Martha Ann Harris Ricks (born Erskine, c. 1817–1901), also called Aunt Martha in her community,[1] was an Americo-Liberian woman among the early colonists to the Colony of Liberia. Born into slavery in Tennessee, she was freed by her father, George Erskine and emigrated at age 13 with him and her family to Liberia in 1830.
While chiefly working in agriculture there, Ricks also was known for her needlework and became an expert quilter. She became interested in Queen Victoria and worked for more than two decades on a quilt to deliver to her. In 1892 Ricks traveled with former First Lady Jane Roberts to England, where she received a royal audience with Queen Victoria and personally presented her the quilt.
Life
Martha Ann was born into slavery in Tennessee. Her father, George Erskine saved money and purchased her, her mother, and siblings, to free them all. [2] He and the family emigrated in 1830 to Clay-Ashland, Liberia, as part of the American Colonization Society project there.
In Liberia, Erskine married Zion (Sion) Harris. The couple were successful farmers and traveled with Liberia's first president Joseph Jenkins Roberts in 1848, after independence, visiting both the United States and the United Kingdom.[3]
The Harris couple raised turkeys, ducks, sheep, and growing crops.[4] Ricks was also known for the high quality of her needlework. Ricks was very good at quilting and had won a prize in 1858 for silk stockings that she made.[3] After Harris died, she married Henry Ricks again and started to be known as Martha Ann Ricks.[3]
Over the years, Ricks developed an interest in Queen Victoria. She determined that, one day, she would meet the queen. She told a reporter in an unknown year:
"I want to go to London to see the Queen. I know I cannot speak to her, but I hope to see her pass along, and then I will return to my farm in Liberia, and die contented. The Lord told me I should see the Queen, and I know I will."[5]
Over the course of 25 years, Ricks worked on a quilt that she wanted to give to the queen. The quilt depicted the Liberian Coffee Tree and was made of silk cotton, with a total material cost of $25 in currency.[1] Its pattern included more than 300 green leaves, and coffee berries in red. A tree of life trunk occupied the quilt's center, and the background was white.[3] Contemporaneous 1897 publication Victoria: Her Life and Reign described the quilt as "a beautiful piece of needle-work, representing on a white satin ground the coffee trees of Liberia, with the berries in all stages of fruition".[5]
When Ricks turned 76, Liberian Ambassador Edward Blyden arranged for her to travel to England and be given an audience with the queen. Accompanied by former First Lady Jane Roberts of Liberia, Ricks met the queen at Windsor Castle on July 16, 1892 and delivered the quilt.[2][6] She also dined alongside the Queen as the Queen's guest.[7]
Legacy
As of 2017, the quilt is missing,[8] but photographs of it remain.
Kyra Hicks wrote a biography, Martha Ann's Quilt for Queen Victoria (2012).[9]
Ricks's story is featured in a short radio documentary on BBC, "Looking for Aunt Martha's Quilt" (2017), read by her descendant Florence Dennis-Huskin.[10]
By 2017, quilters in Caldwell, Liberia have interpreted and recreated the quilt.[8]
Gallery
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The full cabinet card photograph from July 18, 1892, taken by Elliott & Fry in London
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Ricks in January 1892
References
- ^ a b Heard, William Henry (1898). The Bright Side of African Life. A.M.E. Publishing House. p. 25.
- ^ a b c Dale, Penny (7 July 2017). "A quilt fit for a queen". BBC News.
- ^ a b c d Virginia Center for Digital History, University of Virginia. "Virginia Emigrants to Liberia". www.vcdh.virginia.edu.
- ^ "Martha Ann Ricks, a former slave and Queen Victoria".
- ^ a b Knight, Alfred Ernest (1897). Victoria, Her Life and Reign: An Illustrated Biography of the Queen, from the Year 1819 to the Present Time. S. W. Partridge & Company. p. 312.
- ^ a b Benberry, Cuesta (1992). Always there: the African-American presence in American quilts. Kentucky Quilt Project. p. 36. ISBN 9781880584026.
- ^ Heard, William Henry (1898). The Bright Side of African Life. A.M.E. Publishing House.
- ^ a b "BBC World Service - The Documentary Podcast, Looking for Aunt Martha's Quilt". BBC. 2017-07-10. Retrieved 2025-02-26.
- ^ Kyra E. Hicks (17 October 2012). Martha Ann's Quilt for Queen Victoria. Black Threads Press. ISBN 978-0-9824796-8-1.
- ^ "A former slave's gift for Queen Victoria". BBC News. Retrieved 2018-02-12.