Kansas Quilter Series

Wedding photo for Ira and Kizzie Pieratt

Ira and Kizzie Pieratt

Currently I’m working on my fourth book series, the Kansas Quilter, featuring my great grandmother Kizzie (Hamman) Pieratt.

Born in 1874, Kizzie grew up in a large family in the Flint Hills of Kansas. Because there were no older sons in the family, she helped her father with the farming and was known to be more interested in being outside doing farmwork than inside doing housework.

Kizzie married Ira Pieratt in 1894 and immediately started their own family that eventually had eight children. The oldest, Paul was born in 1894 and the youngest, James was born in 1914.

Except for a five year absence when they participated in the Oklahoma Land Rush and ran a hardware store, they always farmed near their families around Strawn, Kansas. Kizzie’s father gave her land – supposedly to get them back home from Oklahoma – and they built a new homestead on her new piece of prairie.

Besides being in charge of the farming, Kizzie was known for her quilting. That was one housework job she excelled in. I’m sure at first it was a neccessity to keep her brood warm, but she also completed quilts for other people for an income.

As I research this series,  I’m taking a closer look at the family quilts that my great grandmother Kizzie made during her ninety-seven years because quilting is a promenent theme, like it was in my Trail of Thread series.

As I handle these antique quilts, I wonder who touched this same fabric during its lifetime. Who wore the dress first that later became part of a quilt block? Who helped quilt it? My great uncle Ralph said he and his younger siblings spent time around the quilt frame while Kizzie read to them.

I’ll piece together Kizzie’s stories and photos and post them in my blog and in the finished books. Look for the first book, tentatively titled “Tying the Knot” in the future.

Ira & Kizzie Pieratt home and family

 

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