PEI

How a craft group helped a P.E.I. man finish his mother's quilt

Stan Gordon's mother Bessie Gordon died in 1978, leaving behind an unfinished quilt that she had started years before. An Island crafting group has recently helped Stan Gordon finish his mother's quilt that was 60 years in the making.

'The memory of my mother lives on through that quilt'

Carole and Stan Gordon say getting the finished quilt back was very emotional. (Laura Meader/CBC)

Stan Gordon was thrilled to see his mother's quilt finally completed, after it sat in storage for almost 60 years.

The St. Joachim's craft group in Vernon River, P.E.I., recently finished the quilt for him. 

"It's just incredible. For me, it's an emotional moment. It takes me back to my mother," Stan said. 

His mother, Bessie Gordon, suffered a massive stroke in 1962, when Stan was just 11 years old. It left her paralyzed on her right side and she was not able to sew again.

Bessie Gordon never had a chance to finish the quilt because of a massive stroke, which left her paralyzed on her right side for the rest of her life. (Gordon family)

'Bessie would have really wanted it finished'

Bessie died in 1978 and Stan and Carole said time just passed — no one in the family was a quilter. 

But the couple connected with the group when they attended a quilt show last year, which was part of the Women's Institute exhibit at Old Home Week.

They were admiring a quilt that was the same kind of design as his mother's. 

The quilt was started about 65 years ago by Bessie Gordon. (Laura Meader/CBC)

That got them talking with Marie Curran, a member of the St. Joachim's craft group.

"I thought it would be nice to have it finished, and I said I would take it to the ladies and ask them if they would be interested in doing it," Curran said. 

Carole praised the group for their hard work. 

"They worked tirelessly through the winter," she said. "They are amazing, they are such a wonderful group." 

The flower garden quilt design is intricate. The St. Joachim's craft group says the fabric was quite fragile in places. (Laura Meader/CBC)

Thinking back to her mother-in-law, Carole said, she knows Bessie would have wanted the quilt done. 

"Bessie would have really wanted it finished," she said. 

Fragile work

Crafters with the group say the quilt was made of delicate material and that it was not easy work.

"Some of us were kind of afraid to work on it because it was quite fragile," said Geraldine MacDougall, a member of the group.

Members worked on it every week with some even taking pieces home with them to help complete the project.

The St. Joachim's craft group worked on the quilt in their meeting hall as well as taking home pieces to work on. (Laura Meader/CBC)

MacDougall said Bessie was obviously a skilled seamstress judging by the intricate quilt design, which included 151 different quilted flowers, all made of different materials. 

"She would have to be pretty exact on her sewing, her hand stitching in order to do it," said MacDougall. 

She said it was a shame to see it not finished. 

'My mother lives on'

Stan said it's been an emotional journey seeing the quilt completed.

"I hope they realize how important that was to me and my family, because now my mother lives on through that quilt," he said. 

'I hope they realize how important that was to me,' says Stan Gordon. (Laura Meader/CBC)

The Gordons plan to hang the quilt in their home and said it will be a treasured piece of history to be passed on for generations. 

"It was just meant to be," Stan said. 

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Laura Meader is a video journalist in P.E.I. She began her journalism career working in Manitoba but eventually made it back to Prince Edward Island where she grew up. She enjoys interviewing people, doing camera work and telling all kinds of stories. In 2021 she was part of a team awarded a National Radio Television Digital News Association award for Enterprise-Video.