Samplings: Antique samplers and silk embroideries from M. Finkel and Daughter M. Finkel and Daughter: Leading Dealer of Antique Samplers and Needlework
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Adelia Ann Goshorn,
Cincinnati, Ohio,
circa 1833

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Sampler size:
22½" x 17¼"


Research available

Price: $5600

 

Enlarged and Printer Version

Adelia Ann Goshorn, the daughter of a dry goods merchant, Nicholas Goshorn and his wife Lorenia (Cutter) Goshorn, was born on June 24, 1824. She was their eldest daughter and was baptized in December at the Old Stone Methodist Church, the first church built in the Ohio Valley. The Goshorn family in America began when Johann Georg Goshorn, who was born in Heidelberg, Germany in 1725, came to America on the ship Two Brothers, sailing in 1750 and arriving in Philadelphia. He was Adelia's great grandfather and the family settled in Pennsylvania. Nicholas Goshorn was born in Westmoreland County in 1801 and in 1805 the family removed to Cincinnati, then a pioneer village formed around the extensive military outpost, Fort Washington. In 1823 he married Lorenia Cutter, a descendant of an early New England family. Lorenia was the daughter of Seth Cutter who had left Boston in the late 18th century to move west, settling as well in Cincinnati.

Adelia Ann was the eldest of their 7 children. She worked this large, handsome sampler when she was 9 years old, circa 1833. It is formed of two pieces of linen which were joined by a seam, much of which was then covered by needlework, directly under the large basket. A strong and somewhat stylized arrangement of flowers within this sawtooth-decorated basket dominates the composition of this sampler, with little dogs, pine trees, stars and pairs of birds providing further embellishment. The verse is one that was used by samplermakers by American samplermakers throughout the 18th and early 19th century, extolling Virtue as a "guiding star." Ohio samplers have been wonderfully and thoroughly researched by the late Sue Studebaker, however no sampler that resembles Adelia Ann's has been recorded.

Of additional interest is information that came to light as our researcher was working on this family. An article entitled "The Higher Education of Women in the Ohio Valley previous to 1840" was written by Jane Sherzer and published in 1916 in Ohio Archaeology and Historic Quarterly. Letters quoted in this article refer specifically to Adelia Ann Goshorn as a student, in 1837, at Pickett's Boarding School of Cincinnati. This was a highly regarded institution which was also known as Cincinnati Female College with a curriculum that included the study of Latin, Greek and Mathematics. While we don't know what school Adelia Ann attended when she worked this sampler, we do know that she furthered her education while attending this college, when she was 14 years old.

Adelia Ann died young, at age 20, in 1844. Amongst her brothers was Alfred Traber Goshorn who served as Director General of the Centennial Exhibition of the United States, held in Philadelphia 1876 and he was knighted by Queen Victoria for this accomplishment. Another brother was Edwin Clarence Goshorn, who served as general manager of the National Lead Company and is noted in published histories of Cincinnati as a leading businessman.

The sampler was worked in silk on linen and is in excellent condition. It has been conservation mounted and is in a molded cherry frame.

