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Quilt Treasures Presents: Cuesta Benberry

St. Louis; Missouri; United States

Cuesta Benberry has engaged in the study and research of quilt history for nearly fifty years. Her research areas have included myriad quilt history subjects; and many of her seminal studies have encouraged later researchers to investigate those topics further. Since 1975, her investigations have been primarily conducted on African-American quilt history. She has published numerous quilt history essays and research papers, served as a quilt research and history editor, as a consultant for quilt exhibitions and for authors, and has lectured widely in the United States and abroad.

Read about Cuesta's work, view images from her books, and hear her discuss her research and insights in this Quilt Treasures web portrait.

Mini Documentary
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Cuesta with her Cuesta's Stars quilt. This quilt was made for Cuesta by her friends from the Point Bonita, California quilt retreat.

 

Cuesta Benberry was interviewed for Quilt Treasures in her home in St. Louis, MO on July 2, 2002, by Merikay Waldvogel and Justine Richardson.

Interview
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Quilts Have Brought Us Together
Jean Mitchell
Lawrence, Kansas
1979
Collection of Michigan State University Museum #2009:119.40

 

Q: Quilts Brought Us Together

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Afro-American Women and Quilts
Cuesta Benberry, Annette Ammen, Lois Mueller and the Kinloch Community Center Ladies
St. Louis, Missouri
1979
Collection of Michigan State University Museum #2008:119.1

 

Q. Afro-American Women and Quilts

"Always There" Gallery
Photos from Always There: The African-American Presence in American Quilts by Cuesta Benberry. Louisville: The Kentucky Quilt Project, Inc. 1992.
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Cover of Always There: The African-American Presence in American Quilt

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African Mask Adaptation Quilt: made by Dorothy Nelle Saunders, Wautosa, Wisconsin, 1976, 68 x 86 inches, cotton, silk screened, fabric paint. Quilted by Luella Jones. Collection of the artist.

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African Jazz Series #10: made by Michael Cummings, New York City, 1990, 98 x 68 inches, cotton, machine appliqued. Loaned by the artist.

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Bible Scenes Quilt: made by a member of the Drake Family, Thomaston, Georgia, circa 1900-1910, 76.5 x 71 inches, cotton, appliqued. Four blocks. Collection of Shelly Zegart.

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Buggy Quilt: made by Mima Thompson Perkins, Trevilians, Virginia, circa 1915-1920, 74 x 74 inches, cotton, rayon, sewn, unadorned crazy patch style. Collection of the Perkins Wilbourn Family.

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Mima Thompson Perkins (1847-1920), quiltmaking matriarch of the Perkins-Wilbourn family. Born December 31, 1847 in Trevilians, Louisa County, Virginia. Married minister Marshall L. Perkins August 16, 1869. Together they raised eight children. Mima Perkins, a prolific quiltmaker, taught her four daughters to make quilts. Some of the quilts of Mima Perkins and those of her two daughters, Emma Perkins Wilbourn and Eva Perkins Ragsdale, are shown in the catalogue. Photograph of Mima Perkins, circa 1900, from the collection of the Perkins-Welbourn family.

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The Clever Turtle Quilt: made by the parents of school children at P.S. 48 Jamaica, New York, 1975. 60 x 29 inches, cotton, felt, appliqued. Seven blocks. Collection of Jean C. Linden.

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Afro-American Women and Quilts: made by Cuesta Benberry, St. Louis, Missouri, 1979, 78 x 53 inches, cotton, pieced, appliqued, embroidered, ink-inscribed. Twelve blocks. Collection of the artist.

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Fleur-de-Lis Quilt: made by Sara Miller, Natchez, Mississippi, circa 1900, 82 x 82 inches, cotton, appliqued. Thirty-two blocks and central medallion. Collection of Portia Robb Higgins.

