• FABRIC
    • KITS ON SALE
    • THREAD
    • NOTIONS & TOOLS
    • PATTERNS
    • BATTING-FUSIBLES-STABILZERS
    • Book Shop
    • HAND EMBROIDERY
    • SALE!
    • Quilts for SALE in our Etsy Shop
    • FREE PATTERNS
    • FAQ
    • ABOUT US
  • Contact
  • SEARCH 🔎
  • Blog
  • Sign In My Account
Menu

Rocking Chair Quilts

301 S Meadow St
Grant Park, IL, 60940
(815)465-2428
Make a Quilt - Enjoy the Sew!®

Rocking Chair Quilts

  • Quilt Shop
    • FABRIC
    • KITS ON SALE
    • THREAD
    • NOTIONS & TOOLS
    • PATTERNS
    • BATTING-FUSIBLES-STABILZERS
    • Book Shop
    • HAND EMBROIDERY
    • SALE!
    • Quilts for SALE in our Etsy Shop
    • FREE PATTERNS
    • FAQ
    • ABOUT US
  • Contact
  • SEARCH 🔎
  • Blog
  • Sign In My Account
MISS MOLLIE FACEBOOK COVER.png

MISS MOLLIE BY BETSY CHUTCHIAN FOR MODA FABRICS

Miss Mollie. Her story is similar to other women who followed her husband’s dream of striking it rich, mining for gold in the Colorado Rockies in the mid 1800’s. Mollie Dorsey 1838-1915, was far more practical than husband to be Byron Sanford, insisting on a 3 year engagement so they could save earnings for a good start. He a blacksmith and she a seamstress, made a good wage in Nebraska City, but one bad venture after another, once married in 1859, Pike’s Peak fever lured By to the mountain camps to try his luck. Mollie tired of being left alone, bought a wagon and drove herself to join him in Colorado. At the different camps, often the only female, she cooked, sewed and took in laundry, lived in shanties, boarding houses, tents, then later, a soldiers barracks when By joined the Union Army. Mollie’s sewing skills saw her through. Gold played out, By tried ranching but at last they, with two young children, settled in Denver where By took a good, steady job with the Denver Mint.

MISS MOLLIE BY BETSY CHUTCHIAN FOR MODA FABRICS

Miss Mollie. Her story is similar to other women who followed her husband’s dream of striking it rich, mining for gold in the Colorado Rockies in the mid 1800’s. Mollie Dorsey 1838-1915, was far more practical than husband to be Byron Sanford, insisting on a 3 year engagement so they could save earnings for a good start. He a blacksmith and she a seamstress, made a good wage in Nebraska City, but one bad venture after another, once married in 1859, Pike’s Peak fever lured By to the mountain camps to try his luck. Mollie tired of being left alone, bought a wagon and drove herself to join him in Colorado. At the different camps, often the only female, she cooked, sewed and took in laundry, lived in shanties, boarding houses, tents, then later, a soldiers barracks when By joined the Union Army. Mollie’s sewing skills saw her through. Gold played out, By tried ranching but at last they, with two young children, settled in Denver where By took a good, steady job with the Denver Mint.

Expected to arrive during July of 2026

<BACK TO FABRIC INDEX

 

OUR FABRIC IS PRICED BY THE 1/2 YARD

READ MORE ABOUT IT HERE.