HI Karen and All,  I was so excited to see Sara Hadley's name that I
didn't absorb your question.  I don't remember much about her patterns for
bobbin lace.  She did branch out in 1903 when her magazine started.  I
know I've seen an ad for her shop that mentions classes in many types of
lace, I'll see if I can find that and let you know what it says.

She may also have mentioned bobbin lace in her Ladies' Home Journal
columns.  I'll look though my copies and notes.  I think the Home
Needlework articles were all about Battenberg lace but I'm not positive. 
I can't remember if she was in Corticelli's Home Needlework or not.

Here is the big scoop!!  I got a copy of Art of Modern Lace-Making from
Amazon and it is the 1891 edition.  In The Story of Battenberg Lace by EA
Eaton and EL Denton 1970 the authors mention uncertainty about who
invented Battenberg Lace.  Sara does take credit for creating Battenberg
Lace in her writings but here is what is in the 1891 edition says - I find
it a little hard to figure out what the author is trying to say <G>.

"Strictly modern lace-making is a result of American ingenuity, and it has
so simple a basis and is so easy to learn that any woman of average skill
may, with little difficulty, produce by its different processes, laces
that are really magnificent and quite as substantial and useful as they
are exquisitely beautiful.  In America modern lace-making has been
developed to a high degree of perfection by its pioneer, Mrs. Grace B.
McCormick in whose designing rooms at No. 923 Broadway, New York, may be
seen specimens of modern laces of every variety, from dainty needle-point
to a very elaborate kind known as the Royal Battenburg (sic).  This
English name for an American production was selected in honor of the
Battenburg (sic) nuptials, which occurred about the time a patent for
making the lace was applied for at Washington.  Only a few years have
elapsed since this plucky little woman made a single piece of lace edging
from common braid as an experiment, and sold it for a trifling sum.  Love
for the work and perseverance have enabled her to overcome obstacles that
would have discouraged a woman of ordinary energy, and she has gradually
improved upon her earlier methods until modern lace occupies a front rank
among the numerous dainty forms of needle-work of the day."

Actually I see that Grace is credited with Modern (tape) Lace not just
B'berg.  I have to check my notes but I'm almost positive Grace McCormick
is Sara's sister's married name (she also had a Sara Hadley shop in
Portland, OR!). Also I'm not sure what a pioneer is - creator or
perfector?  There were articles on Featheredge Braid laces in earlier
magazines and fagoting has been around a very, very long time.

So those are my secret tidbits.  I don't see a reason to keep them secret.
 Our lace history is for all of us!!

Jane in Vermont, USA where lawns are greening up but the leaves are still
waiting to show themselves.
jvik...@sover.net




> Does anyone know when Sara Hadley published her bobbin lace patterns?  I
have spent a good many hours trying to find information with no luck. At
the Smithsonian American History Museum we have some of her patterns. I
am
> guessing from the early 1900's as they are very similar to the ones
copyrighted by the Torchon Lace Co (Princess Lace Loom or Machine), and
in
> fact were donated with a Princess lace pillow, patterns and books. I
have
> found when she lived (1860-1927). She had a lace shop in New York in the
early 1900's and published books through Butterick, where she was an
editor, and in Ladies' magazines. She claimed to have invented
Battenberg
> lace, which she called "Modern Lace". In 1901 she writes in "Modern Lace
Making": “Pillow lace, while exceedingly dainty and pretty, is not
adaptable to the workers of today”, so I am guessing her bobbin lace
patterns are later. She mostly published on tape lace (Modern Lace
Making
> or Battenburg), but also on crochet, hardanger, filet and Romanian Point
(cut work) among other laces.
> Thank you
> ​-​
> Karen
> ​in chilly but sunny Washington, DC​
>
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