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Framed Medallion Quilt Top: made by Francis M. Jolly, Massachusetts, or North Carolina, date inscribed 1839, 105 x 102 inches, silk and wool, appliqued, pieced, and embellished with braid and embroidery. Collection of the Smithsonian Institution, Negative #89-10437

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Frederick Douglass: made by the Negro History Club of Marin City and Sausalito, California, 1953, 120 x 96 inches, cotton, appliqued. Design by Ben Irving. Gift of the Howard Thurman Educational Trust to the permanent collection of the Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center, Atlanta, Georgia. Photograph courtesy of the Robert W. Woodruff Library.

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Freedom Quilt: made by Jessie Telfair, Parrot, Georgia, 1980, cotton, synthetic fabric, pieced, appliqued, 73 x 85 inches. Forty-two blocks. Collection of Shelly Zegart.

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Have a Seat Quilt: made by Dorothy Holden, Charlottsville, Virginia, 1990, 70 x 57 inches, silk foulard, cotton, synthetic fabrics usesd in men's ties, pieced, appliqued. Collection of Dorothy H. Holden.

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High Jinks Quilt: made by Marie Wilson, Brooklyn, New York, 1990, 75 x 60 inches, cotton, pieced, appliqued. Thirteen blocks. Collection of the artist.

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La Baker Quilt: made by Jim Smoote, Chicago, Illinois, 1990, 47 x 35 inches, cotton, acrylic paint, photo transfer pellon, appliqued. Collection of the artist.

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Lady's Shoe Quilt: made by Fanny Cork, Grand Rivers, Kentucky, circa 1890, 67 x 93 inches, cotton, pieced. Thirty blocks. Collection of the Michigan State University Museum #2008:119.2

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Liberty Medallion Quilt: made by Elizabeth Hobbs Keckley, a former slave, Washington D.C., circa 1870, 85 x 85 inches, silk, pieced, appliqued, embroidered.

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Lord's Prayer Quilt: made by Lorain Mahan, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1974, 87 x 85 inches, cotton, appliqued. Eighteen outer and twenty-five inner blocks. Collection of Loraine A. Mahan.

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People of the World: made by Lillian Beattie, Chattanooga, Tennessee, 1979, 71 x 54 inches, appliqued, and embroidery. Cotton and cotton blends. Collection of Bets Ramsey. Photograph courtesy of Williams College Museum of Art, "Stitching Memories: African Story Quilts," April 15-October 1, 1989.

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The Family Quilt from "Solid as a Rock" series: made by Carolyn Mazloomi, Cincinnati, Ohio, 1989, 49 x 39 inches, cotton, fabric paint, pieced. Collection of the artist.

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Harriet Tubman: made by the Negro History Club of Marin City and Sausalito, California, 1951, 120 x 96 inches, cotton, appliqued. Designed by Ben Irvin. Gift of the Howard Thurman Educational Trust to the permanent collection of the Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center, Atlanta, Georgia. Photograph courtesy of the Robert W. Woodruff Library.

Cuesta Gallery
View the materials and products of Cuesta Benberry's research and writing -- including newsletter and magazine covers from Aunt Kate's Quilting Bee, Nimble Needle Treasures and little 'n BIG; materials found through her research such as Mountain Mist Batting packages; blocks designed for her, and patterns she researched, such as an 1860s slave-made block.
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Author Cuesta Benberry

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Aunt Kate's Quilting Bee, Newsletter cover, 1979. From Michigan State University Museum; Cuesta Benberry Quilt and Ephemera Collection.

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little 'n BIG, newsletter Vol. 1 #4, May 1965. Edited by Betty Flack. From Michigan State University Museum; Cuesta Benberry Quilt and Ephemera Collection

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Mountain Mist Batting Package with Quilt Pattern. From Michigan State University Museum; Cuesta Benberry Quilt and Ephemera Collection

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Cuesta's Choise block, designed by Hazel Carter. From Michigan State University Museum; Cuesta Benberry Quilt and Ephemera Collection

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Cuesta's Choice block diagram, designed by Hazel Carter. From Michigan State University Museum; Cuesta Benberry Quilt and Ephemera Collection

