Saturday, March 9, 2013

28 Ocean Wave: My Friend Erma

Ocean Wave by Becky Brown
Becky put a little seaweed in the corners of the Ocean Wave.

Ensign Erma Hughes
1920-2012

Each generation fights for rights the next generation takes for granted. My friend Erma Hughes Kirkpatrick was a generation older than I. She enlisted in the armed services during World War II. The concept of women as support troops was an idea my generation took for granted during the Viet Nam years, but Erma was a pioneer in the Navy.


In 1943 she was one of 27,000 women who joined the WAVES, a pretty acronym for "Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service." The E for emergency meant that women in the Navy were there only for the duration, although post-war attitudes changed and the women's divisions became permanent in 1948.

Erma found the perfect spot for her bright mind and degree in psychology as a cryptanalyst in Washington D.C., reconstructing coded communications from the enemy. About ten years ago an interviewer from the Women Veterans Historical Collection at the University of North Carolina Greensboro talked to her. From that transcript:

"[I] ended up in the unit that was reconstructing Japanese codes. It was a naval intelligence unit that was largely responsible for our winning the Battle of Coral Sea, because we were reading the naval traffic and knew what ships were going to be there. So that unit was very proud of that work....But what we were doing—and they would hang me if I'd told all this earlier, but when messages are sent from ship to ship, from naval unit to naval unit, they must be encoded. One job, if you're a cryptographer, is to decode from the codebooks you have. If you're a cryptanalyst, you try to reconstruct the code they're using, which they change occasionally. You try to build it up and reconstruct the code so that future intercepted messages can be read.
"One of the things I did at one time was to do research at the Library of Congress, because a message would come through, and it would refer to a ruler of a certain country or a certain world event involving a person, and they couldn't tell what the word was. So I'd look up like whom they might be referring to, what official, and find that in the Library of Congress or New York Times or in some other records book. So you sort of do it backwards. You figure out what the codes were.
"There was a group who did the brainwork.... They worked in what we call the 'booby hatch,' the big minds, and the people who really could do the figuring out. I didn't do any of that. What I did was very routine....there were just a very few women in this unit....Definitely a minority. But I made some really good friends, and they'd have stag parties, and I was included, and they never thought anything of it. They had stag parties, and I came, too. So I had a good time. I made warm friends, and wartime Washington was very friendly to an unattached young woman. It was a very rich experience."


A WAVE and a code-breaking proto-computer in 1943.

While we sewed Erma used to tell us the stories about her days in Washington. We wanted to hear about how she battled for respect and her rights, but like many women of that generation whom I've interviewed she didn't see the battle as we did. She accepted more, as she told the interviewer:
"I haven't felt a lot of discrimination. I recognize that there is discrimination. Partly, it's because I accepted the role of women. There were six girls in my family. My two brothers, who were the youngest, didn't understand why women were clamoring to be equal. They thought they had grown up under sort of a little suppression themselves. They didn't see why women wanted equality—they already had it. My husband never treated me as anything but an equal, so I've not felt keenly discriminated against."

Erma

Ocean Wave by Georgann Eglinski

We can remember the first women who joined the Navy in 1943 with Ocean Wave. The pattern was very popular in the late 19th-century, published as Waves of the Ocean in Hearth & Home magazine about 100 years ago and as Ocean Wave by Ruby McKim about 1930. 

A quilt from about 1910

The basic unit is the six-sided shape of triangles---an elongated hexagon, similar in structure to last week's Grandmother's Dream. Above the hexagon alternates with squares. In the pattern here it's set with larger triangles to fit it inside a square block.

See BlockBase #1323
If you want to re-size the pattern use #1323. This block is similar. Use 1323 to calculate the sizes for A & B, and then shade and cut the triangles to match the pictures here.

Ocean Wave
By Becky Brown


Cutting an 8" Finished Block (12" in Red)

A - Cut 1 square 4-7/8" (6-7/8'). Cut into two triangles with one diagonal cut.

B - Cut 12 squares 2-7/8" (3-7/8").

Cut each in half diagonally to make 2 triangles. You need 24 smaller triangles.



Ocean Wave By Dustin Cecil

Read the interview with Erma Kirkpatrick from The Betty H. Carter Women Veterans Historical Project at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro here:


It took another generation or two for women to go beyond support troops. This photo from television's China Beach (thirty years ago) shows actresses portraying nurses and entertainers in the Viet Nam war.

Saturday, March 2, 2013

27. Grandmother's Dream: The Houghtons

Grandmother's Dream
By Becky Brown

Caroline Garlinghouse Houghton had a dream for her three daughters. Widowed and well-to-do, she set her sights on Bryn Mawr College for each girl. After being diagnosed with cancer at age 38 she spent her last months making preparations for the future. She did not want her daughters, ages 12 to 16, raised by rich relatives with very different values.

