We must begin your education by shouting very
loudly that cotton blankets were never sold to Indians.
Rather, they were marketed from the outset as the proper choice for the beach,
car, camp, summer cabin, etc. and primarily sold through dry goods stores and
giant retailers like Sears and J.C. Penney.
Cotton Indian pattern blankets were produced by two companies - Beacon
Manufacturing Company and Esmond Mills. Cotton blankets are generically referred
to as Beacon blankets but in truth many so-called Beacon blankets are simply
Esmond blankets that have lost their labels.
Beacon began in New Bedford, Massachusetts in 1905
and started making Indian patterns 5 or 6 years later. They opened
another mill in Swannanoa, North Carolina in 1925 and eventually
consolidated their entire operation there. The
company closed for good just a few years ago and has since burned to the
ground.
Esmond Mills was located in a section of Smithfield, Rhode Island known as Esmond. Esmond was Beacon's largest
competitor not only in Indian patterns, but also in many other types of cotton
blankets.
Both mills began using
cotton blended with synthetics such as rayon and acrylic in later years. It
is only the earlier pure cotton blankets from these companies that
are sought by serious collectors.
WHY ARE THESE BLANKETS CALLED
CAMP BLANKETS?
This term originated on the east coast - these blankets were packed
off to summer camps with countless young members of the Caucasian
tribe. They were also used on camping trips and in the magnificent rustic
Adirondack retreats known as the Great Camps. Also, they have been used at Camp
David by all our presidents. I just made that last bit up and don't think
for a moment that I'm proud of myself.
ARE THE SIZES AND DESIRABLE
COLORS THE SAME AS IN WOOL TRADE BLANKETS?
Pretty much. Again, 5' x 6' is generally the standard minimum size. Primary
colors are the most desirable with one notable exception. Primarily violet or
lavender colored blankets are highly prized colors in camp blankets and carry a premium price tag
if condition and pattern are also excellent.
SHOULD I COLLECT WOOL OR
COTTON BLANKETS?
I
collect both and there are solid arguments for each type. With wool there's
the mystique of the Indian trade, but cotton enthusiasts argue that wool
blankets are scratchy; a dream meal for moths and that some people are allergic
to wool. Cotton blankets are soft, much easier to take care of and some feature
a very desirable design element known as....
OMBRE. IS THIS A SKIN
DISEASE? COME ON, BARRY, WHAT THE HELL IS IT?
Ombre is the name given to colors or tones that shade into each other and
the ombre effect is what makes the best cotton blankets great. Beacon was the
master of ombre patterns and a couple fine 1920's examples are pictured on this
page.
PICTORIAL BLANKETS...UH OH!
The
bane of collecting cotton Indian blankets are the old cotton/synthetic blend
blankets seen at every flea market and antique mall in the country. These fuzzy
and often pictorial pieces of junk most often date from the 40's and 50's.
Serious collectors do not buy them at any price. These blankets pill like a bad
sweater if they're cleaned even once. Most of the pictorial blankets one
sees are these woven nightmares both in Indian and cowboy pictorial
patterns. Surprisingly, few pure cotton pictorial blankets were
made and though scarce are not particularly valuable. On the
other hand, wool pictorial blankets carry some of the heftiest price
tags in the hobby.
