Hooked Rugs of the Midwest: A Handcrafted History
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About this ebook
Mary Collins Barile
Mary Collins Barile is an Adjunct Assistant Professor at the University of Missouri. She is a board member of the Missouri Center for the Book, the Missouri Parks Association, the Friends of Historic Boonville (where she resides), the MU Libraries Friends and the Western Writers Association.
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Hooked Rugs of the Midwest - Mary Collins Barile
known.
INTRODUCTION
One of the most characteristic arts of America has been that of rug-making, strips of cloth being drawn back and forth between the meshes of a burlap foundation. A design is marked upon the burlap, and the various portions of the design are filled in with cloths of various colors. As the rugs in use became worn, they were relegated to the kitchen, to the pantry, or even to the stable, which accelerated their ruin.
—American Hooked Rugs, 1921
Handmade rugs have graced North American homes since the mid-1800s, and the textiles still have the power to evoke times past, when everything was better and everybody knew it. Other than perhaps a spinning wheel, few utilitarian items evoke the nineteenth century as well as a rug and dozy cat resting in front of the hearth, even as the types of rugs varied with the community. In New England and along the Atlantic coast, the rug could be hand-dyed and hooked. Travel through the South, and there were woven rugs from the mountain regions, supple, colorful goods treasured by collectors. The Southwest spun its floor-covering history from Native American looms, conjuring rugs to dazzle the eye and the spirit. And in many states, the truly blessed might stumble across a knitted rug made by the Shakers, a religious group that gave their hands to work and hearts to God,
with a simplicity of design that is a wonder in and of itself.
But what of the Midwest? How did the rug—more particularly, the hooked rug—arrive in the region? A place of enormous variety both culturally and geographically, the Midwest is shaped by rivers, prairies, weather, music, blues and ragtime, sunflowers, buffalo, the great western trails and millions of threads that weave the immense web of culture around Native Americans, emigrants and immigrants alike. The Midwest is flat and hilly, rural and urban, reserved and ebullient, conservative and wildly experimental. Its colors are the colors of barns and sky, golden wheat, farm ponds, red clay, red brick, steel, glass and fountains. In the nineteenth century, the Midwest was described as being west of the Ohio River and east of the Missouri River, although today it encompasses a huge area, sometimes including Wisconsin, Minnesota, Kansas, Nebraska and even parts of the upper South and Southwest. The Midwest is nearly impossible to define or depict.
Adapted from a Currier and Ives lithograph titled The Happy Family, this rug shows a grouse in its woodland habitat. The artist hand-dyed the wool and used size-three cuts. There are more than one hundred colors in this tapestry. Designed by Joan Moshimer. Hooked by Margaret Collins Barile.
For the textile lover, the Midwest is a place of quilts and baskets, rugs and weavings. And like all good stories, the history of the hooked rug in the Midwest is a colorful ragbag of romance, folklore, myth and common sense. It is the purpose of this book to shake out the dust from the Midwestern hooked rug and place it on the newly polished floor of history. The story may surprise you.
CHAPTER 1
THE FOUNDATION
This is a book about rugs—hooked rugs of the Midwest to be precise. But being precise presents its own problems. For example, what of the first hooked rug west of the Alleghenies? Who made it? Where? How was that first rug dyed, cut and looped? We may never know, and it does not really matter. What does matter is that a woman (for it must have been a woman) sat down after her chores were done for the day and with a bent nail, a feed sack and rags made something to stand between foot and floor on a dark winter’s morning—something practical, utilitarian and comforting for her family, something colorful or whimsical, something we would recognize today as a hooked rug.
That first Midwestern hooked rug would be a fascinating window into the textile past, as it is less well known than its New England cousins. Many contemporary rug hookers in the Midwest date their interest in the craft to the 1970s or later, even though rug hooking has existed in the United States for more than 150 years. This seeming lack of history begs the question, Why didn’t anything ‘rug hooky’ happen in that century-wide gap?
As a matter of fact, it did, but the textiles’ history has been overshadowed by other crafts, arts and interests. Perhaps the answer lies in how rugs were perceived as part of the Midwestern culture and economy.
Hooked rugs were one of the least demanding crafts found in the Midwest. The rug hooker required little equipment—a quilt hoop or an unused picture frame to hold the foundation, a crochet hook set into a handle or a simple bent nail and worn-out fabric hand torn into strips. The rug maker used the cast-offs from other projects to produce an object that was most at home underfoot. It was a neighborly craft, but it did not require the assistance of other rug makers to succeed. And the rug was created as a utilitarian floor covering, subject to muddy, wet and thorough trompings from boots, feet and paws.
