Quilt trail
A quilt trail is a series of painted wood or metal hung or freestanding quilt squares installed along a route emphasizing significant architecture and/or aesthetic landscapes. Currently North America has 46 quilt trails: 43 in the United States and three in Canada.[1]
History[]
The first official quilt trail was begun in 2001 in Adams County, Ohio. Donna Sue Groves wanted to honor her mother, Maxine, a noted quilter, with a painted quilt square on the family's barn in Manchester, Ohio. Though many believe that the Groves' farm is home to the first barn quilt, the first was an Ohio Star created as part of a community celebration at a nearby herb farm. The Groves farm later became part of a trail of 20 barn quilts that formed a driving trail throughout Adams County. An emerging concept, a U.S. national quilt trail that first spread across Ohio now includes barn quilts in Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia and Wisconsin. In Canada, British Columbia has developed a trail. Barn quilts also exist in Ontario and Kings County, New Brunswick.
North American quilt trails[]
There are quilt trails in over half of the states in the United States now.
Alabama[]
The Alabama Barn Quilt Trail in Lauderdale County plans to expand across the entire state.
Arkansas[]
Over a dozen counties in Arkansas are on the quilt trail and more are being added. Find out more at: http://arkansasquilttrails.com/
Florida[]
Historic downtown Trenton is considered the start of the Florida quilt trail. Many quilts can be seen along the I-75 corridor including in White Springs, Maddison, and Lake City. Trenton hosts an annual quilt festival on National Quilt Day which falls on the third Sunday in March.
North Carolina[]
North Carolina has barn quilt trails in many counties, some formally organized and mapped and others in the development stage at a local level, including in Western Rowan County. On July 8, 2019 residents of Mount Ulla installed the largest community barn quilt in the United States on the wall of a local store, West Rowan Farm, Home & Garden. The Mount Ulla Community Barn Quilt measures 500 square feet, twenty square feet larger than the previous title holder, a community barn quilt in Ashland, Kansas.[2]
Pennsylvania[]
Pennsylvania Community Partnerships RC & D is currently in the planning stages of a series of quilt trails (PA Quilt Trails), including a railroad quilt trail running from Lewistown to Harrisburg.[3][4]
Tennessee[]
Appalachian Resource Conservation & Development maintains the online quilt trail database for the six-county region of Northeast Tennessee. [5]
See also[]
References[]
- ^ www.barnquiltinfo.com
- ^ Wineka, Mark (July 9, 2019). "Different kind of mural: Bear Poplar store now home to country's biggest community barn quilt". Salisbury Post. Retrieved July 9, 2019.
- ^ Community Partnerships Retrieved on 2010-12-13
- ^ Barn Quilts and the American Quilt Trail Movement
- ^ "Quilt Trail | Appalachian RC&D Council". arcd.org. 2011-11-15. Retrieved 2020-07-14.
External links[]
- Auto trails in the United States
- Quilting
- Roads in British Columbia
- Barns in the United States