Caroline Garlinghouse Houghton (1856-1894)


Before Caroline died she enrolled the girls in a secondary school that specialized in preparing girls for Bryn Mawr and rented them a house nearby. Her dreams were set aside once they were orphaned. Caroline's brother-in-law Amory Houghton took over the girls' guardianship. As president of Corning Glass Works he had the money and self-importance to believe he knew what was best for girls and that did not include a college degree. Katherine and Edith challenged their uncle in court and found their own guardian, a family friend who also believed girls should get an education.


Katherine Martha Houghton


Katherine (1878-1951), Edith (1879–1948) and Marion (1882-1968) each fulfilled their mother's dream and graduated from Bryn Mawr. Katherine did graduate work at Radcliffe and Edith went on to medical school at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore. Edith married medical student Donald Russell Hooker and Katherine married medical student Thomas Hepburn who opened a practice in Hartford, Connecticut. Marion went on to Columbia University, married Stevens T. Mason and moved to Detroit.
Edith Houghton

Each Houghton was active in social work, in the fight for women's rights and each raised her own children to believe in the equality of women and the necessity of having a voice. Marion was President of the Detroit Equal Suffrage League and of the League of Women Voters. Edith is remembered as an important figure in the fight for Maryland women's rights. She was an organizer and publisher, editing the Maryland Suffrage News and a later journal Equal Rights.

Edith Houghton Hooker in the 1920s at right,
 seated next to Alice Paul

Katherine organized the Hartford Equal Franchise League and was president of the Connecticut Woman Suffrage Association. She and Edith, influenced by Emmeline Pankhurst and Alice Paul, were members of the more radical arm of the American women's movement, the Women's Suffrage Party.

Katherine's daughter remembered picketing the
Wilson White House as a child with her mother.
The woman wearing the Bryn Mawr banner
above might very well be a Houghton.

Once the battle for women's suffrage was won Katherine fought to legalize birth control with childhood friend Margaret Sanger. She was on the Board of Directors of Sanger's National Committee on Federal Legislation on Birth Control.

Katherine Houghton Hepburn with her six children about 1920

Katherine's main claim to lasting fame has been her namesake daughter Katherine Hepburn, the movie star, who told Life Magazine in the 1940s, "My mother is important. I am not."

Grandmother's Dream can recall Caroline Houghton who never knew her grandchildren but whose dreams lasted beyond her death.
Grandmother's Dream
By Dustin Cecil

The pattern is a variation of one given that name by the Ladies' Art Company pattern house (BlockBase #4107.)
BlockBase #4104
is the variation here.




8" Pattern above; 12" below.


Cutting an 8" Finished Block (12" in red)
 A - See the templates. Or cut 8 rectangles 5-1/4" long by 1-1/2" (7-3/16" x 2") and trim the ends at 45 degree angles.
8"

12"

B - Cut 4 squares 2-1/2" (3-1/2")
C - See the templates. Cut 4. 

Grandmother's Dream
By Becky Brown

Read a family summary of Edith Houghton Hooker's life here:
Katherine Houghton Hepburn (the elder) is in the Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame. Click here:
Edith Houghton Hooker is in the Maryland Women's Hall of Fame.

The pattern, made this week as a block, was also done as a mosaic type of design made of a square and an elongated hexagon. Here's a cheerful version from the 1940s or '50s.

Saturday, February 23, 2013

26. Ladies' Wreath: Mourning for Mother


Ladies' Wreath by
Becky Brown
Ladies' Wreath recalls the mourning wreath on
 the door, a symbol of a death in the family.



Jane Austen never married. She may have viewed marriage as a dangerous business. Three of her brothers' wives died after childbirth. Charles' wife Fanny died with her fourth baby. Both Francis and Edward lost their wives after the birth of their eleventh children.


In the Austen family and many others, women had babies until they died. The pattern was the same in America. Mary Todd Lincoln's mother died in 1826 after the birth of her seventh child. She was 32.  Methods of birth control were available, but "nice" women like the extended Austen family knew little beyond Jane's comment to her sister. "I would recommend to her and Mr. D[eedes], the simple regimen of separate rooms." Mrs. Deedes remained in the marital bed, eventually giving birth to 19 children but (amazingly enough) living long past menopause.


Queen Victoria survived nine pregnancies, luckier than her cousin
Crown Princess Charlotte who died in childbirth in
1818, making Victoria heir to the throne.
 
A century after the Austen wives died, women were still ignorant. Moral legislation insured they would remain ignorant.  America's Comstock Laws not only banned contraceptives, they also made it illegal to inform anyone as to their use. A physician warning a woman who had barely survived childbirth that a seventh or tenth child would kill her was legally forbidden to advise her about condoms, diaphragms or the rhythm cycle.
Margaret Sanger, using civil disobedience
 similar to the suffrage movement, broke
laws against disseminating obscene material
and in this publicity photo wore a gag.


