Rocky Hill Library
The Web They Wove:&r
The Web They Wove:” Women & their Wardrobes During New England’s Revolution

Wednesday, Jul. 23, 6:00 PM - 7:00 PM
or call 860-258-7623.
We are combining women's history and textlies in this exciting program with The Dirty Blue Shirts!
Underpinning the sensationalism of battle reports and broadsides is the often silent steadiness of women’s work with textiles. The choices they made every day about fashion and fabric consumption and creation drove the course of Revolution just as determinedly as any congress. As southern New England commemorates the 250th anniversary (semiquincentennial) of the War for Independence, it is these local lives dressed in fulled wool or spun silk that continue to inspire creativity, resilience, and empathy in us today. From the mythology of homespun to legends of midnight rides in red cloaks and calashes, The Dirty Blue Shirts share stories of women who waged war on multiple fronts as well as a look at what they wore as their worlds turned upside down. This program is presented by costumed historians and includes reproduction clothing pieces & fabric samples as well as a PowerPoint presentation with images of extant originals. Registration is recommended.

About the Presenter: The Dirty Blue Shirts is an experiential history collective of living historians, scholars, and artists based from Eastern Connecticut. Its members worked together on the front lines of a maritime museum, both aloft on tall ships and on land as historic roleplayers. Now they bring customized, museum quality programming to historic sites throughout New England, offering presentations & workshops on environmental history, blacksmithing, fiber arts, woodworking, historical dress, original & traditional music, immigrant history, theatre, and of course maritime culture & history. 
Sponsored by The Friends of the Rocky Hill Library.
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