Amazing Day in Hart Square

What do you get when you turn a quilter, a writer, and a kid loose in a historical log cabin village? A really, really good day!

On Saturday, Josh, James, and I went to Hart Square for their Founder’s Day celebration. Hart Square is an amazing place built by Bob and Becky Hart and their family. Click Here to learn more about Hart Square.

It’s hard to describe this exactly, but this seems the most fitting. Quilters collect fabric, knitters collect yarn, blacksmiths and welders collect metal.

Bob Hart collected log cabins!

This is actually the largest collection of historical log cabins in the United States, but they are so much more than just a set of buildings.

Bob became interested in the history behind it – what is was that tool used for? Why was that house built that way? And began collecting and preserving all the little details of life to go along with the houses.

In almost every house I entered, hand pieced, hand quilted quilts were displayed on the beds, hung on the walls, and draped over the furniture. Along with quilts they have dishes, linens, knives, and every kind of tool imaginable.

It’s a level of history and preservation that I’ve honestly never seen before. Since yesterday, I’ve tried to put my finger on why this feels so incredible. It’s a bit like Renaissance Festival in that it’s a chance to step back in time and appreciate how people lived many years ago.

But to me, Hart Square is even more magical and wonderful because it’s REAL. This isn’t a magical fantasy world with dragons and princesses. This is how we used to live and raise our kids, in tiny cabins that had to be bitterly cold in the winter and very warm in the summer.

It feels magical I think because the cabins have been so well preserved and so much attention to detail has been given to filling them with historically accurate furniture, quilts, and accessories.

So that’s what I was busy with yesterday! I had an amazing time with my family and saw so many beautiful quilts. I feel filled with inspiration and ideas and a much deeper sense of appreciation for the comfortable life I get to live in the twenty-first century.

This has definitely made me want to pull out needles and thread start a new quilt project 100% by hand. If my great grandmothers could do it along with everything else they were managing, I can too!

Let’s go quilt,

Leah Day

LeahDay

Leah Day has been teaching online since 2009. She's the creator of the Free Motion Quilting Project, a blog filled with thousands of quilting tutorial videos. Leah has written several books including 365 Free Motion Quilting Designs, Explore Walking Foot Quilting with Leah Day, and Mally the Maker and the Queen in the Quilt.

3 Responses

  1. Nancy says:

    Wonderful place! And we quilters worry about how to manage and store our collections- he needed acres and acres to store his. How inspiring, and it's always good to remember our foundations.

  2. QuiltShopGal says:

    Sounds like a wonderful day. I hope I one day get a chance to visit Hart Square. Really looks beautiful and full of history. What an amazing guy to collect old log cabins.

  3. Great post, I love log cabins, quilts, and anything vintage so I am sure I would have loved seeing these. I am happy they are preserving the past. And Happy you and your family enjoyed a day exploring together. Happy quilting Markay

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