Mary Ann Hodges, Salome 'Sally' Fetter, and others
Mourning Embroidery Dedicated to Deborah Hodges
1814
Scroll
- Maker: Mary Ann Hodges
- Designer: Salome ‘Sally’ Fetter
- School: Moravian Seminary for Young Ladies, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
Mourning Embroidery Dedicated to Deborah Hodges
1814
Physical Qualities
Silk ground, silk embroidery threads, metallic spangles, linen lining, 18 7/8 x 19 1/2 in. (47.9 x 49.5 cm.)
Credit Line
Gift of Mrs. Francis White, from the Collection of Mrs. Miles White, Jr.
Object Number
1973.76.379
Mary Ann Hodges, who worked this embroidery at the Moravian Seminary at Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, was the second child of Dr. Thomas Ramsey Hodges II and Deborah Berry Hodges of Maryland. Mrs. Hodges died after giving birth to the couple's third child in 1803. Approximately twelve years afterward, her daughter Mary Ann embroidered this memorial "To the Memory of a beloved Mother," whom she had known only as an infant. She took comfort in the belief that her loved one was, "Not lost...but gone before, Where joys prevail for ever [mo]re." The embroidery exhibits the solidly worked willow leaves and chain-stitched borders with clustered spangles characteristic of the Bethlehem school.
Baltimore Museum of Art by gift, 1973; Nancy Brewster (Mrs. Frances White) by inheritance; Virginia Purviance Bonsal (Mrs. Miles White, Jr.).
Anita Jones, BMA, 'The Accomplished Stitch: American Samplers and Silk Embroideries from the Collection,' 5/11-7/20/97, no. 25.
Anita Jones, Baltimore, The Baltimore Museum of Art, Jean and Allan Berman Textile Gallery, "Mournful Maidens: Love and Loss in American Embroidery," (September 9, 2009-February 21, 2010), no catalog.
Anita Jones, Baltimore, The Baltimore Museum of Art, Jean and Allan Berman Textile Gallery, "Mournful Maidens: Love and Loss in American Embroidery," (September 9, 2009-February 21, 2010), no catalog.
Inscribed: Written in ink by hand on memorial: "To the Memory/ of a beloved Mother/ DEBORAH HODGES/ Not lost blest thought, but/ gone before,/ Where joys prevail for ever [mo]re."