VoyForums
[ Show ]
Support VoyForums
[ Shrink ]
VoyForums Announcement: Programming and providing support for this service has been a labor of love since 1997. We are one of the few services online who values our users' privacy, and have never sold your information. We have even fought hard to defend your privacy in legal cases; however, we've done it with almost no financial support -- paying out of pocket to continue providing the service. Due to the issues imposed on us by advertisers, we also stopped hosting most ads on the forums many years ago. We hope you appreciate our efforts.

Show your support by donating any amount. (Note: We are still technically a for-profit company, so your contribution is not tax-deductible.) PayPal Acct: Feedback:

Donate to VoyForums (PayPal):

Login ] [ Contact Forum Admin ] [ Main index ] [ Post a new message ] [ Search | Check update time | Archives: 1[2]345678910 ]
Subject: Ruth Clement Bond; Quilter, Civic Activist


Author:
Manhattan
[ Next Thread | Previous Thread | Next Message | Previous Message ]
Date Posted: November 08, 2005 2:57:10 EDT

Ruth Clement Bond, 101, a well-traveled educator whose quilt designs in the mid-1930s expanded the practical use of quilts into a medium of expression, died of cardiopulmonary arrest Oct. 24 at her home in Manhattan.

Mrs. Bond did not know how to quilt when she began designing patterns for a group of women whose husbands were hired to work on the Wheeler Dam in Alabama for the Tennessee Valley Authority.

While her husband supervised the training of the African American construction workers from 1934 to 1938, Mrs. Bond organized the wives through a "home beautification" program she began. She gave the women the cutout fabric and selected the colors for the quilts.

"Our first quilt we called 'Black Power,' " Mrs. Bond said in an oral history for the Associates of the American Foreign Service Worldwide. "That was a pun, of course, TVA being about power. The first quilt showed a bolt of lightning signifying power, held in the hand of a black worker."

She said some people believe this was the origin of the term "black power." "The only thing I was trying to say was that things were opening up for the blacks in the South," Mrs. Bond said.

The TVA quilts, as they are called, have been documented in books, including "Soft Covers for Hard Times: Quiltmaking & The Great Depression" (1990) by Merikay Waldvogel. They also were displayed at the American Craft Museum's exhibit in 1994, "Revivals! Diverse Traditions, 1920-1945: The History of 20th Century American Crafts," and in 2004 at "Art Quilts From the Collection of the Museum of Arts and Design."

Mrs. Bond was featured in the book "Women Designers in the USA 1900 to 2000: Diversity and Difference" (2001), edited by Pat Kirkham.

Ruth Elisabeth Clement was born in Louisville, the daughter of a bishop in the African Methodist Episcopal Church. She graduated from Northwestern University in Chicago and received a master's degree in English literature in 1926.

She taught English literature, Latin and French at Kentucky State College in Franklin, Ky., until the lure of city life drew her back to Louisville, where she taught high school.

In 1931, she married J. Max Bond and moved shortly thereafter to Los Angeles. During the mid-1930s, she accompanied him to Alabama while he worked for the director of training for blacks at the TVA.

When her husband became dean of Dillard University, in New Orleans, in 1938, she focused on raising their children. She became involved in civic work in New Orleans and later in Tuskegee, Ala., when her husband worked at the university there.

From 1944 to 1947, while living in Haiti, where her husband worked for the State Department, Mrs. Bond taught English in a secondary school and founded an orphanage with the help of several other American women. She then taught French at Atlanta University. From 1950 to 1954, she was chairman of the English Department at the University of Liberia.

As a Foreign Service spouse, she lived in Afghanistan, Tunisia and Sierra Leone and worked with women and charitable organizations. In Malawi, she taught English at Bundu College in Blantyer.

Mrs. Bond moved to Washington in the early 1960s and continued her civic activities. She was a founder of the African American Women's Association and was on the board of the Boys and Girls Club of Washington, the YMCA and the Red Cross. She also was active in the Foreign Service Women's Association.

For five years until 1984, she worked as a foreign student adviser for the Africa-America Institute in Washington. She lived in Washington until 1995.

Her husband died in 1991.

Survivors include three children, Jane Bond and J. Max Bond Jr., both of New York City, and George Clement Bond of Teaneck, N.J.; six grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.

[ Next Thread | Previous Thread | Next Message | Previous Message ]


[ Contact Forum Admin ]


Forum timezone: GMT-5
VF Version: 3.00b, ConfDB:
Before posting please read our privacy policy.
VoyForums(tm) is a Free Service from Voyager Info-Systems.
Copyright © 1998-2019 Voyager Info-Systems. All Rights Reserved.