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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ploring_sm.jpg



 

Polly Loring,
Hingham, Massachusetts,
1787

Sampler size:
10¾" x 8"


Research available

Sale Price:
$3200

Original Price:
$4000

 

Enlarged and Printer Version

This fine 18th century American sampler was made in 1787 by Polly Loring of Hingham, Massachusetts and it is listed in the important 1921 book, American Samplers by Bolton and Coe. The Loring family in America began with Thomas Loring, who emigrated by 1634 and settled in northern Plymouth County. Members of the Loring family figure prominently in the early history of the Massachusetts Bay Colony and were original settlers of the towns of Hingham and Hull. John Loring (1630-1714), Polly's great great grandfather, was a town clerk, Selectman and Representative to the General Court in 1692.

Several generations later, Mary Loring (in the 18th century Polly was the nickname for Mary) was born in 1778 in Hingham, to Joseph Loring and his second wife, Ruth James. According to the Loring Genealogy, published in 1917, Joseph Loring was a cooper who served in early regiments as well as in the Revolutionary War. Polly was the ninth of her father's ten children. Interestingly, Polly's brother, Josiah Loring (1775 – 1840) was a bookseller and charter of maps who became one of America's best known makers of globes. In 1838 Loring received a silver medal for his globes (see Globes from the Western World, by Dekker and van der Krogt, page 139 – 140). His highly regarded labeled celestial and terrestrial globes are in museums and important collections.

In 1798, Polly married Alexander Young, printer and publisher of, amongst other things, the New England Palladium. One of their sons, Rev. Alexander Young, was a highly regarded Unitarian minister and antiquarian, remaining involved with Harvard College and the Massachusetts Historical Society for many decades. He was the author of many books on the history of Plymouth Colony and the planters of the Massachusetts Bay. Polly died in 1849 at age 71.

Polly's sampler is an excellent one, featuring alphabets, a numerical progression, a well-developed horizontal band and the inscription, "Polly Loring Sampler 1787 Born February 16 1778." She may well have attended the Derby School, a highly regarded school just down the road from her home, also in Hingham. This school was established in 1784 and was patronized by many illustrious families of the town. Polly's younger sister Lydia attended the Derby School where she worked a fine silk sampler in 1794 which is also listed in the Bolton & Coe book.

Worked in silk on linen, the sampler is in very good condition with very minor loss. It has been conservation mounted into a black painted frame.

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Samplers Listing

Phebe Ackerman, Fishkill, New York, 1831
Louisa Arneke, Germany, 1792
ASF, German sampler, dated 1766
Henrietta Salara Baker, Plaistow, New Hampshire, 1823
Sarah Elizabeth Bannister, New England, circa 1820
Two Samplers by Lucinda Beck, Montgomery County, New York, 1831 & 1836
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
Darning Sampler, northern Europe, 1788
Basket of Flowers with Butterflies and Sheep, Delaware, circa 1810
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
Gesualda Visibelli, Italian sampler, 1800
Dolly Warriner Silk Embroidery, Mary Balch School, Providence, Rhode Island, circa 1810
Kitty Waterman, England, 1804
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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AMERICA'S LEADING SAMPLER AND NEEDLEWORK DEALER
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