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Jessie T. Pettway, quilt maker extraordinaire, has been relentlessly producing masterpieces for decades.

Pettway, nicknamed “Bootnie,” has been quilting since her childhood in Gee’s Bend, a couple hours south of Birmingham. Like all the coolest artists (looking at you, Andy Warhol) Pettway chose her own moniker. Originally J.T., Pettway chose the name “Jessie” after her teacher, making her the best student in history. Name changes show far more dedication than apples and flimsy Starbucks gift cards.

Pettway’s creations are part of the larger local quilting tradition. In the 1800s, Gee’s Bend was a plantation town with enslaved black workers. With emancipation came a new era of sharecropping in the community. In the 30s, the federal government bought the land and ownership was finally transferred to the black residents of Gee’s Bend. Discrimination, of course, continued; the local ferry was even shut down to keep black residents from their right to vote. Pettway’s take on Gee’s Bend’s unsavory history is frank: “I don't see no great change. White folks get a little nicer, laughing with you now, but it's phony.”

Pettway’s guardian, Aunt Seebell, taught her the local trade. Although she learned young, Pettway certainly wasn’t swimming in free time. She walked five miles to school (a distance many may be guilty of traversing with an Uber) and worked in the house and fields. The talented superwoman managed to become an artist of acclaim despite the hours she dedicated to milking, farming, and everyday chores. She was even featured in a 2006 US stamp collection.

Pettway herself, like many artistic prodigies, doesn’t always get the hype around her own creations. She called a particularly famous quilt she made “just a lot of strings sewed together.” Museums, however, disagree with Pettway’s diagnosis, and for good reason. Most of us could never reach her level of mastery (a few woefully inadequate middle school crafts come to mind). Regardless, the matter of fact quilt maker’s fame persists, and Pettway continues to be featured in books, galleries, and exhibitions galore.

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Here is what Wikipedia says about Jessie T. Pettway

Jessie T. Pettway (1929–2023) was an American artist associated with the Gee's Bend group of quilters.

In 2006 her quilt Bars and string-pieced columns appeared on a US Postal service stamp as part of a series commemorating Gee's Bend quilters. Her work is included in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago and the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco.

Life

A woman of many names, Jessie T. Pettway was given the name J.T. at birth, most called her by her nickname, "Bootnie," and she always referred to herself as "Jessie," after her favorite school teacher.

Jessie T. Pettway was born in Primrose, Alabama, to a single mother, Channie Pettway. Although she knew her father, Joe Benning, and passed his house frequently, he did not play an active role in her or her siblings' lives. Her mother died at a young age, and she and her siblings lived with her mother's sister, Seebell Kennedy ("Little Sis"), and her husband, Alp Kennedy, thereafter.

Their days were long and filled with chores before and after school. Their farm grew cotton, corn, peas, peanuts, and sweet potatoes, as well as the variety of vegetables that were on their own plot for subsistence use. They also raised livestock, such as goats and hogs.

Pettway completed schooling up to the eleventh grade. She married Monroe Pettway and together they raised seven girls and two boys.

Pettway died in 2023, at the age of 94.

Check out the full Wikipedia article about Jessie T. Pettway