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The Filson Historical Society Digital Projects

Household linen, 1800-1825

Item

Title

Household linen, 1800-1825

Description

Household linen, hand-woven in a huckaback pattern, credited to Elizabeth Tyler Sturgeon. Elizabeth married Thomas Sturgeon in 1816. After he died in 1823, she managed their farm and raised three young sons. Her father, Edward Tyler II, enslaved up to fourteen people. Elizabeth herself enslaved seven people whose labor sustained both the household and the farm. This forced labor enabled the production of textiles like this household linen. Eliza and/or enslaved laborers cultivated and processed flax into yarn for weaving. Historical records suggest that an unidentified enslaved woman played a key role in managing the household and supervising other enslaved laborers after Thomas’s death. In 1833, Eliza died from cholera, leaving behind three children under the age of eighteen.

Source

1936.1.7, Museum Collection, The Filson Historical Society, Louisville, Kentucky

Date

Format

Identifier

1936.1.7

Citation

Sturgeon, Elizabeth Tyler, 1791-1833, “Household linen, 1800-1825,” The Filson Historical Society Digital Projects, accessed February 9, 2026, https://filsonhistorical.omeka.net/items/show/5833.

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