…continuing with our exploratory road trip along Missouri’s backroads and byways. The city of Hamilton, with 2 museums and a quick lunch, was our last stop before leaving Missouri and arriving at our son and daughter-in-law’s home in Omaha Nebraska.
Following
our visits to the Walt Disney Hometown Museum and the General John J.
(Blackjack) Pershing Museum, we continued west on US Hwy 36 to Hamilton, the
home of two more museums, including one that features another well-known personage.
Hamilton
is another hometown for a ‘celebrity’ of sorts.
James Cash Penney of the J.C. Penney Department Store Company, lived in
this town for several years before he created his retail empire. The museum shares this building with the
town’s library on the left side of the structure and the memorial museum for
Penney at the right side…
To be
honest, this museum isn’t too impressive.
Much of it is devoted to articles, signing, promotional items and bits
of James Cash Penney’s history as well as that of his company. A full size model or replica of an older J.C.
Penney greets visitors from behind a showcase.
Penney’s first and last business desks are on display as is his last
office chair. Other exhibits include his
Masonic sword and a plethora of his pedigreed livestock.
Factoid: In 1940, while visiting a J.C. Penney store
in Des Moines Iowa, Mr. Penney showed a young 22 year old clerk just how to
wrap packages with a minimal amount of ribbon.
The clerk’s name was Sam Walton...
One of
the artifacts on display in this little museum was this newspaper article. On April 17, 1924, the Hamilton Advocate-Hamiltonian
headline announced the opening of James Cash Penney’s 500th
store…this time in his own childhood hometown.
J.C.
Penney (1875 – 1971) was the seventh of twelve children, of which only 6 lived
to adulthood. His father was a Baptist
preacher and farmer. A strict
disciplinarian, he made his son pay for his own clothing starting after his
eighth birthday. Penney had hoped to
become a lawyer but his father’s early death forced Penney to go to work as a
store clerk to help support the family.
His discipline and business sense paid off. Penney opened his first store in Kemmerer
Wyoming in 1902.
By 1929,
the JC Penney Company was operating 1,400 stores. With the stock market crash and the Great
Depression, Penney lost almost all of his personal wealth and had to borrow
against his life insurance policies to keep the company going. He gave up control of the company to others
but still remained active…going to his office daily almost until his death.
Upon
Penney’s death in 1971, the Reverend Dr. Norman Vincent Peale delivered the
eulogy. Penney was buried in Woodlawn Cemetery
in the Bronx, New York City, close to the grave of F.W. Woolworth. By 1971, the company recorded sales of $5
Billion…equivalent to $36.1 Billion in today’s dollars. (Talk about inflation! That is a 722% jump…or decrease in the value
of the dollar) The company peaked with 2,053 stores in 1973.
James Cash Penney isn’t the only entrepreneur from Hamilton Missouri. It is the hometown of Jenny Doan who, with her children, has built a large quilting-related business in the city. With annual sales of $20 million dollars, the Missouri Star Quilt Company owns 26 buildings in Hamilton and it is a partial owner of 3 restaurants. With 450 employees, the company is the largest employer in Caldwell County. In addition, the business brings as many as 8,000 quilters to Hamilton each month…almost 100,000 visitors a year!
I don’t know if Kathy’s Kitchen is one of the restaurants that is partially owned by the Missouri Star Quilt Company…but it is the place that we chose for our lunch break. The décor is quirky, befitting a town that attracts a significant number of tourists and, as you can see, outdoor seating is provided for those who are so inclined.
The menu is basic, featuring a number of sandwiches, a few Mexican offerings, a series of hotdogs, and a selection of salads. I chose the Tenderloin Sandwich ($9.00) with mayonnaise, iceberg lettuce and tomato. Laurie went for the Chicken Club ($9.00) with fried chicken, mayonnaise, lettuce, tomato and bacon on a hoagie roll.
Both of
our sandwiches were sizable and satisfying.
By the time we left, Kathy’s Kitchen was quite busy, feeding local
workers and tourists alike. To learn
more, just go to Kathy's
Kitchen | Hamilton MO | Facebook.
