It’s the 15th of the month and time for my monthly “ScrapHappy” post as part of the ScrapHappy group I belong. At the end of this post I have a link to the other blogs participating in this monthly event in case you’d like to check out their ScrapHappy posts.
For this month’s ScrapHappy post I thought I would honor a legendary scrap quilt and it’s maker.
Harriet Powers is recognized in the African American quilting community as one of the “Mothers of African American Quilting” and is known for her famous Bible Quilt (which is a scrap quilt) first exhibited in 1886.

Image from the Smithsonian Museum website
According to the Smithsonian Museum, “Harriet Powers, an African American farm woman of Clarke County, Georgia, made this quilt in about 1886. She exhibited it at the Athens Cotton Fair of 1886”.
Two of her bible themed quilts which are considered icons of American quilt making are in the collections of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston and the Smithsonian National Museum of American History in Washington, DC.
Here is her Bible Quilt from the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston:

Image from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston website
Last year Dr. Carolyn Mazloomi, founder of the Women of Color Quilting Network (WCQN) to which I belong, sent out a request to WCQN members to contribute to purchasing a headstone for the gravesite of Harriet Powers.
Harriet Powers passed away in 1910 and the small cut stone marker, inscribed by one of her sons (she had 9 children with her husband Armstead Powers) originally marked the grave for her and her husband who passed in 1909. In 2008 this fragile marker was broken and removed.
Members of the WCQN, including myself, contributed to purchasing a beautiful headstone for Harriet and Armstead Powers gravesite and on December 2, 2023 there was a “Recommittal and Dedication Ceremony” at Gospel Pilgrim Cemetery in Athens, Georgia.
I was invited but could not attend. Dr. Mazloomi kindly sent me the pamphlet from the ceremony.
When I lived in Central Oregon in 2016 I took an appliqué quilting workshop at the Stitchin’ Post in Sisters, Oregon with the amazing teacher Janet Storton (who runs the Sisters of the Heart Foundation helping women in Uganda empower themselves through craft making).
In this appliqué workshop you could work on making a Bible Quilt inspired by the one made by Harriet Powers or another project. Janet brought in a bag of her scraps, which included African themed fabrics, to share with the class.
I ended making my wallhanging sized quilt Tree of No Hurry based on the Lao Tzu quote: “Nature does not hurry, yet everything is accomplished” with the new appliqué techniques I learned in the class.

Here are my blog posts from 2016 – 2017 related to the process of making this piece:
The Backstitch and the End of Tangled Floss
Everything is Accomplished (What’s On the Design Wall)
“Tree of No Hurry” at QuiltWorks Gallery
Here is one of the Bible Quilts made by Ugandan women that Janet works with as part of her foundation that was exhibited at the 2016 Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show (Janet shared the quilt top before it was quilted during our workshop):


As promised, here are the bloggers that participate in the ScrapHappy monthly posting event, check out their blogs linked below for their ScrapHappy posts:
Kate @Tall Tales from Chiconia , Gun @Rutigt – G Adrian, Eva @bambisyr-evaj, Sue @From the Magpie’s Nest, Lynda @Life on the Farmlet, Birthe @Birthes rom, Turid @Den syende himmel, Susan @DesertSky Quilting, Cathy @nanacathydotcom, Tracy @It’s a T-Sweets Day!, Jan @The Snail of Happiness, Moira @The Quilted Snail, Sandra @Wild Daffodil, Chris @chrisknitsews, Alys @Gardening Nirvana, Claire @Claire93’s Blog, Jean @onesmallstitch, Dawn @DawnGillDesigns, Gwen @Deep in the Heart of Textiles/Textile Ranger, Sunny @The Adventures of Team Wil-Sun, Kjerstin @Quimper Hittys, Sue @Going Batty in Wales, Vera @lifebyacompassnotaclock, Ann @Ann F Stonehouse Quiltmaker, Dawn @myquiltprojects, Carol @Quilt Schmilt, Preeti @Sew Preeti Quilts, Nóilin @Paper, Pen and Mug, Viv @Where the Journey Takes Me 2, Karrin @Karrin’s Crazy World, Amo @View From Our Hill, Alissa @ Snakes & Cranes, Lynn @Tialys, Tierney @tierneycreates, Hannah @quietwatercraft

