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Gift of Mary Means Huber, 2009.330.1  Photograph by David Stansbury.  © 2009 The Connecticut Hi ...
Sampler
Gift of Mary Means Huber, 2009.330.1 Photograph by David Stansbury. © 2009 The Connecticut Historical Society.
Photographs and all rights purchased by the Connecticut Historical Society.

Sampler

Date1811
ClassificationsTextiles
Credit LineGift of Mary Means Huber
Object number2009.330.1
Description

Label TextThe detailed tavern at the center of the sampler—distinguished by its
suspended sign—and the one-word motto, “INDUSTRY,” set the town
of Thompson in time. Once a small hamlet, Thompson boomed with the
construction of turnpikes in the 1790s and 1800s. The intersection of two
thoroughfares created a thriving location for taverns and shops, and a
factory by 1811, the year the sampler was made. By 1850, Thompson had
become the most populous town in northeastern Connecticut and one of
the wealthiest rural towns in the state.

The two names stitched at the bottom are presumably those of the sampler
maker and her teacher. Unfortunately, the relationship is not specified,
and incomplete biographical information makes it currently impossible to
ascertain which was which.
Status
Not on view
The Newman S. Hungerford Museum Fund, 2010.402.1 Photograph by David Stansbury.   © 2012 The Co ...
Mary Juliana Salter
1804
The Newman S. Hungerford Museum Fund, 2010.468.0  Photograph by David Stansbury.  © 2012 The Co ...
Mary Ann Fuller
1833
Museum purchase, © 2015 The Connecticut Historical Society.
Elizabeth Stebbins Waterbury
1835-1845
Susannah Spencer sampler
Sarah Spencer
1761
The Newman S. Hungerford Museum Fund, 2014.74.0  © 2014 The Connecticut Historical Society.
Tabitha Billing
1762
Sampler
Esther Maria Bull
1812
Sampler
Anna Dimmick
1808
Caroline Julia Johnson
1818
Sampler
Cynthia Pond
1816
Sampler
Lucia Ann Loomis
about 1857
Sampler
Harriet N. Allyn
1826
The Newman S. Hungerford Museum Fund, 2013.230.0  © 2014 The Connecticut Historical Society.
Rebecca Marietta Butler
1798