Throwback Thursday – Fabric of the Community

Airing of the Quilts, May 17, 2025, at the Arts Center at Duck Creek, Springs, NY

This past weekend, relics of Montauk’s history representing the fabric of our community were displayed at the Arts Center at Duck Creek’s Airing of the Quilts. Three quilts from the Montauk Library’s collection were exhibited outdoors alongside baby blankets, contemporary textile artworks, heirlooms, and historical pieces created or inherited by community members across the East End. 

The Airing of the Quilts is “a celebration of renewal, community, and storytelling—as we shake the quilts out, after a long winter, to preserve them for the next year, and embrace spring” says the Arts Center at Duck Creek’s website.

Among our contributions was the “First Quilt,” created by the Friends of the Montauk Library in 1981, one of the group’s first efforts to raise funds for a new library. 

The “First Quilt” by the Friends of the Montauk Library, 1981. Quilters included Fran Ditzel, Kathy Havlik, Eileen Bock, Sue Kelly, Ada Giganti, Pat Smyth, Winifred Gilmartin, E.S., Fran Greenbaum, Suzanne Gosman, Ines Wildner-Fox, Stephanie Krusa, Sybil Tuma, Wendy Duryea, and Charlotte Schorr. | Montauk Library Archives

“We pulled together this wonderful group of intergenerational ladies from Winnie Gilmartin to Sue Kelly, a young mother, Sybil Tuma… Charlotte Schorr, Ada Gigante, just a wonderful host of women,” recalled Stephanie Krusa in an oral history interview. “And we organized meetings and got quilt material and decided how big, and people decided what they wanted to represent in their picture quilt. And we got to work.”

Michelle Flotteron won the first community quilt in a raffle to benefit the Friends of the Montauk Library. | Friends of the Montauk Library Scrapbook 1980-1986, Montauk Library Archives

Within months, the quilt was finished, exhibited around town at businesses and community events, and finally raffled off. Michelle Flotteron won the first quilt. “Ms. Flotteron worked at Gosman’s that summer, where the quilt was displayed when it wasn’t being exhibited at various fairs and parties,” reported the East Hampton Star in 1981. She later donated the quilt back to the Montauk Library, where it is now preserved in the archives. 

Photographs of the quilt on display, pulling the winning raffle ticket, and delivering the quilt to the winner, 1981. | Friends of the Montauk Library Scrapbook 1980-1986, Montauk Library Archives

“The Quilt Committee sews again. The first quilt raised over $4000, and the Committee has decided to start another, a patterned patchwork,” stated the Friends in a November 1981 newsletter. 

Picture quilts gained popularity in the late 19th century. “This is one of the latest innovations on the old-time crazy quilt and is another of those creations which are made up from friendly contributions,” said Farm and Home in 1892. Each block represented a different picture, shape, scene, or memory stitched together from various colored, textured, or patterned fabrics. The blocks were then joined neatly to create a story or a combined motif. 

In the case of the “First Quilt,” each quilter worked on a different scene of Montauk: the lighthouse, the bluffs, the manor, the train station, Gosman’s dock, a deer in a field, a crab on a beach, a fisherman, a clamdigger, and a pheasant. 

Again in 1994, the Friends came together to create another picture quilt of recognizable Montauk scenes and historic buildings. Can you identify any of the places in this quilt?  

Friends of the Montauk Library 1994 Picture Quilt. Quilters: Min Annis, Eileen Bock, Marilyn Carberry, Fran Ditzel, Jean Fischer, Ada Giganti, Kathy Greene, Anne Iscoe, Stephanie Krusa, Jane Liebell, Leda Maher, Ellie Richard, Charlotte Schorr, Barbara Sullivan, Sybil Tuma, Elizabeth Vogel, and Loretta Weldon. | Montauk Library Archives
Also on view was Susan Schrott’s quilt “The Seven Sisters” inspired by the Montauk Association Houses (pictured second from the left)
Airing of the Quilts, May 17, 2025 at the Arts Center at Duck Creek, Springs, NY

If you missed the event, the Friends’ 1994 Picture Quilt is on permanent display on the library’s lower level, adjacent to a coral reef display by the Nauti-Knitters, Montauk Library’s knitting and crochet club. Montauk has no shortage of community crafters.

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