Description
Those familiar with the Hands Across the Sea Samplers’ portfolio will recognise the names of the sisters Ann and Isabella Uffindell. It was whilst we were reproducing the sisters that Ruth Bates found us.
A sampler, badly in need of cleaning and repair that was stitched by a Ruth Bates when she was just eight years old, came up for auction. Ruth’s sampler had so many similarities to Isabella’s that there had to be a connection. We were able to make contact with one of Ruth’s descendants, a medieval archivist who had some information on the family’s history. Ruth was born in Plaistow, London, on August 16, 1815 to Joseph Bates and Esther Bates, née Cartwright.
The most interesting rabbit hole that Ruth’s sampler took us down was how Isabella and Ruth came to stitch two similar samplers six years apart at a time when children were educated in many different ways, or not at all, depending on their parents’ financial situation, social class, religion, and values?
We believe the connection is the governess Elizabeth Bates, Ruth’s unmarried paternal aunt. Whilst Ruth’s father was alive it would have been natural for his unmarried sister to live with the family and assist with the care and education of his young daughters. Elizabeth probably taught Ruth to stitch using her own childhood sampler to work from.
Ruth’s father died whilst she was still a young girl. Her mother, in reduced circumstances and living off an annuity, moved the family from Plaistow into a smaller house in St Leonard’s, Shoreditch. An area popular with nonconformist families and a very short distance from Finsbury and the Uffindells.
It is possible that there was not enough space for Elizabeth to continue to live with the family and without her brother’s financial support, she had to seek work as a governess. On the 1841 census Elizabeth was recorded as lodging with the Uffindells.
The Uffindells were not in the financial position or class to employ a governess but it is possible that when Elizabeth was not teaching her charges, she spent some of her leisure time teaching Isabella and Ann needlework, either through kindness or as part payment towards her rent. This would explain why Ruth and Isabella’s samplers have so many similarities.
The design is suitable for intermediate and advanced needleworkers but is not beyond a determined beginner. The stitches used are cross stitch over 1 and 2 threads and satin stitch.
Laundry Room - Symbols
Au Ver a Soie 146 Soie d Alger
Au Ver a Soie 144 Soie d Alger
Classic Colorworks CCT-14 Ginger Snap
Au Ver a Soie 116 Soie d Alger
Weeks Dye Works Perle 5 - Baked Apple #1330
Petite Fille en Rouge by Gigi R Designs
DMC 3731 Stranded Cotton
Colour Streams 50 Silken Strands Blackberry Ripple
DMC 300 Stranded Cotton
Au Ver a Soie 234 Soie d Alger
Au Ver a Soie 112 Soie d Alger
Au Ver a Soie 161 Soie d Alger
Classic Colorworks CCT-024 Pink Posey
Au Ver a Soie 122 Soie d Alger
Au Ver a Soie 235 Soie d Alger
Au Ver a Soie 126 Soie d Alger
DMC 107 Stranded Cotton
Au Ver a Soie 206 Soie d Alger
Cheer - Made My Day - Forest
Au Ver a Soie 224 Soie d Alger
Classic Colorworks CCT-013 Finley Gold
DMC 159 Stranded Cotton
New Flame - Made My Day - Sweetly
FARM FUN PATTERN 900
Fabulous Foxes
Au Ver a Soie 143 Soie d Alger
Au Ver a Soie 221 Soie d Alger
Gentle Art Sampler Threads 0111 Sea Spray
Love Lily - Scribble Dot - Blueberry
PINEAPPLE PASSION
Sue Spargo Ellana #12 EN19 Seaspray
Nurge Plastic Square No. 4 Hoop 25cm x 28cm
Au Ver a Soie 114 Soie d Alger
Wool Blend Felt - Olive 0731 