Activists opened clinics, wrote advice books and went to jail for obscenity, gradually winning the rights to information and equipment.

"Shoo!"


Connecticut had some of the strongest and most enduring laws. Using any instrument or drug to prevent conception was illegal until 1965 (five years after the birth control pill became available.) In 1965 the United States Supreme Court ruled in Griswold vs. Connecticut that interfering with a married woman's right to practice contraception was an invasion of privacy. It wasn't until 1972 that the court extended that right to an unmarried woman.
Mourning for Mother

Ladies' Wreath by
Becky Brown

BlockBase #1131

Ladies Wreath was given the name about 1890 by the Ladies Art Company.

 
Cutting an 8" Finished Block
 A - Cut 12 squares 2-7/8".
     Cut each in half diagonally to make 2 triangles. You need 24 triangles.
UPDATE:
B - Cut 4 squares 2-1/2".
Nancy caught an error:
The B squares should be cut 2-1/2" NOT 1-1/2". Your HST should then measure 2-1/2". I verified the cutting instructions on BlockBase. Have fun! Nancy in MO



12" Instructions


Ladies' Wreath by
Georgann Eglinski
Ladies' Wreath by
Dustin Cecil


Saturday, February 16, 2013

25. The Carrie Nation Quilt

The Carrie Nation Quilt by
Becky Brown


This double four-patch was given the name "The Carrie Nation Quilt" in the Kansas City Star's quilt column in 1940. Carrie Nation died in 1911 but she was still famous three decades later.


Carry or Carrie Nation with hatchet and Bible

Born in Kentucky in 1846, she moved with her family to western Missouri. After the Civil War she married an alcoholic war veteran who died in 1869. Carrie believed that the personal was the political. Rather than blaming an irresponsible, ill husband, she blamed society for permitting him to drink. The solution to alcohol abuse was the prohibition of sales and possession of spirits.

The WCTU, the Women's Christian Temperance Union
was the leading anti-liquor organization.

With her second husband she moved to Kansas in 1890. The state had recently passed a constitutional amendment prohibiting manufacture and sale of liquor, a law ignored more than enforced. Nation took enforcement into her own hands. As leader of the local Women's Christian Temperance Union she burst into "open saloons", destroying windows, fixtures and furniture with rocks and bricks. In 1901 she attacked a "joint" with a hatchet, finding a lasting image.


A trip to Wichita resulted in her arrest. The Topeka Capitol  reported on a jail house interview: " 'I came to Wichita expecting to get into trouble and here I am...I studied the law and asked competent lawyers if I can be prosecuted for destroying the property of the jointists and they say I cannot for the reason that the saloon men here have no rights under the state laws' ....She is considered eccentric at some times."


"Carrie Nation-Smasher," "A Dry Nation," "Carry A. Nation."
Nation changed her name-spelling to Carry for the
readymade slogan which she registered as a trademark.

Her "hatchetations" received international publicity, particularly after she partnered with James Furlong who managed her lecture tours. After her husband divorced her in 1901 she made a living selling small hatchets and photo portraits as she toured around the world, signing copies of her best-selling autobiography.


Eccentric, self-promoting or seriously unbalanced, Carrie Nation was the kind of reformer newspaper editors loved. She fit every stereotype of the unsexed harridan (one of her offenses was being nearly six feet tall.)


Her escapades were a not-so-subtle warning of what would happen if women got more political power. Women with a vote would vote for prohibition. One reason that the suffrage fight took decades to win was the well-financed opposition by those who manufactured and sold alcohol.

The Smasher's Mail was Nation's short-lived periodical.
Here's a complete run.

Her destruction of public property, willingness to be arrested over and over, and her marketing a movement with trinkets such as miniature hatchets predates similar behavior by militant suffragists. She was a trend setter in political publicity. Carrie Nation remains a household name thanks to her not-so-civil disobedience and skills in creating celebrity. 


"You refused me the vote and I had to use a rock." Carry A. Nation.

The Carrie Nation Quilt by
Becky Brown
She's fussy-cut some squares so they look like little bowties.

The double four-patch is one of the oldest quilt patterns.

As The Carrie Nation Quilt it's BlockBase #1105.

Cutting an 8" Finished Block
A - Cut 16 squares 1-1/2".
B - Cut 12 squares 2-1/2".


Cutting a 12" Finished Block
A - Cut 16 squares 2".

B - Cut 12 squares 3-1/2".


Piecing the Block

The Carrie Nation Quilt by
Georgann Eglinski

The Carrie Nation Quilt by
Dustin Cecil
Dustin rotated the small four-patches
so the block isn't quite so directional.

Woman with a hatchet pin

See an outline of Nation's life here at the Kansas Historical Society, which has a great collection of Nation items.
Read her autobiography The Use and Need of the Life of Carry A. Nation here: