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A Sampler’s Story from Sierra Leone

By Matthew Monk, Linda Eaton Associate Curator of Textiles at Winterthur

Sampler, Africa, 1843. Museum purchase with funds provided by the Henry Francis du Pont Collectors Circle 2018.0007

On January 3, 1843, Lucy Davis, a Black African girl, completed this sampler at a Church Missionary Society (CMS) school in Freetown, Sierra Leone. Her needlework features a central field divided by a cross-stitched border of repeating X motifs. The upper half contains a verse from Hymn for a Poor Negro, a poem printed in The Missionary Repository for Youth, and Sunday School Missionary Magazine.1 Missionaries across the expanding British Empire used literature like this to Christianize and anglicize African youth and reinforce British colonial hierarchies of race and class:

“We love the Lord he came to save
Poor negro from the sinner’s grave,
Though we are black, and mean, and vile,
Lord Jesus on poor negro smile.
We love him, and we would not break
The least command our Saviour spake,
But pray him, by his precious blood,
To make us humble, faithful, good.”

Flanking the verse are a basket of flowers tied with a bow on the right and a spray of blooms on the left. The lower half of the linen ground features a stylized tree filled with birds with Davis’s name, location, and the date stitched below. A leafy vine border, framed by long-arm cross stitches, surrounds the entire composition.

Only twenty-six samplers from CMS schools are known to survive, and few student records exist beyond the needlework itself. However, one teacher’s name is known: Jane Hickson Boston Young (1810–1841), a Eurafrican woman educated at a CMS school in the Rio Pongo region (now the Republic of Guinea). Jane learned needlework from an African American colonist—referred to only as “Nova Scotian”—who had remained loyal to Britain during the American Revolution and later immigrated to British-controlled Africa from Nova Scotia.2

Jane Young went on to teach at CMS schools in Kissy, Gloucester, Bathurst, and eventually Freetown and Waterloo, where she and her second husband founded a school in 1836. Though she died in 1841, just two years before Davis stitched her sampler, it’s likely that Davis was taught by a liberated African woman who had been trained by Young—continuing a lineage of needlework instruction that began with a formerly enslaved African American woman.3

CMS schools were established to educate native-born Africans and “recaptives” or “liberated Africans”—those freed by the British Navy after the Empire banned the transatlantic slave trade in 1806. These children were relocated to Sierra Leone and educated in CMS schools, often sponsored by British abolitionists. By the 1830s, the schools primarily served native-born Sierra Leoneans, and after Jane Young’s death, the needlework teacher in Freetown and Waterloo was likely one of these liberated African women whose name has been lost to history.4

Lucy Davis’s sampler reflects both the constraints and the aspirations of colonial education. While the verse and format were shaped by British missionary ideals, Davis’s work also represents the emergence of an educated Sierra Leonese elite—young Black Africans who were being trained for roles within the colonial administrative structure. Her sampler embodies the paradox of colonial education: devotional verse stitched in thread, at once reinforcing racial hierarchies and preserving the presence of Black girls in the historical record and is featured in our exhibition Almost Unknown, The Afric-American Picture Gallery.

Sources:

  1. Periodical Publications. 1839. “The Missionary Repository for Youth, and Sunday Scholar’s Book of Missions.” In Nineteenth-Century Short Title Catalogue.
  2. Silke Strickrodt, PhD, “Mission Samplers from Sierra Leone: Traces of a Black Woman’s Career in the Church Missionary Society, c. 1811 to 1841,” Spotlight: In-Depth Dive into Noteworthy Needlework. Samplings.com (Philadelphia: M. Finkel & Daughter, 2025); Silke Strickrodt, “African Girls’ Samplers from Mission Schools in Sierra Leone (1820s to 1840s),” History in Africa. 2010;37:189-245.  
  3. Strickrodt, “Mission Samplers from Sierra Leone.” 
  4. Ibid.

