From the collection of Sulgrave Manor in
Oxfordshire, England: the ancestral family home of George
Washington
George Washington's great-grandfather, John Washington, a
Royalist, emigrated to Virginia from England in 1656, while
Oliver Cromwell was in power. His ancestor, Lawrence
Washington, bought Sulgrave Manor from the Crown in 1539,
and it remained in the Washington family for 120 years.
In 1914, efforts began by both the British and
Americans to purchase and restore Sulgrave, which is now
preserved and furnished with objects from the sixteenth
through the eighteenth centuries reflecting the daily lives
of its residents over a three hundred year span.
This tent stitched picture, affectionately dubbed The
Morris Dancer, was made in the latter part of the
seventeenth century, and depicts a lively farmer cavorting
in a hilly landscape. He sports the fashionable moustache
and beard of Charles II, a waistcoat, knee breeches, wrapped
leggings, buckled shoes, and a jauntily angled cap.
The color is worked rigidly through graduated shades
of green, brown, and turquoise blue. Stylized oak trees
flank the dancer, lending symmetry to the scene. Stitches
used are tent and, for the background, counted satin stitch.
The palette consists of 27 different colors, requiring 51
skeins of floss, hence the price!
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