Houston daily journal. (Perry, GA) 2006-current, November 04, 2006, Page Page 6, Image 80
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people feel good about themselves and where they live.”
Groves conceived the idea in 2001 to brighten an abandoned tobacco barn on
her family's property in Manchester, Ohio. The barn became her canvas to paint
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Oil.
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The barn quilts,
painted mostly
by neighbors and
other volunteers,
“make people
feel good about
themselves and
where they live.”
—Donna Sue Groves
IK! ■
a colorful quilt square to honor her mother, an accom
plished quilter. But the mural soon morphed into an
k arts-based tourist attraction that other communities
began imitating
1 jw-' * £i£
In 2004, 13 barns in Grundy County were
painted, followed by another 12 in 2005. The
colorful quilt murals have attracted a steadv
stream of visitors —some in cars, some in
buses—who follow the county's seven-town
“Quilt Loop," along which they often grab
IB
TV
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lunch or peruse local shops.
To Julie McNair, co-owner of the
General Store in Conrad (pop. 1,066),
1 the barn project came at a good time.
B A recently completed highway, U.S.
20, had set a faster pace that encour
aged cars to whiz past area towns
without stopping. "We needed to
have something that would pull
people olt the highway, that
would get people to come and
■ say, Gee whiz, there is some
■ thing in Grundy County besides
black dirt, corn and soybeans!" savs
■ McNair, 53, who heads the county’s
barn quilt committee, which coor-
SB dinates painting assignments.
Grundy County residents aren't
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