Kansas Flint Hills Barn Quilt Trail
Drive through the countryside anywhere in Rural America and
you will most likely come across many barns. They drape the landscape in many
designs, colors and architecture. Some
barns are painted to display advertisements. Years ago a woman named Donna Sue
Groves, from Adams County, Ohio wanted to honor her mother by hanging a
colorful painted quilt block on her barn. She soon began a community project in
which twenty quilt blocks were displayed along a driving trail to encourage
visitors to travel through the countryside. This was the start of the first quilt
trail in America.
According to Suzi Parron who authored Barn Quilts and the American Quilt Trail
Movement, quilt trails are now being organized all across the
country. Quilt
blocks are displayed on barns around the countryside and then
mapped out for tourists to follow these amazing works of art. The quilt trails draw visitors into our rural
communities as well as promote county-wide pride and showcase agriculture.
Traditional stars and various quilt patterns are now being
displayed on barns, homes, sheds and sides of buildings throughout the Flint
Hills. They are also put on posts and displayed in yards and parks. The Flint
Hills Tourism Coalition is currently developing a Flint Hills Quilt Trail. New
participants are welcome to join the trail. If you have a quilt block on a barn
or building, or you are interested in displaying a quilt block on a barn or
building, and want to become part of the Kansas Flint Hills Quilt Trail, please
contact Connie Larson, Alta Vista Ag Heritage Park, President, at 785-532-8393.
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