Impact

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Showing of 6 results
Expanding Educational Outreach
Winterthur held 130 programs for 3,500 students with its school offerings in…

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Making An Impact: Ann Lowe: American Couturier
Conservators and technicians worked for nearly two years to stabilize and prepare…

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Year in Review
Winterthur is undergoing a renaissance in its ability to connect with diverse…

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Poison Book Project earns worldwide publicity
A recent feature by The Washington Post on the Poison Book Project…

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Embracing New Acquisitions with Historical Significance
Many visitors to Winterthur are surprised to learn that our collection is…

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Magic and Memories: Story Time Adventures in Enchanted Woods
Two-year-old Miles toddled into the Story Stones area in Enchanted Woods at…

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Expanding Educational Outreach

Winterthur held 130 programs for 3,500 students with its school offerings in 2022.

By 2023, with a grant allowing the programs to be held for free, 532 programs (263 on-site, 242 in-classroom, 27 virtual) were held for 10,630 unique students from 109 schools/organizations and 24 public school systems. The number of students served jumps to 14,169 when accounting for students who participated in multiple programs.

All school programs:

  • address Common Core and Delaware curriculum standards.
  • use a cross-disciplinary approach to guide learning in science, social
    studies, history, literacy, language arts, and the visual arts.
  • emphasize student-centered, interactive approaches to learning.
  • facilitate small-group collaboration.
  • are open to students of all abilities.

Making An Impact: Ann Lowe: American Couturier

Conservators and technicians worked for nearly two years to stabilize and prepare the forty dresses and mannequins for the highly praised Ann Lowe: American Couturier exhibition at Winterthur. Conversations, research, and planning for a revolutionary new mannequin-making project began even earlier.

To display Lowe’s historic dresses, Winterthur’s textile lab partnered with Katya Roelse, an instructor of fashion and apparel studies at the University of Delaware (UD), and with UD’s MakerGym, an interdisciplinary design and fabrication studio, to develop mannequins that are both cost effective and archival quality.

The exhibition presented the life and work of the remarkable and influential American designer who created couture gowns for debutantes, heiresses, actresses, and society brides, including Jacqueline Kennedy, Olivia de Havilland, and Marjorie Merriweather Post.

Elizabeth Way, associate curator at The Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology, served as guest curator of the exhibition. It was the largest exhibition of Lowe’s work to date, featuring gowns never before on public view.

Way delivered a sold-out lecture when the exhibition opened in September 2023.

“The event was stunning. I couldn’t believe the level of connection everyone had with her story.”

Allison Tolman, associate director of collections management, National Museum of African American History and Culture, Smithsonian, on the opening reception for the Lowe exhibition.

A highly acclaimed symposium on Lowe followed in October and drew an international audience of fashion scholars and journalists.

Leading up to and during the exhibition, Winterthur also led a successful hunt for previously “undiscovered” or “forgotten” original Lowe dresses.

Ann Lowe’s recently emerging visibility as a designer stands in contrast to much of her career and the countless unrecognized Black dressmakers and designers who have contributed to American fashion for generations, including her own grandmother and mother. She blazed a path for others to follow, and her legacy is still felt in fashion culture.

The exhibition also featured the work of contemporary couturiers and fashion designers whose current design practices, perspectives, and career paths reflect the trajectory of American fashion emanating from Lowe’s foundation.

Why was Winterthur the right place to mount such a substantial effort to celebrate a fashion designer?