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Cuesta inducted into The Quilter's Hall of Fame. From Michigan State University Museum; Cuesta Benberry Quilt and Ephemera Collection

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Nimble Needle Treasures-Spring 1972. From Michigan State University Museum; Cuesta Benberry Quilt and Ephemera Collection

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Cover of Nimble Needle Treasures-November 1969. From Michigan State University Museum; Cuesta Benberry Quilt and Ephemera Collection

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Portion fo slave-made quilt, Maury County, Tennessee, circa 1860. From Michigan State University Museum; Cuesta Benberry Quilt and Ephemera Collection

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Timeline
9/8/1923 Born in Cincinnati, Ohio; later moved to Grandmother's in St. Louis, MO.
  Attended St. Louis public schools.
  Graduated from Harris Teachers College in St. Louis with a B. A. in education.
c1945-85 Taught school in the St. Louis Public Schools.
1951 Married George Benberry.
  Son, George Benberry, Jr. born.
  Began studying and collecting quilt patterns.
  Joined "Round Robin" mail circles for sharing quilt patterns.
1965 Cuesta's collected rhymes reprinted in Little'N' Big.
"Kennedy Eternal Flame" Cuesta's original quilt block design won Honorable Mention in Aunt Kate’s Quilting Bee Magazine, edited and published by Glenna Boyd.
1967 Graduated from University of Missouri, St. Louis with a master's degree in library science.
1970-75 Nimble Needle Treasures (NNT) a new quilt magazine featuring history and background articles about patterns began; Cuesta began writing for 2nd issue with Hatfield and McCoy article, followed by Victory Quilts article. Wrote steadily for NNT on her quilt research about pattern history and quilt makers.
1977 Began contributing articles to Quilters' Journal.
1979 Friendship Quilt presented by Betty Hagerman and forty-one of Cuesta's friends.
Began contributing articles to Quilters Newsletter Magazine.
1980 Attended first meeting of American Quilt Study Group (AQSG) in California.
  Made sampler quilt, Afro-American Women and Quilts.
1981 Prepared Afro-American Women and Quilts for the AQSG seminar.
1983 Inducted into the Quilters Hall of Fame.
1986 Traveled to Soweto and began lecturing on patch work quilts of Zamani Soweto Sisters Council of South Africa and the anti-apartheid struggle. Purchased Maria Holmolka's quilt at London exhibiton Soweto: The Patchwork of our Lives.Curated exhibition Hear My Quilt for the St. Louis Art Museum.
1988-93 Wrote occasionally for the Women of Color Quilters' Network Newsletter edited and published by Carolyn Mazloomi.
1991 Curated Always There: The African American Presence in American Quilts exhibition and book, produced by The Kentucky Quilt Project in conjunction with the Louisville Celebrates the Quilt.
Curated exhibition Hear My Quilt for the St. Louis Art Museum.
1993 Edited A Patchwork of Pieces: An Anthology of Early Quilt Stories with Carol Crabb, published by The American Quilter's Society.
1994 St. Louis Art museum commissioned Faith Ringgold to make a quilt in honor of Cuesta Benberry for its permanent collection. Jo Baker's Birthday installed March 1994.
1997 Curated 20th Century Quilts: 1900-1970: Women Make Their Mark exhibition with Joyce Gross, for the Museum of the American Quilter's Society in Paducah, Kentucky.
2004 Recipient of the 2004 Distinguished Scholar's Lifetime Achievement Award for her groundbreaking research on the history of African-American quiltmaking, awarded by the Anyone Can Fly foundations.
8/23/2007 Cuesta passes away.
  Biography
For nearly 50 years, Cuesta Benberry has been making significant contributions to the quilt world as a lecturer, workshop leader, seminar director, film, tv and radio program participant, curator, researcher and author. She was first introduced to quilts and quilt patterns by women from her husband's family in Kentucky. Her interest was sparked; and it grew into a lifelong passion for pattern collecting and quilt history research, which she initially pursued through round robin pattern exchanges and correspondence. Cuesta's research has contributed considerable knowledge the field of quilt studies. She has written four books and her articles have been published in many venues including International Review of African American Art, Uncoverings (the journal of the American Quilt Study Group), Nimble Needle Treasures, Quilter's Journal, and Quilter's Newsletter Magazine.