Hooked rugs may have been made from rags, but this late nineteenth-century Missouri example shows that even an old rug can be treasured enough to be patched and reused. Courtesy of Maggie Bonanomi.
In contrast were hand-woven goods and quilts. The loom was large, bringing with it a sense of stability and age, and families long recalled the thump and whack
sound of the weaving. Warping the loom was a complicated effort often requiring help from other weavers, who also shared their patterns or drafts. As for quilts, they were worked on room-sized frames, and the social aspect of craft was emphasized with quilting bees shared by kith and kin. Weaving and quilting called for and thrived on community work, and the coverlets and pieced quilts became family heirlooms. It was apparently the fate of Midwest rug hooking to be the Cinderella of textile crafts, overlooked more than her better known sisters but just as lovely and just as present at the dance.
To begin the story of the Midwestern hooked rug, it is necessary to travel back in time to see where rug words began. Although today we use rug,
carpet
and mat
somewhat interchangeably, in the past, each word had a precise meaning for the object’s place within a household. Carpet
is an old word, born around 1100 AD, when it first referred to a thick cloth used to make gowns and robes. A carpet fabric was woven from wool or silk and could be trimmed and buffed and finished like velvet. By the fourteenth century, carpet
had acquired the additional meaning of a table cover or cloth, including fabrics used in religious ceremonies or placed on altars. By the early eighteenth century, a carpet might cover a table, a bed (as a heavy blanket) or in wealthy households, the floor. Finally, the word took on the meaning of a machine-woven floor covering that often reaches from wall to wall.
Mat
appears to have an even older origin, with some scholars tracing the word to the ancient Phoenician language. More than four thousand years ago, Egyptians covered offering tables with mats made of reeds bound together and placed loaves of bread, pots of beer and other foods on the mat to honor the gods. In ancient Egyptian, the word hotep
could refer to the table, the mat and food, and conveyed the sense of an offering
or to be pleased.
The hieroglyph for a mat was a small square and was represented by the letter p.
Later, mat
assumed the meaning of a bed, a bedcover and floor cover, and it still refers to a small rug or a table protector.
Today, the most common word used to indicate a floor covering is rug,
which has its own mysterious origin. It is possible that the word emerged more than one thousand years ago from the Scandinavian languages, at which time it indicated the rough coat of a horse or pony or something equally shaggy. One theory even suggests that the word may have referred to Satan, since he was often depicted as a bushy-coated goat. Rugged
soon meant a strong, coarse fabric woven of wool, and eventually, rudg
or rouge
or rug
became associated with a heavy bed covering. The English still call a small travel blanket a rug,
while a covering for a horse is also a rug,
perhaps harking back to the sense of a rough coat. The first time the word rug
was used in the North American colonies was in Captain John Smith’s 1624 narrative The General Historie of Virginia, New-England, and the Summer Isles. Smith wrote about a meeting with the Native American sachem Massasoyt, noting, He came over the brook to our Plantation, where we set him upon a rug and then brought our Governor to him with Drums and Trumpets.
Even as Smith was trying to impress his visitor with the ground cloth, the wealthy colonists in Manhattan and along the eastern and southern seacoasts were importing floor coverings from Europe, for the good reason that few colonial artisans had the wherewithal to create fine textiles.
Families in the colonies lived according to their means and often walked upon dirt floors, planks, milled wood or stone, but all floors required constant sweeping, washing and polishing. Among the earliest floor coverings in more humble homes was fine sand, which was easily swept into designs and later raked free of table litter and candle wax drippings. Sometimes, rushes—the broad leaves of the iris or cattail—were gathered from surrounding marshes and spread throughout the house. The plant leaves were dried in the attic and then braided or twisted into small mats, which offered insulation from cold floors in the winter and damp, muddy floors in the summer. The colonists probably learned to weave and twine rush mats from Native Americans, who constructed long mats from dried cattails to place over hoop poles and form portable and weatherproof wigwams. At the other end of the aesthetic and economic scales, a visitor to a well-to-do manor house might see fine imported Turkie
carpets made in Persia, Europe and Eurasia and brought to the colonies from Holland or England. In the seventeenth century, carpets rarely graced the floors, instead being draped over tables, bedsteads and walls as marks of wealth and refinement rather than comfort. Nearly all houses were drafty, fireplaces provided little heat and chilblains were a common cold-weather affliction, so fancy carpets were more about establishing a family’s social status than providing warmth, regardless of economic status.
But as rough as life was in the new colonies, housewives immediately began to make their homes in the wilderness. In New England, sewn work and appliqué and schoolgirl samplers and woven rugs cheered up the interiors of cabins, brick mansions and wooden farmhouses. Design and color were all around—in the woods, fence rows, fields and farmyard—from the geometric patterns