  • Winterthur is a place that celebrates stories of American craft and achievement. The story of Ann Lowe was one Winterthur was uniquely positioned to tell.
  • It started here. Margaret Powell, whose three-year tenure at Winterthur from 2013 to 2016 as a cataloguing assistant for a grant-funded project with the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), coincided with the early stages of Margaret’s research into Lowe’s life and legacy. The exhibition was a tribute to Margaret.
  • Winterthur has the skill. Internationally renowned conservators conducted critical treatment of many of the gowns featured in the exhibition.
  • Winterthur has the connections. Winterthur’s longtime partnership with the University of Delaware enabled the recreation of Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy’s 1953 wedding gown. The original is too fragile to display. Winterthur donated the recreation to the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum so the public can continue to see this iconic gown.
  • Winterthur is leading the field. Working with UD, Winterthur pioneered a 3D printing technique to create customized mannequins for the exhibition. Other museums and institutions will benefit from this work.
  • Winterthur left a legacy. Winterthur’s publication Ann Lowe, American Couturier (Rizzoli) was the first scholarly representation of Lowe’s contributions to twentieth-century couture in the United States. The book received the Costume Society of America’s 2024 Millia Davenport Publication Award and sold out and was reprinted by Rizzoli within months of its first printing.

“I think it’s a testament to Margaret (Powell) that she made connections strong enough to withstand her passing. It truly took a village of women committed to Margaret and Ann Lowe to ensure that the work continued.”

Rachel Delphia, Alan G. and Jane A. Lehman Curator of Decorative Arts and Design, Carnegie Museum of Art, on Margaret Powell and her research

The day the Lowe exhibition opened on September 9, 2023, saw Winterthur welcome 88% more people and a 37% increase in self-paced tours than on a normal day.

The week of the exhibition’s opening saw a 54% increase in overall visitation and a 96% increase in self-paced tours. The exhibition was featured in worldwide media coverage.

Giving Societies

Winterthur celebrates those who are closely involved with the institution through philanthropy. 

Founder’s Circle

The Founder’s Circle is an active community of Winterthur’s most generous patrons who make an annual contribution of $2,500 or more. Founder’s Circle members share the vision of our founder, Henry Francis du Pont, to inspire and educate through Winterthur’s collection, estate, and academic programs. 

Learn more.

Port Royal Society

The Port Royal Society recognizes donors who have aligned their legacies to the mission and vision of Winterthur through a planned gift commitment.

Learn more.

Preserving Oral Histories for 50 Years and Still Going Strong

By Molly Mapstone, Winterthur Academic Affairs Intern

Our memories are wells of invaluable information. The basic facts of our lives, skills we learned in school, and important events are all stored in our minds and inflected by our unique experiences and perspectives. Through oral history, we record and collect these memories for future generations. Following the death of their colleague, Rutherford John Gettens, early career art conservators Tom Chase and Joyce Hill Stoner spearheaded an oral history project to collect firsthand accounts of their profession.

Three unnamed women from Radcliffe College with George Leslie Stout (center right) learning about historical painting techniques in the course “Methods and Processes of Painting,” circa 1928–29.

On September 4, 1975, Chase and Stoner conducted a roundtable discussion at a conservation conference with conservators Richard Buck, Katherine Gettens, and George Leslie Stout. Chase and Stoner were curious about their subjects’ experiences as conservators during a time of immense change and asked them to discuss their mentors, first jobs, technical approaches to caring for material culture, and thoughts on the future. This roundtable discussion grew into the Foundation for Advancement in Conservation (FAIC) Oral History Project.

Joyce Hill Stoner with unidentified speaker, ready to record and file interviews for the FAIC Oral History Project, circa late 1970s.

The FAIC Oral History Project documents developments in the field of conservation through firsthand accounts. When the project officially began in 1975, conservation was a relatively recent development in cultural heritage work. Prior to the mid-20th century, historically significant objects that needed treatment in America were typically worked on by restorers who wanted to preserve and restore them to their original state.  

Watercolor painting illustrating restoration-focus of restorers, created by George Leslie Stout for a 1976 presentation.

Two events in American history accelerated the transition from restoration to conservation—World War II and Italy’s 1966 Florence Flood. During both events, Americans traveled abroad and joined international experts to recover, repatriate, and provide appropriate treatments on objects of cultural significance. Roundtable interviewee George Leslie Stout served in the “Monuments Men” division of the Civil Affairs and Military Government Sections of the Allied armies during World War II. One of the first Monuments Men to land in Normandy after D-Day, Stout helped conserve thousands of works of art stolen and hidden by the Nazis across Europe.