Her research areas have incorporated a multitude of quilt history subjects that have served as seminal studies which significantly influenced and encouraged later researchers to pursue the investigations of those topics at great length. From the Hatfield-McCoy's Victory quilt, to a first presentation of the importance of quilts rendered in the WPA sponsored Index of American Design, to a first study of charm quilts, to an initial investigation of the 20th century's first quilt revival, Cuesta's original research covered many quilt history topics never before seriously examined. The broad range of styles and interests of African American quilters received the same concentrated attention characteristic of Cuesta's works. This work, best known through her book Always There: The African American Presence in American Quilts, countered many mainstream art historical assumptions that categorized African American quilting within specific visual styles. In addition, she placed African American quilting in a wider historical context and was able to give evidence of the diversity of black quiltmaking, and the concomitant imprint of quilts in other areas of black endeavors, such as painting, sculpture, poetry, literature, and even religious sermons. A teacher as well as a researcher, Cuesta has presented many seminars and lectures, and worked as a reading specialist in St. Louis public schools until her retirement in 1985. She was an original member of American Quilt Study Group and has been recipient of many awards for her work, including induction into the Quilter's Hall of Fame and a citation in Marquis Who's Who in America. In 2004, she was the recipient of the Distinguished Scholar's Lifetime Acheivement Award for her gournbraking research on the history of African American quiltmaking, awarded by the Anyone Can Fly Foundation. Cuesta passed away on August 23, 2007.

In 1977, she gave the Quilter's Hall of Fame her study collection of over 800 quilt blocks, a scrapbook, and a few pieces of ephemera. In 2003, Cuesta gifted the American Folk Art Museum with the non-African American portions of her quilt ephemera collection. In 2007, Cuesta passed away leaving behind a legacy of public scholarship and her collections. In mid 2008, her family gifted the Michigan State University Museum with her collection of African and African American quilts and her quilt history collection and the museum also acquired Cuesta's extensive collection of quilt kits. In 2009, the American Folk Art Museum transferred their Benberry Collections to the MSU Museum so that the bulk of her work could be in one place where it could be more effectively accessed for research and educational uses.
Biography written by:
Marsha MacDowell
Mary Worrall
Amanda Sikarskie

Bibliography:
Books:
Always There: The African-American Presence in American Quilts. Louisville: The Kentucky Quilt Project, Inc. 1992.
A Patchwork of Pieces: An Anthology of Quilt Stories, 1845- 1940. With Carol Crabb. Paducah: American Quilters Society. 1993.
A Piece of My Soul: Quilts by Black Arkansans. Fayetteville, AR: University of Arkansas Press. 2000.
Twentieth Century Quilts, 1900-1970: Women Make Their Mark. With Joyce Gross. Paducah, KY: Museum of the American Quilters Society. 1997.
Love of Quilts: A Treasury of Classic Quilting Stories with Carol Pinney Crabb Minneapolis, MN: Voyageur Press 2004.

Quilt Research Papers:
"The Nationalization of Pennsylvania-Dutch Quilt Patterns in the 1940s to 1960s." in Bits and Pieces:Textile Traditions. Ed. Jeannette Lasansky, Lewisburg, PA: Oral Traditions Project. 1991 pp.80-89.
"Afro-American Slave Quilts and the British Connection" America in Britain, American Museum in Britain, Claverton Manor (Bath, England) Vol. XXV Nos. 2and3 (1987).
"Marie Webster: Indiana's Gift to Quilts" Chapter 4 in Quilts of Indiana: Crossroads of Memories. by Marilyn Goldman, Marguerite Wiebusch, et al. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press 1991.
"Quilt Cottage Industries: A Chronicle." Quiltmaking In America: Beyond the Myths. ed. Laurel Horton. Nashville, TN: Rutledge Hill Press. 1994. pp. 142-155.
"African American Quilts: Paradigms of Diversity." International Review of African American Art. Hampton University Museum. Hampton, VA. Vol. 12 No. 3 Winter 1995.
"The Threads of African American Quilters Are Woven Into History" in African American Quiltmaking in Michigan. MacDowell, Marsha, ed. East Lansing, MI: Michigan State University Press in collaboration with the Michigan State University Museum. 1997.