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Samplers Listing

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Mary Belden, Burlington, Connecticut, 1835
Elizabeth Biegler, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1808
Agness Blackburn, Lancashire, England, circa 1838
Annie E. Blinkhorn, Royal British Girls’ School, Southampton, England, 1867
M. A. Brearey, Quaker Darning Sampler, England, 1816
Janet Brodie, Edinburgh, Scotland, 1798
Heloise Bruhiere, Rouen, France, 1822
Bullfinch and Basket of Strawberries, England, circa 1825
Mary Cadwallader, Philadelphia area, Pennsylvania, 1836
Paula Casyanaza, Spain or Colonial Spain, circa 1840
Nancy Clark, Tewksbury, Massachusetts, 1818
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Marian Diamond, Albany, New York, 1811
Dutch Motif Sampler Initialed LVG, 1786
Elsey Earle, under the instruction of Miss Field, Bergen County, New Jersey, 1806
Mary Ann Egee, New Jersey or Pennsylvania, 1830
E.H., British Isles, 1740
FCC, Plain Sewing Samplers, European, circa 1850
Crestina Freddi, Italy, 1818
Rebecca C. Fritts, Nine Partners School, Dutchess Co., New York, 1826
Charlotte Frye, Andover, Massachusetts, 1811
Geffroy Family Print-work Silk Embroidery, Mary Balch School, Providence, Rhode Island, circa 1818
Unfinished Motif sampler, Germany, circa 1770
Mercy Gillow, St. Nicholas at Wade, Kent, England, 1769
Adelia Ann Goshorn, Cincinnati, Ohio, circa 1833
Keziah A. Hilliard, Burlington Co. NJ, 1836
Mary Ann Hoch, Hanover Township, Lehigh Co., Pennsylvania, 1832
Sarah Holl, England, 1805
Louisa Hose, England, dated 1840
Mary Howe, England, 1832
Mary How, school of Fanny Dow, Methuen, Massachusetts, 1816
ICH, Hamburg, Germany, 1819
Buttonhole Sampler, initialed IDA, Germany, 1811
“John and Ellin” Ship sampler, Wales, circa 1825
Charlotte John, Regent Town, Sierra Leone, 1843
Emily Knox, York County, Maine, 1826
Huldah M. LaRue, Polkville, Warren Co., New Jersey, 1854
Sophie Letailleur, France, 1848
Polly Loring, Hingham, Massachusetts, 1787
Sally G. Lovejoy, Wilton, New Hampshire, circa 1810
Ellen Augusta Mansfield, New Haven, Connecticut, 1845
Sarah Martin, Ormskirk, England, 1830
“Specimens of Needlework,” Letitia Mercer, Derrylee School, Northern Ireland, 1863
Miniature Sampler, British Isles, circa 1800
E. Myers, Dog Sitting on Cushion, American, 1840
Julia Naden, American or English, 1837
Needlework Bird on Paper, American, circa 1810
Susanna Peacock, England, 1808
"Memen to Mori" silk embroidery, Moses and Elizabeth Peck, Boston, Massachusetts, circa 1810
Pennsylvania German Sampler dated 1820, Warwick, Lancaster County, PA
Les Pensionnaires Pieuse, France, circa 1820
Mary Piercy, England, 1810
Pocketbook, European, late 18th century
Ann Reed, England, 1802
Postrema Ridgway, Burlington Co., NJ, 1805
Anne Roe, Philadelphia, dated 1793
Eliza Sanger, Newton Academy, Mass., 1805
Laura M. Soley, Duanesburg, Schenectady County, New York, 1846
Spot Sampler, England, mid 17th century
Elizabeth Stanford, probably Scottish, circa 1790
Stanwood Family Silk Embroidered Memorial, Massachusetts or New York, circa 1805
Maria L. Stauffer, Lancaster Co. Pennsylvania, 1867
Harriet Stevens, Celebrating Gen. Lafayette’s Visit, Kennebunk, Maine, 1825
Mahala Tarr, Gloucester, Massachusetts, 1831
Isabella Taylor, Birmingham, England, 1783
Abby Treadway, Middletown, Connecticut, 1797
Elma M. Tripp, Washington, Dutchess County, New York, 1830
Sarah Tyson, Skippack, Montgomery Co., Pennsylvania, 1840
Maria Van Wyk, Dutch Darning Sampler, Holland, 1762
Beadwork Picture, A. Ville, France, 1838
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Dolly Warriner Silk Embroidery, Mary Balch School, Providence, Rhode Island, circa 1810
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Ann Webster, England, circa 1815
Mary White, Rampton, Nottinghamshire, England, 1800
Mary Wing, Braceby, Lincolnshire, England, 1845
Eve Ann Yundt, Baltimore, 1828

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