By the late 20th century, museums, libraries and other cultural institutions hired conservators to work on their collections and ensure the long-term preservation of the objects that connect us to our shared past. Conservators today focus on using reversible treatments and preventing future damage to objects.

Joyce Hill Stoner on scaffolding constructed for her to conduct a conservation treatment by removing discolored varnish on a mural in the New York Public Library in the 1970s.

Since 1975, hundreds of interviews have been held with conservators and allied professionals in America and abroad. Rebecca Rushfield, associate director of the project, conducted more than one hundred interviews and continues this work today. These interviews provide insights into the history of object treatments, issues in the field, and eyewitness accounts of numerous historical events. Now housed in the Winterthur Library, the FAIC Oral History Collection archive can be accessed online through the Winterthur Library Digital Collection or on-site at the Winterthur Library by appointment.

Explore the digital collection.

Access the annotated transcript of the first interview conducted in 1975 by Stoner and Chase of Stout, Buck and Gettens.

Explore the finding aid for the complete collection.

Winterthur thanks the Berger Foundation for supporting work to make this collection accessible to a broad public.

Yuletide House Tour

Celebrate the season in a storybook setting where literature, history, and holiday magic meet. Artful displays inspired by classic tales uniquely connect to Winterthur with rarely seen collection objects and tributes to the estate’s rich history. Self-paced tour. Reservations recommended. Included with admission. Members free. Purchase tickets online or call 800.448.3883.

Tuesday–Thursday and Sunday, November 22–January 4
10:00 am–5:00 pm (last tour at 4:15 pm)

Holiday Nights

Starting November 28, extended hours on Friday and Saturday. Excludes November 29 and December 26.
10:00 am–8:00 pm (last tour at 7:15 pm)

On December 24
10:00 am–2:00 pm (last tour at 1:15 pm)

On January 1
10:00 am–5:00 pm (last tour at 4:15 pm)

Winterthur Hosts Free Day of Exploration, Creativity & Fun on August 23

WINTERTHUR, DE (August 15, 2025)—On Discover Winterthur Day, August 23 from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library offers a free, fun-filled day for all ages featuring access to its naturalistic gardens, live performances, hands-on crafts and activities, and engaging experiences with community partners.

Visitors can enjoy interactive storytelling, early childhood games, art workshops, nature walks, and educational exhibits from local organizations like the Delaware Museum of Nature & Science, Humane Animal Partners, and Tri-State Bird Rescue.

With something for everyone, from story time to seed planting, face painting to fossil exploration, historic games, bird conservation, and even adoptable dogs, Discover Winterthur is a vibrant celebration of nature, culture, and community.


Event Highlights

Visitor Center

  • Take a guided garden walk to areas not seen from the tram route.
  • Meet adoptable dogs and learn about pet wellness with Humane Animal Partners.
  • Participate in child development activities with Books, Balls & Blocks.
  • Enjoy a special performance by The Rainbow Chorale of Delaware at 11 a.m.

Greenhouses & Brown Horticulture Learning Center

  • Watch live cyanotype artmaking, using the sun to print, with Sarah Bourne Rafferty of Atwater Designs.
  • Learn to grow fall vegetables with the Food Bank of Delaware and take free seeding supplies.
  • Decorate your own terra cotta pot, plant a seed, and make a garden marker.
  • Discover how to add native plants to your garden with Winterthur’s Delaware Master Naturalists.
  • Explore Winterthur’s historic firetruck, get a photo, and meet local fire safety experts.
  • Visit Tri-State Bird Rescue & Research and learn about bird conservation.
  • Experience “From Fleece to Fiber: A Winterthur Wool Journey.” Observe (10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.) how to skirt and scour fleece sourced from one of Winterthur’s merino sheep. Watch and try your hand at processing wool and spinning yarn (1:00 p.m.–3:00 p.m.).

