Skip to main content
Liberty Needlework
Lucinda Hudson
Photographer unidentified
Liberty Needlework
Liberty Needlework
Lucinda Hudson
Photographer unidentified
Liberty Needlework Lucinda Hudson Photographer unidentified
Record Details

Liberty Needlework

Artist ((1787–?))
Date1808
Place/RegionSouth Hadley, Massachusetts, United States
MediumWatercolor and silk thread on silk, with metallic thread and spangles
Dimensions18 × 16"
Credit LineMuseum purchase with funds from the Jean Lipman Fellows, 1996
Accession number1996.9.1
CopyrightThe American Folk Art Museum believes this work to be in the public domain.
Description

Following the American Revolution, and in the spirit of Republican Motherhood, numerous academies of learning for girls and young women were established throughout the Northeast. It was the goal of such schools to create a strong sense of patriotic nationhood in a literate body of young women versed in history, geography, some mathematics, and tasteful ornamental arts, filtered through Christian values and ethical philanthropy. Many of the girls attending these schools had experienced the war as young children, or through firsthand accounts of family members.

Lucina Hudson was one of several girls from Oxford, Massachusetts, who attended Abby Wright’s (1774–1842) school in South Hadley, Massachusetts, and whose fathers had fought for freedom. The ornamental exercises practiced at the school were typical in choice of topics, from biblical chapters to historical scenes and mourning pieces. This is one of at least five examples of Liberty made under the guidance of Wright. It is interesting that the allegorical figure of Liberty is not represented as an unattainable ideal but as an accessible contemporary. This Liberty is a pretty young woman with her hair ringleted in a classical style, fashionably garbed à la grecque, and carrying a liberty pole topped by a Phrygian cap, a close-fitting hat that was worn in ancient Rome and symbolized liberty.

Stacy C. Hollander, “Liberty Needlework,” exhibition label for Self-Taught Genius: Treasures from the American Folk Art Museum. Stacy C. Hollander and Valérie Rousseau, curators. New York: American Folk Art Museum, 2014.

Agnes Campbell Throop and her sister Clara Campbell Howard, “Campbell Family Star Crazy Throw”,…
Agnes Campbell Throop and her sister Clara Campbell Howard
1880 - 1900
1995.6.1
Artist unidentified, “MV Crazy Throw,” United States, 1880–1890, Silks, velvets, satins, spangl…
Artist unidentified
1880–1890
1985.23.8
Mourning Piece for Mrs. Ebenezer Collins
Probably Lovice Collins, c. 1793–1847
South Hadley, …
Lovice Collins
1807
1981.12.8
Artist unidentified, “Our Motto,” Probably Japan, 1880–1900, Silk, metallic thread, and embroid…
Artist unidentified
1880–1900
2015.1.145
Independent Order of Odd Fellows Apron
Artist unidentified
Photo by José Andrés Ramírez
Artist unidentified
1840–1870
2015.1.95
Union and Liberty Sampler Quilt Top
Artist unidentified
Photo by Scott Bowron
Artist unidentified
1860–1870
1980.31.1
Dorothy's World 
Dorothy Yaffe Frank (1916–2005)
Syracuse, New York
c. 1968 
Silk, cotton, …
Dorothy Yaffe Frank
c. 1968
2005.3.1
Sampler
M. Berbif
Photographer unidentified
M. Berbif
1890 - 1900
1978.31.6
Rebecca Carter Sampler
Rebecca Carter, 1778–1837
Photo courtesy Sotheby's, New York
Providen…
Rebecca Carter
1788
2013.1.47
Artist unidentified, “Mourning picture for John Noyes Little”, United States, 1810, Silk thread…
Artist unidentified
1810
1973.4.1
Sampler
Elizabeth Safford
Photographer unidentified
Aug. 25th, 1840
1978.30.3
Sampler
Ann Ellis
Photographer unidentified
Ann Ellis
1820 - 1830
1978.31.1