Needlepoint Farm

The Warren D. Neal farm, Madison County, Iowa, four miles south of Dexter. Old Creamery Road is along the right side, with a tiny red flag on the rural mailbox.

I stitched the needlepoint in 1976 for Dad, who built the house between about 1961 and 1963. Artistic license: Lilacs are blooming, corn tasseled, and the pumpkins are ripe. We still lived in Colorado, so I plotted everything from photos. 

It sits where my childhood house was, so everything else is very familiar. The upper part of the granary is where I caught a mouse but it bit my finger as I climbed down. I haven’t been fond of mice since then.

Sis Gloria and I helped pull “square” bales of hay off the elevator in the haymow which faced the house. We also played with Minnie and her kittens in there.

Dad built the house from 1961-1964.
1971 - the garage
1953 - granery
1973 - hoghouse on granery
1968 - wooden gravity wagon
1952 - hog shed
1964 - farrowing house
1960-1963 - grain bins

Dudley, my sister’s cat, the only “farm animal,” is on the porch.

The two-bedroom house has cement floors, except in the kitchen. Underneath the kitchen is the old cellar with steps leading down to it from a utility room. The cellar doors on the old house were below the kitchen windows, outside to the south.

There’s no furnace. Electrical heat radiates from the ceilings in each room. Above is an unfinished attic. Now my sister lives in the house, which she had painted white.

The basic needlepoint stitch seemed hard on my hands, so that hobby didn’t last as long as most of the others. Does anyone do needlepoint anymore?

32 comments

  1. That is so intricate and special. Grandma Katie Scar taught me to embroider the winter I was 9. She bought 6 white dish towels at Mrs. Creamer’s store in Dexter. She ironed on outlines of cartoonish kitchen pots, pans, skillet, etc. surrounded by various vegetable and fruit characters with facial features. I finished all 6 and had developed many stitch techniques. I was very popular in college, pilot training and in the Marines. Sewing on buttons and bigger jobs. I still hand sew often, patching and other tasks.

  2. I’m very impressed with the detail of your project, Joy. How many hours/days would you estimate went into this project?

  3. I reread my earlier comment. I think the Five and Dime/Variety store was Craemer’s. “E” and “A” reversed. Do you remember. It was between Adkins Grocery and Jensen Hardware. I remain fond of Dexter. I consider it my hometown even if I didn’t go to school there.

  4. Your needlepoint is beautiful! I have several that my aunts made for me. I deeply appreciate them. I also have some chairs with cushions that were done by them…so lovely!

  5. Mrs. Kraemer, Yes ! Thank you, Joy. For a young, farm boy the store had “millions” of merchandise things. I remember walking around, just fascinated by “all the stuff”. As a budding coin collector, her store was one of my stops asking to exchange a copper cent for a 1943 steel cent.

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