The
Missouri Quilt Museum has taken over and remodeled the Hamilton
Schoolhouse. This official Missouri
State Museum features 30,000 square feet of indoor space. Their goal is to create that largest and most
interactive quilt museum in the United States.
It hosts quilting exhibits from local artists as well as top quilt
designers from around the world. This
structure features 3 floors of exhibits…all served by a new elevator.
With
little effort, I found that there are many quilting museums in the USA. I found a list of 18 including this one. Other states that have quilting museums
include Indiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Utah, Texas, California, Washington,
New York, Wisconsin, Colorado, Alabama, Kentucky, Nebraska, Georgia, Virginia
and Florida. I’m sure that there are
others as well. We’ve previously toured
the National Quilt Museum in Paducah Kentucky.
…and now
for a few quilt photos from our visit to this museum.
This
handsome quilt has aged well. Coming
from central Missouri, it is over 160 years old…
Family
history for this quilt states that it was made by African American slaves in Mississippi
during the 1840s. The brown color came
from the use of leftover coffee grounds from the slave’s owner. The cotton batten between the layers of
fabric still contain some cotton seeds… Despite being much used, it is in
remarkably good condition.
This is
one of our favorite types of quilt! It is a “Crazy
Quilt”, named because scraps of fabric were cobbled together in no particular
pattern. We have a quilt like this
ourselves but it has deteriorated significantly as much of the fabric came from
old silk gowns worn by family members back in the late 1800s.
This
particular crazy quilt was made by Mary J. Rorabaugh (1828 – 1901) for her granddaughter’s tenth birthday in 1891. It was
donated to the museum by Mary’s great grandson…
This
colorful creation is the Missouri Bicentennial 4-H Quilt. This piece of art was created by quilters
from all over the state, with each of them making a block to represent their
county…all 114 of them!
August
10, 2021 was the two-hundredth anniversary of Missouri becoming the 24th
state to become part of the United States of America.
I didn’t
copy down any information about these 2 quilts but I included them in this post
because I liked them…
FYI – In 2013, Astronaut Dr. Karen Nyberg made a quilt block while in space. It’s on exhibit at the museum as are many
other new and complex quilt designs.
Laurie and I just prefer the old patterns and quilts.
It’s not all about quilts at Hamilton’s Quilt Museum…but the other exhibits are related to quilting in one way or another. There is a room full of doll beds all covered with mini-quilts. As you can see above, there is an exhibit of thimbles and sewing machines…with just a fraction shown in my photos. Another exhibit features buttons and there is even a collection of antique toy sewing machines.
So just
how crazy…or dedicated to quilts…folks are in Hamilton Missouri?! How about this ‘quilt themed’ limousine that
was parked outside the museum. It is
definitely over the top!
If you
would like to visit the Missouri Quilt Museum, it is open Tuesdays through
Saturdays. Adult admission is only
$12.00 and seniors only pay $10.00! The
museum is not funded by the Missouri Star Quilt Company although the company’s
founder, Jenny Doan does exhibit there.
To learn more, go to Missouri
Quilt Museum | United States | Quilt Museum.
Just
click on any of the photos to enlarge them… This concludes our backroads trip
through parts of Missouri.
Thanks
for stopping by for a visit!
Take
Care, Big Daddy Dave
Such wonderful quilts. I certainly contributed to J.C.'s wealth...still have a lamp purchased there. Mainly a great clothing place when I was a working woman. Styles more my choice than other stores. I always have loved quilts, and machine made one for one of my sons, with his various childhood fabrics included.
ReplyDeleteI love those quilts! I am not sure we have a quilt museum here...really interesting that they allowed you to take the pictures. That ‘quilt themed’ limousine is definitely SOMETHING!
ReplyDeleteLooks like a quilters paradise - I wonder if younger generations are taking it up. That definitely looks like you king of sandwich - similar to Hot Rods in size.
ReplyDeleteLindas colchas. Te mando un beso.
ReplyDelete