Quilt Codes of the Underground Railroad

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Sno-Isle Libraries

Sno-Isle Libraries

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер
@step7274
@step7274 Ай бұрын
Thank you for this wonderful presentation and loved seeing your beautiful quilt. ❤️❤️
@snowblanky6267
@snowblanky6267 2 ай бұрын
Georgia, I absolutely loved your presentation and your quilt is beautiful. Thank you for all you’ve contribution to the history of our African American history.
@dr.deannaellis-chopin7433
@dr.deannaellis-chopin7433 3 күн бұрын
If just ONE person was able to secure FREEDOM due to this method, it is NOT a myth or false/fiction.
@caseyshep2585
@caseyshep2585 Жыл бұрын
❤This was such an informative talk about a little known side of our African American culture. Georgia, you have presented so many facts about quilting that are now brought to light! I have seen your other quilting talents and have definitely, personally experienced your sewing talent! You are so amazingly gifted and this presentation is worthy of exposure beyond Snohomish County! Thank you for doing this Georgia and thanks to the Sno-Isle Library for this production!
@AnitaCarr
@AnitaCarr Жыл бұрын
😂
@AnitaCarr
@AnitaCarr Жыл бұрын
.😊
@pbiz9576
@pbiz9576 2 ай бұрын
It's such a fascinating story! Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge. I love your quilt and the fabrics that you used. 💕
@thomasinerogers3757
@thomasinerogers3757 8 ай бұрын
Your quilt is beautifully made and you explained how the quilts were used well. Please continue to pass along this piece of our history. I too quilt and am making those blocks in quilts too.
@gailthecrafter
@gailthecrafter 10 ай бұрын
Very enlightening. Thank you for sharing.
@MariaAndre-gl9uv
@MariaAndre-gl9uv 11 ай бұрын
Thank you! Always a great project for students! My little ones use precut paper and grids.
@JackFace-ns1gb
@JackFace-ns1gb Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this info!❤
@sarahill123
@sarahill123 3 ай бұрын
Thank you for this presentation! I always wondered how thousands of slaves who could not read or write could make the long treacherous journey north where they had never been and evade all those determined slave catchers. I knew about the code in songs but the quilts help to fill in more of that picture. Even children use symbols/pictures to communicate in secret so this isn’t a far fetch theory at all and not all slaves worked in the fields plenty of house slaves would have worked with fabric for the slaveowners. Also I did learn that slaves even use braids in their hair to communicate in secret. The things enslaved Africans had to do in the pursuit of freedom is truly remarkable, thank you for your efforts in preserving this history!!
@jolenedeanne825
@jolenedeanne825 7 ай бұрын
Very nice presentation and quilt. Thank you for sharing.
@gaylemattox9169
@gaylemattox9169 9 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for your presentation.
@beadingbusily
@beadingbusily 5 ай бұрын
I remember hearing and singing? a song about shoefly when I was little. Didn't know. Thanks for the knowledge. 😊
@bierjip1
@bierjip1 11 ай бұрын
I cannot tell you if all of this is true or not. I also heard people say this is too clever and complicated to be true, not because black people wouldn't have the intelligence, but because they wouldn't have the time or opportuntity to sew such complicated patterns. I can just imagine it must have taken enormous courage (and desperation) and intelligence to run away. If they succeeded they would have outsmarted their white owners. This story might be another elaboration on that: perhaps Mme Ozella Mc Daniel Williams came up with it to outsmart white people again, not telling them how it really worked so as not to give away secrets. But then, my theory could also be nonsense. However, wouldn't it be the ultimate triumph?
@glasscallalily
@glasscallalily 8 ай бұрын
One thing about our ancestors is they knew how to make that time to be able to help each other reach freedom and that’s clever in itself. Oral tradition is and has always been vital to our history. Our ancestors and elders are enough proof of this truth.
@quil10it
@quil10it 7 ай бұрын
Pure fiction
@joybranham8250
@joybranham8250 7 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, it's a nice story, but that's all it is--a story. Absolutely NO basis in fact! The whole thing started with one woman who made up a really great tale and fed it to a gullible interviewer. Then it took on a life of its own and exploded. People get very worked up about this--people who believe it is true are fiercely partisan. Others, like me and other quilters who have delved a lot into history, are also very upset that a fairytale has been passed as true. Slaves were also quilters, but the whole idea of a "quilt code" is simplistic and naive. Please don't perpetuate this myth!
@freedomteacher
@freedomteacher 4 ай бұрын
As she stated native people of not only Africa but THIS EARTH used oral tradition as a way to pass down stories . That's all history is . What we observe as history in modern times is no more than a false perspectives of colonizers who have no foundation for existence or claim of knowledge . If you were born in America much of what you know of America only exists because of the Africans who were trapped and still are trapped in America .
@dr.deannaellis-chopin7433
@dr.deannaellis-chopin7433 3 күн бұрын
Of course it is a myth, fiction or even false story; the enslaved Afrikans were not intelligent enough to find ways to seek and search out ways to secure what the Most High gave to all people, i.e. FREEDOM. So I will give the Most High all the credit for controlling the factors related to the CLAIMS of this story. HalleluYAH ❤! And I will buy the book...thank you sister Payne.
@joybranham8250
@joybranham8250 2 күн бұрын
@@dr.deannaellis-chopin7433 Of course the enslaved Africans were plenty smart enough to think up ways to achieve freedom! NOBODY is denying that! It's just that this particular tale is, unfortunately, a tall tale. And I can think that displaying quilts as signs might actually have been done, but I refuse to believe that there was a widespread "code" related to the quilts.
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