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Mary Lee Bendolph, Lucy Mingo and Loretta Pettway

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Claudine Pettway showing one of her quilts at the 2015 National Heritage Fellowship Concert, Washington, D.C., Photograph by Michael G. Stewart.
Claudine Pettway, Mary Lee Bendolph and Lucy Mingo giving a quilting demonstration at the 2015 National Heritage Fellowship Concert, Washington, D.C., Photograph by Michael G. Stewart.
Claudine Pettway, Washington, D.C., 2015, Photograph by Alan Govenar.
Lucy Mingo quilting at the 2015 National Heritage Fellowship Concert, Washington, D.C., Photograph by Michael G. Stewart.
Lucy Mingo, Mary Lee Bendolph and Claudine Pettway, Washington, D.C., 2015, Photograph by Alan Govenar.
Lucy Mingo, Washington, D.C., 2015, Photograph by Alan Govenar.
Mary Lee Bendolph and Lucy Mingo at the 2015 National Heritage Fellowship Concert, Washington, D.C., Photograph by Michael G. Stewart.
Mary Lee Bendolph at the 2015 National Heritage Fellowship Concert, Washington, D.C., Photograph by Michael G. Stewart.
Mary Lee Bendolph quilting at the 2015 National Heritage Fellowship Concert, Washingto, D.C., Photograph by Michael G. Stewart.
Mary Lee Bendolph singing and quilting at the 2015 National Heritage Fellowship Concert, Washington, D.C., Photograph by Michael G. Stewart.
Mary Lee Bendolph, Washington, D.C., 2015, Photograph by Alan Govenar.

Mary Lee Bendolph, Lucy Mingo and Loretta Pettway carry on a tradition of quilting that began during slavery in the predominantly African-American community of Boykin, Alabama, known as Gee's Bend for a nearby bend in the Alabama River. Gee’s Bend quilts are improvisational and inventive and have been compared to abstract paintings. They drew national notice during the 1960s civil rights movement when the women took part in the Freedom Quilting Bee. These quilts were sold throughout the United States, producing needed income for the community. Quilts made by the three Heritage Fellows have been exhibited in museums from Houston to New York City. Two quilts by Loretta Pettway and one by Mary Lee Bendolph were in the group chosen for the U.S. Postal Stamp Collection issued in 2006. Today, paintings of these quilts are part of the Quilt Mural Trail in Gee's Bend.

In 1965, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., visited the community and encouraged residents to register to vote and to join him in a march to Selma, Alabama. Many Gee’s Bend women were jailed for these actions, and the ferry service that connected Gee’s Bend to the larger town of Camden was canceled until 2006. When King was assassinated in 1968, two mules owned by Gee’s Bend farmers pulled his casket.

Like others in the community, the three honorees have led difficult lives, working in farm fields from an early age. The oldest of the three, Lucy Mingo was born in 1931 in Rehoboth, a settlement near Gee’s Bend. “You know, we had hard times,” she has said. “We worked in the fields, we picked cotton, and sometimes we had it and sometimes we didn’t. And so when you look at your quilt and say, ‘This is some of the old clothes that I wore in the fields. I wore them out, but they’re still doing good.’” She and her husband, David, raised ten children. She was among those who registered to vote and accompanied King on the march to Selma. Mingo worked as a homemaking educator for more than twenty years and has taught quiltmaking all over the country. In 2006, she received a Folk Arts Apprenticeship grant from the Alabama State Council on the Arts to teach quiltmaking to her daughter Polly Raymond.

Bendolph, born in 1935, was the seventh of sixteen children. She learned to quilt from her mother. While she and her husband, Rubin, raised eight children, Bendolph worked in the textile industry. She has had more time to quilt since retiring in 1992. She usually works with fabric cut from used clothing and draws inspiration from the world around her to create her geometric quilts, saying, “I can walk outside and look around in the yard and see ideas all around the front and back of my house.”

Loretta Pettway, born in 1942, made her first quilt when she was 11 years old under the tutelage of her grandmother, stepmother and other female relatives. She endured despite her mother’s desertion of the family and a long marriage to an abusive husband to whom she bore seven children. Though sewing was an unwelcome chore when she was young, she has come to value it as an expression of her spirit. Her colorful quilts are often made with the Bricklayer pattern that she learned as a child. The pattern resembles a pyramid or set of steps. “I always did like a ‘Bricklayer,’ she explains. It made me think about what I always wanted. Always did want a brick house.”

Bibliography
Lord, Debbie M. “Three Gee’s Bend quiltmakers awarded NEA National Heritage Fellowships.” Al.com, June 9, 2015. http://www.al.com/news/mobile/index.ssf/2015/06/three_gees_bend_quiltmakers_aw.html
National Endowment for the Arts. “Mary Lee Bendolph, Lucy Mingo, and Loretta Pettway: Quilters of Gee's Bend.” https://www.arts.gov/honors/heritage/fellows/mary-lee-bendolph-lucy-mingo-and-loretta-pettway
Philadelphia Museum of Art. “Gee’s Bend: The Architecture of the Quilt.” https://www.philamuseum.org/booklets/8_47_101_1.html

Watch

Lucy Mingo, Mary Lee Bendolph and Claudine Pettway at the 2015 National Heritage Fellowship Concert, Washington, D.C., courtesy National Endowment for the Arts.

Listen

Claudine Pettway answers the question "How do you pass on this tradition?" Interview by Alan Govenar, Washington, D.C., 2015.

Claudine Pettway answers the question "How do you pick the colors?" Interview by Alan Govenar, Washington, D.C., 2015.

Claudine Pettway answers the question "How does music influence your quilting?" Interview by Alan Govenar, Washington, D.C., 2015.

Claudine Pettway answers the question "What is your style?" Interview by Alan Govenar, Washington, D.C., 2015.

Lucy Mingo answers the question "How many quilts have you made?" Interview by Alan Govenar, Washington, D.C., 2015.

Lucy Mingo answers the question "What is the meaning of tradition in your life?" Interview by Alan Govenar, Washington, D.C., 2015.

Lucy Mingo answers the question "What is your style?" Interview by Alan Govenar, Washington, D.C., 2015.

Lucy Mingo answers the question "What was it like growing up in Alabama?" Interview by Alan Govenar, Washington, D.C., 2015.

Mary Lee Bendolph answers the question "How did you get started quilting?" Interview by Alan Govenar, Washington, D.C., 2015.