What a wonderful post! I loved learning about Harriet Powers. So moving. It is so important to honor our dead and to restore the headstone does just that. Wow. Really great.
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Glad you enjoyed it, thanks for stopping by! I agree, it was an amazing project that Dr. Mazloomi undertook!
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It must feel really good to work to empower women through art. Beautiful historical quilts! The idea bible quilt is very creative, one could look at it fora long time and still find stories and meanings. I like the acorn to oak tree as well.
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Janet does some awesome work in the world, I was so happy to meet her and take a class from her. Glad you enjoyed the quilts!
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So moving. Thank you for sharing and honoring her memory.
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Thanks for reading and commenting 🙂
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thank you for this wonderful post. I had never heard of Harriet Powers or the bible quilts. Her animals are especially marvelous, wish I could see the quilts “in person”. It is so important to mark her final resting place, well done.
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Thanks for stopping by and glad you enjoyed the post. I’d like to see at least one of these quilts in person someday!
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She was a true artist. The individual elements are clean, powerful and graphic, and she has balanced all the blocks so that it tells her story as a cohesive whole. Wonderful work. Thank you for introducing it.
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Thanks for reading and I agree – pretty amazing 🙂
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Gotta love Lao Tsu. I think I like the idea of using some quotations in quilts–maybe will include that in new year’s goals!
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Glad you liked it! Yes he has some wonderful quotes!
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I’m surprised by how modern her quilts look. It’s wonderful you were able to contribute to a new gravestone for her. I love Tree of No Hurry.
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I know it is amazing but then the modern quilting movement (especially the improvisational design) was influenced by African American quilting such as Gee’s Bend and “primitive style” designs like these. Of course most of the history of quilting by people not of financial means was “make do” proposition. And then in current times people were inspired by the “make do” even though they had to the money not too lol.
Thanks on Tree of No Hurry 🙂
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Very interesting story and those quilts she made, beautiful!
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Glad you enjoyed it 🙂
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Harriet’s quilts are beautiful in their simplicity and message
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Thanks for your comment and I agree 🙂
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Thank you for sharing this story! I’m glad she and her husband received a new headstone… and now I have someone new to learn about!
A happy Christmas to you!
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Thanks Monique – for your comments and hope you have a wonderful holiday!
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WOW those Bible Quilts are amazing. Thank you for sharing her story Tierney.
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Thanks for reading! They are pretty awesome 🙂
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Those are amazing quilts – Harriet Powers’, yours, and the one your teacher used for display! Thank you for sharing this story. Grave markers are important remembrances of people – I’m glad she and her husband have a new one!
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Thanks for stopping by! I am so happy this legendary quilter has a new grave marker.
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That is wonderful 🙂
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A rich post. Harriet Powers was aptly named. Thank you for the wonderful images and background information
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Thanks for reading, I was happy to play a little part in it but it was so amazing what Dr. Mazloomi did!
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Thank you Tierney for including me and the ladies in Africa in your wonderful blog. I enjoy reading and keeping up with all your work. Their beautiful Bible quilt was our most successful raffle quilt. I hated to give it up. I will be returning to Uganda in January and hope to teach them your new quilt idea with leftover African scraps I will practise with an old pair of jeans I have. If your travels ever bring you to Tucson I would love to see you again. Merry Christmas, Janet Storton
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Thanks so much and it was a really special memory taking your class! That is funny actually my sister and I might be having a little sister trip to Tucson in 2024 so I will reach out if we’re headed that way! Thanks for the good you do in the world❤️
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What a lovely post and you’ll go and see the headstone sometime soon I’m sure.
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Thanks so much!
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