Clenny Run Lawn

  • Dive into the magical world of Bubbletopia with giant soap bubbles, music, and interactive fun.
  • Get your face painted, inspired by the garden.
  • Enjoy giveaways and story time with Read Aloud Delaware, featuring Mother Goose.

Galleries Reception Area

  • Make your own mini loom art with Hello Loom.
  • Touch real fossils and learn about dinosaurs with the Delaware Museum of Nature & Science (10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.).
  • Meet future seeing-eye dogs from Guiding Paws of Delaware.
  • Try 18th-century-style tools at a cabinetmaker’s workbench.
  • Connect with local organizations like Delaware Division of the Arts, People to People Delaware, and Woodlawn Library.

Rotunda

  • Join Winterthur Maker-Creator fellow Emmanuel Aboagye for an immersive art-making session using image transfer, painting, collage, and drawing on canvas, and Maker-Creator fellow Shefon Taylor for an introduction to sculptural wire drawing (ages 15+ only).

Library (10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.)

  • Drop in for historic toys and games, read a storybook, or craft a colorful bookmark.


Important Information

Admission is free, but parking is limited. A large early turnout is expected, so visiting later in the day is encouraged to ensure a relaxed experience. Registration is strongly encouraged but not required. See www.winterthur.org for more information.

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About Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library
Winterthur—known worldwide for its preeminent collection of American decorative arts, naturalistic garden, and research library for the study of American art and material culture—offers a variety of tours, exhibitions, programs, and activities throughout the year. Admission includes a self-paced house tour, exhibitions, a narrated tram ride (weather and space permitting), and the Winterthur Garden.

Winterthur is located on Route 52, six miles northwest of Wilmington, Del., and five miles south of U.S. Route 1. Winterthur is committed to accessible programming for all. For information, including special services, call 800.448.3883 or visit winterthur.org. Winterthur is closed seasonally from early January through late February.

Cultivating a Cutting Garden

By Natasha Vadas, Winterthur Horticulturist

While each season of gardening is sure to bring its own unique experience, I find there are a few things I consistently do when cultivating a cutting garden. My first rule, as simple as it may sound, is to have fun with my cut flower garden—so I grow flowers I truly enjoy working with and watching bloom. My recent favorites have been dahlias, whose unique colors and beautiful symmetry go well in almost any floral arrangement.

Another rule I like to follow is to grow something I know will perform well, year after year. I often choose zinnias, which are fantastic and dependable flowers to grow in a cutting garden. Not only are they amazingly easy to grow from seed, but they will also bloom continuously up until the first frost of the fall season.

Beyond an array of colors, I enjoy growing various textures in my cutting garden to add more dimension to both the garden and flower arrangements. The lacy caps of false Queen Anne’s lace or the papery blooms of early-season poppies add dimension and delicate texture to any display.  I also love to add an element of surprise by using herbs such as sage, nasturtium, or variegated basil to provide aroma and greenery to an arrangement.

Because my cutting garden receives full sun for much of the day, I typically choose plants that will thrive in that environment. Of course, with full sun comes the prospect of soil drying out, so I keep my plants watered by running a sprinkler on them during the early morning hours when they can absorb the most water.

When the time comes to make an arrangement, I prefer to cut the flowers before the heat of the day. Using clean flower cutters, I snip flowers that are either freshly blooming or about to open their buds, cutting above the next node of growth. This will allow the plant to continue blooming into the growing season. After cutting the flowers, I allow them to sit in room-temperature water to acclimate for a while. Then, when it’s time to create an arrangement, I invoke my first rule of the cutting garden—to have fun.

There is no “correct” way to create a floral arrangement. Each is as different as the flowers themselves, and it’s always exciting to allow the artistic process to unfold into a beautiful display.

