Gown Skirt Panel, Silk Damask
Date1734-1740
Attributed to
Anna Maria Garthwaite
Worn by
Martha Custis Dandridge Washington
(1731 - 1802)
MediumSilk damask with silk hem binding
DimensionsOW: 20 1/4" (selvage to selvage) x OL: 28 1/2"
Credit LineGift of Mrs. R. Keith Kane & daughters: Mrs. James H. Scott, Jr., Mrs. Timothy Childs, Mrs. N., Beverly Tucker, Jr., and Mrs. Lockhart B. McGuire.
Object number1975-342,2
DescriptionThis is one of four panels of beige silk damask in a large-scale pattern of asymmetrical scrolling leaves and flowers, once part of a woman's disassembled gown skirt, or petticoat. This panel is shaped with green-striped selvages on both sides with remnants of original stitching threads, a narrow beige silk tape finishing the straight bottom hem, and an unfinished cut edge at the top. Note that another small panel, 1975-342,4, was once part of the top of this panel, as the pattern lines up at the top cut edge.Label TextWoven at Spitalfields, the silk-weaving district near London, this textile has a characteristically bold pattern over the full width of the 20 1/4-inch-wide fabric. According to family tradition, this is one of several surviving panels that came from a gown worn by Martha Washington (1731-1802). Because the textile dates to Martha Washington's childhood, the gown must have been passed down from a family member.
The silk's design is attributed to the London silk textile designer Anna Maria Garthwaite by comparison with her watercolor designs held at the Victoria and Albert Museum.
ProvenanceFamily tradition in the Dandridge/Henley/Kane family states that the textile came from a gown owned by Martha Washington (Dandridge/Custis.) Fragments of the same material with Washington histories are in collection at Mount Vernon, confirming the family tradition. However, Martha's birth date of 1732 suggests that her gown was remade from an earlier one.
1734-1740
1734-1740
1734-1740
1844
ca. 1760
1725-1750
1770- 1790
1750-1770
1730-1750
1780-1800
1740-1760 (possibly altered later)
1740-1760 (possibly altered later)