Periodicals venues, with selected articles:
American Quilter Magazine, The (KY)
"A Style of Their Own: Two Black Quiltmakers" Spring 1988.
"Reflections On A Favorite Quilt: African Jazz: In Black and White" Winter 1991.
American Visions Magazine (Washington, D.C.)
Blanket Statements AQSG Newsletter (NE)
Canada Quilts (Sudbury, Ontario, Canada)
"Bible Quilts: Twentieth Century Style" Parts 1 and 2 Issue 17, March 1977; Issue 18, April 1977.
Center for the History of American Needlework, CHAN (PA)
Needlecraft Magazine: Needlework Press Series Vol. 2 no. 1 Feb. 1978.
Modern Priscilla Magazine: Needlework Press Series" Vol. 2 #3 Aug. 1978.
Essence Magazine (NY)
International Review of African American Art (Hampton, VA)
Lady's Circle Patchwork Quilts (NY)
"Missouri: 20th Century Quilt Pattern Supplier" Issue #57, May 1988.
Nimble Needle Treasures Magazine (OK)
"Ballad: Hatfield-McCoy Victory Quilt" Vol. 2 no. 2 June 1970.
"Victory Quilts" Parts 1 and 2 Vol. 1 no. 3 Sept. 1970; Vol.2. no.4.
"Ladies Art Co.: Pioneer in Printed Quilt Patterns" vol. 3 no. 1 March 1971.
"The Superb Mrs. Stenge" Vol. 3 no. 2 June 1971.
"Quilt Patterns from a WPA Artists Project" Vol. 3 no. 3 Sept. 1971.
"The Index of American Design" Vol. 4 no. 1 Feb. 1972.
"Quilts in the Museum of History and Technology," Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC Vol 4 no. 2 May 1972. (Note: Museum's name subsequently changed to the National Museum of American History.)
"Quilt Patterns of the Late Victorian Era" Parts 1, 2, 3, 4, Vol. 4 no 3 Aug. 1972; Vol 4. no. 4 Nov. 1972; Vol. 5. no. 1 Feb 1973; Vol. 5 no. 2 May 1973.Vol 5 no. 3 Sept. 1973. (first citation of the connection between the 19th century Civil War era Sanitary Commission and quilts in a quilt periodical).
"Quilt Kits, Present and Past" Parts 1, 2, 3. vol. 6 nos. 2 and3 1974, December 1974; Vol. 7 no.1 1975. (first citation of quilt kits and Florence Peto in a quilt periodical).
Quilters' Journal (CA)
"The Folklore Archives at So. Ill Univ.: Quilt Block Collection" Spring 1978.
"Hatfield-McCoy Victory Quilt" Vol. 2 np. 3 Fall 1979.
"Found: Missing Stearns and Foster Quilt Patterns" Parts 1 and 2 Vol 4 no. 1 ; Vol. 4 no. 2.
Quilter's Newsletter Magazine (CO)
"A Pattern of American Indian Origin" #110 March 1979.
"The 20th Century's First Quilt Revival" Parts 1, 2, 3, #114 July/Aug. 1979; #115, Sept. 1979; #116 Oct. 1979.
"Charm Quilts" #120 March 1980.
"A Quilt Research Surprise" #134 July/Aug. 1981 (details the origin of an 1836 anti-slavery fair crib quilt that is extant in a Boston museum).
"A Quilt for Queen Victoria" #189 Feb. 1987.
"The Face Behind the Familiar Name: Barbara Bannister." Issue #200 March 1988 p. 26.
"The Story Tellers: African American Quilts Come to the Fore" #227 Nov. 1990.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch (MO)
Women of Color Quilters' Network Newsletter (OH)
 