Join Natasha for Garden to Vase: Cut Flower Workshop on September 2 to create your own stunning floral arrangement from Winterthur flowers.

IRUG16: 16th Conference and Workshop of the Infrared and Raman User’s Group

For over three decades, the Infrared and Raman Users Group (IRUG) has been at the forefront of advancing spectroscopic analysis in cultural heritage conservation. Every few years, this vibrant international community gathers to share groundbreaking research, innovative techniques, and the latest developments in infrared and Raman spectroscopy for the analysis and conservation of cultural materials. In October 2026, IRUG 16 will bring together an international cohort of conservation scientists, conservators, researchers, and industry specialists working across diverse collections. This conference will showcase cutting-edge research and methodologies that are essential for advancing our understanding and preservation of cultural heritage materials.

For inquiries about IRUG 16, please contact the organizing committee at irug16@winterthur.org

For general IRUG information, visit www.irug.org

Abstract Submission

Please submit your abstracts online using this form: https://forms.office.com/r/ySYgFDeBDP 

The deadline for abstract submission is January 31. 

Registration will open in April 2026.

Program Schedule

October 7-9, 2026

The program will include oral and poster presentations; networking events; time for museum, garden, and gallery visits; and an optional tour of the Winterthur conservation department.

There will be an optional conference workshop on Tuesday, October 6.

Keynote Speaker

Dr. Roger Turner | Spectroscopy as Cultural Heritage

The history of spectroscopy is much more than a timeline of landmark papers and advances in instrumentation. Scientific instruments can also be markers that people use to organize themselves and define systems of meaning. What does spectroscopy look like when we view it as a set of cultural practices and social groups? While celebrated figures like Bunsen and Kirchhoff still matter, a social and cultural perspective reveals significant contributions by less famous, and sometimes minoritized, individuals. Women played crucial roles by coordinating groups to create shared community resources, like Clara Smith Craver’s work in building spectra libraries. Communities of spectroscopists were created through short courses like the Fisk University Infrared Spectroscopy Institute founded by James Raymond Lawson and Nelson Fuson. The Science History Institute’s collections offer a window on spectroscopy’s surprising and playful cultural heritage, from a 1954 photo of brawling spectrophotometer salesmen to an aftermarket label warning users about an NMR spectrometer’s “Emotional Crisis Detector.”

Biography

Dr. Roger Turner is the curator of instruments and artifacts at the Science History Institute in Philadelphia. He enjoys translating the history of science for different audiences, from chemists at Pittcon to museum visitors and students of all ages. He has recently written museum displays that situate spectrophotometry as part of the Institute’s temporary exhibits Downstream and Lunchtime. He holds a Ph.D. in the History and Sociology of Science from the University of Pennsylvania.

Accommodations

If you will not have a car, we suggest staying in Wilmington or the Wilmington Riverfront for access to restaurants and public transportation. The conference will provide one shuttle trip to Winterthur each morning and one return trip to Wilmington each evening for all attendees.

There are plenty of options for short-term housing rentals in Wilmington and the nearby area, but below are hotel options for Wilmington and the Wilmington Riverfront.

Hotels

Wilmington

Riverfront

Getting Around

Traveling to Delaware

Wilmington, Delaware, is conveniently located just 30 minutes from Philadelphia International Airport and is served by rail connections to major cities along the East Coast.

Getting to Winterthur

Complimentary shuttle buses will run daily between Wilmington/Wilmington Riverfront and Winterthur for all registered attendees. There will be one morning shuttle trip to deliver attendees to the conference and one evening shuttle to return attendees to Wilmington/Wilmington Riverfront.

If you prefer to drive, ample free parking is available at Winterthur. Directions can be found online.

Please note that Winterthur is not accessible by public transportation. However, rideshare services and taxis (e.g., Delaware Express) provide easy and reliable transportation to the site.


This symposium is made possible with the support of the following partners: