Flosstube 48 - Anna Funk, a sampler story of immigration and friendship

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  • Опубликовано: 26 окт 2024

Комментарии • 18

  • @sbwgigstitcher
    @sbwgigstitcher 2 месяца назад

    Beautiful sampler and a great story!!

  • @joanneneufeld8212
    @joanneneufeld8212 2 месяца назад +1

    What a wonderful sampler. Anabaptist Mennonite history is my heritage. I love going to one of the Mennonite Historical Societies in BC and trace my genealogy. It’s fascinating! I believe my ancestors came over in the big migration in the 1870’s as well. I’ve found the ship listings of relatives that came in through Quebec and found their way to western Canada. I am mostly going to be stitching this sampler. I love both color ways.

  • @deborahbrandenburger7240
    @deborahbrandenburger7240 2 месяца назад

    I love the story of this sampler. Thank you for charting it and all the great ideas you publish along with it!

  • @charj57
    @charj57 2 месяца назад

    What a great part of history to hear. The sampler is beautiful!

  • @RhubarbPatchStudio
    @RhubarbPatchStudio 2 месяца назад

    I will be looking for this release! 😀 What a special story behind this sampler, and I love that it is a celebration of immigration! ❤ -Leah Noel

  • @kathynewhart6738
    @kathynewhart6738 2 месяца назад

    Love this sampler and the history behind it is awesome :-)) thx you Erica for reproducing it for all to enjoy!!!

  • @debbiebiggs3144
    @debbiebiggs3144 2 месяца назад

    Thank you for sharing all that you have learned about the back story.....it personalized the sampler and makes it so much more meaningful. I have been looking for a sampler to memorialize my paternal great grandparents who came from then, Prussia, now, Poland.......and I think Anna Funk will be perfect! Thank you for taking the time to reproduce the sampler!

    • @ericamichaelsdesigns
      @ericamichaelsdesigns  2 месяца назад

      @@debbiebiggs3144 you are welcome, I also have a branch of the family who came from Prussia!

  • @sleepycalico
    @sleepycalico 2 месяца назад

    What a charming booklet you have created! I didn't know such things had existed, let alone survived. I love that a stitcher knows to look on the back to determine whether something was stitched by one person. I can just imagine Anna gazing at the sampler and smiling as each motif reminded her of a particular friend. I wonder if they contributed different colors.

  • @cheryldowd6916
    @cheryldowd6916 2 месяца назад

    Amazing. My paternal grandmother was from Prussia and grandfather was from Germany. They came to America and then married. I have their marriage certificate which is actually poster size. It is written in German. They settled in Pennsylvania. I will definitely get your design to honor all of the people who risked everything to come here.

  • @nanhendrickson5012
    @nanhendrickson5012 2 месяца назад

    So interesting! I grew up in Liberal, KS (southwest KS). Beautiful sampler!

  • @debrafry577
    @debrafry577 2 месяца назад

    So tickled to hear this story that I’m very familiar with, as my family has the same roots! My dad grew up in Halstead and Newton, love the Goessel museum. He then had a big farm in western Kansas starting with that famous winter wheat. My husband and I lived in the Whitewater area when our children were young but we now live in Durango, CO. Will be definitely getting my hands on this sampler!

  • @dwolfe581
    @dwolfe581 2 месяца назад

    Wow! I live near Sterling. I will have to meet a friend and visit that little museum. My Great-grandparents and family move d from. Germany, to Russia (Bessarabia). Their heritage was not Anabaptist, but Lutheran. I even have their “church release” from that church when they emigrated.

  • @funkarella5
    @funkarella5 2 месяца назад

    I’m married to a Funk so this is a must for me! My father-in-law’s relatives followed Catherine the Great to Russia from Germany. It wasn’t for religious reasons. I’ve been told it was for the deep love that they held for Catherine. My father-in-law’s parents immigrated from Russia to the US. They settled in Chicago. When my father-in-law was born, his parents were so happy because they saw the US as the best country and it was their dream for their son to speak English, even though German was spoken at home. When WWII broke out, my father-in-law was told to tell anyone if asked that they were Russians, not Germans. Eventually, they moved to the southwestern corner of Michigan and bought farmland. This is definitely going in my to be stitched now category! On behalf of the non-Mennonite Funks, thank you! ❤

  • @alicebaskervil4475
    @alicebaskervil4475 2 месяца назад

    That's really interesting story. As a Ukrainian I just would like to ask you to call modern Ukrainian territory as Ukrainian and mention about it more. Especially while we fight with russians for this land with our blood. And Molotschna is a Ukrainian name (if it was russian it would be Molotschnaya). This is very important for us that more and more people will learn about these differences across the world.