Forewords, Introductions, and Prefaces:
Introduction to The United States Patchwork Pattern Book: 50 Blocks for 50 States. Barbara Bannister and Edna Paris Ford. NY: Dover 1976.
Introduction: Juror's Statement to Grand Endeavors: Vintage Arizona Quilts and Their Makers. By Helen Young Frost, and Pam Knight Stevenson. Flagstaff, AZ: Northland Publishing/Arizona Quilt Project 1992.
Foreword to Mary Schafer and Her Quilts. By Gwen Marston and Joe Cunningham. E. Lansing, MI: Michigan State University Press 1990.
Introduction to Traditions in Cloth: Afro-American Quilts/West African Textiles. Nancy McKinney, ed. Los Angeles: California Afro-American Museum 1986.
Foreword to Twentieth Century Quilts: 1900-1950. Thomas Woodard and Blanche Greenstein. New York: E.P. Dutton 1988.
Foreword to Communion of the Spirits: African American Quilters, Preservers and Their Stories. Roland Freeman. A Nashville, TN: Rutledge Hill Press. 1996.
Foreword to Spirits of the Cloth: Contemporary African American Quilts. Carolyn Mazloomi. New York: Clarkson Potter. 1998.
Foreword to Hidden in Plain View: A Secret Story of Quilts and the Underground Railroad. Jacqueline Tobin and Raymond Dobard. New York: Doubleday. 1999.
Foreword to "Quiltmaking in Liberia." Kathleen Bishop in Quilter's Newsletter Magazine No. 276 Oct.1995 p. 32.
Foreword to Marie Webster's Garden of Quilts. Rosalind Webster Perry and Mary Frolli. Santa Barbara, CA: Practical Patchwork Co. 2001.
Foreword to Quilt Designs and Poetry Rhymes. Edna Patterson-Petty and Rose Jackson-Beavers. East St. Louis, IL: DDD Publictions 2002.
Foreword to Black Threads: An African American Quilting Sourcebook. Kyra Hicks. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland and Co. 2003.

Interviews:
Cuesta Benberry- African American Quilting Legend. A Conversation with Faith Ringgold, August 18, 2004. http://acffessay.blogspot.com/2011/02/cuesta-benberry-2004.html

Credits:
Many thanks to Cuesta Benberry for her generous participation, astute editing, and good humor.
Justine Richardson, MATRIX - project director, videographer, and web portrait co-curator
Merikay Waldvogel – web portrait curator and interviewer
Marsha MacDowell, MSU Museum – assistant web curator

Site design and production: Addie Guzman, MATRIX
Video editing: Simon Perazza, MATRIX
Video linking: Ryan Scott, MATRIX
Curatorial assistance: Mary Worrall, MSU Museum
Image scanning: Pearl Wong, MSU Museum
Interview Transcription: Francie Freese, MSU Museum

Those who contributed questions for this interview:
Shelly Zegart
Marsha MacDowell
Kyra Hicks

Images from Always There: The African American Presence in American Quilts appear courtesy of The Kentucky Quilt Project, Inc.

Special thanks to Al and Jean Waldvogel for hosting us in St. Louis, and to Brandi Searcy for technical assistance with inventorying and compiling Cuesta's collection.

This Quilt Treasures interview was made possible by generous donations to The Alliance for American Quilts from Jinny Beyer (http://www.jinnybeyer.com) and from Lake Mills Studios. Completion of the web portrait was made possible by significant contributions to The Alliance from RJR Fashion Fabrics in honor of Judy Sabanek and from Karey Patterson Bresenhan and Nancy O'Bryant Puentes in loving memory of their mother and aunt, Jewel Pearce Patterson.

The project was completed with additional in-kind support from Michigan State University Museum and MATRIX: Center for Humane Arts, Letters and Social Sciences Online at MSU.

Written by Justine Richardson;Merikay Waldvogel (2002)

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