1920 documents the historical formation and cultural foundations of the movement to conserve and protect America’s natural heritage. The collection consists of sixty books and pamphlets, myriad government documents, one hundred seventy prints and photographs, two historic manuscripts, and a two-part motion picture. The Chronology of Selected Events in the Development of the American Conservation Movement highlights the growing momentum of the conservation movement from 1847 to 1920, including Schurz’s leadership as Secretary of the Interior.
- Read the entry for March 25, 1861, in Washington during the Civil War: The Diary of Horatio Nelson Taft, 1861-1865 for Taft’s glimpse of “Carl Shurz the famous Dutch Orator” [sic].
- Search on Schurz in the Library’s Prints & Photographs Online Catalog to find additional images of and about Carl Schurz, including photographs and political cartoons.
- Visit The Germans in America, a special online presentation of the European Reading Room. This presentation provides information about immigration from the German-speaking world to the United States and about the activities of German immigrants in the United States from the seventeenth to the twentieth centuries.
Today in History – October 29-External Links
Today’s Weather in History
Today in Earthquake History
This Day in Naval History
Today’s Document from the National Archives
Today’s Events, Births & Deaths –Wikipedia
Today in History by AP
On this Day -1950 to 2005 – Today’s Story–BBC
On This Day: The New York Times
This Day in History –History.com
Today in Canadian History – Canada Channel
History of Britain that took place On This Day
Russia in History –Russiapedia