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NewsOctober 7, 2001

CUMBERLAND, Md. -- They come to the visitor center three times a week with a singular purpose: to piece together colorful swatches of fabric. They will cut and stitch and turn rags into rich and glorious quilts that will comfort the sick and forlorn and give their own spirits a boost...

By David Dishneau, The Associated Press

CUMBERLAND, Md. -- They come to the visitor center three times a week with a singular purpose: to piece together colorful swatches of fabric.

They will cut and stitch and turn rags into rich and glorious quilts that will comfort the sick and forlorn and give their own spirits a boost.

The eight men belong to a quilting club at the minimum-security Federal Prison Camp in western Maryland. Some savor the artistic challenge of designing and creating a quilt from heaps of donated fabric. Thirty-year-old Jason Haigh discovered other reasons to be proud of his handiwork.

"It has a calming influence," says Haigh, who is serving a 12 1/2-year sentence for drug conspiracy. "I haven't actually done anything positive in a long time. Some of my guys kind of give me a hard time but it doesn't matter. I do it for me, not for them."

Quilting for charity

There was initial reluctance to join this unlikeliest of prison clubs, but only until the men learned where the quilts were going. About three dozen quilts were donated to Project Linus, a national charity connected to children's hospitals. Two dozen more went to the Family Crisis Resource Center, which helps victims of domestic abuse.

"I have a little boy, 4 years old this year, and I kind of thought, 'What if he were sick and he got a quilt?' It would be kind of nice if he got something to hold on to," Haigh says.

The prison club was formed two years ago by a member of the local Schoolhouse Quilters Guild. Since Todd Adams, a drug offender, learned how to cut and stitch, he has made nine or 10 quilts of increasing complexity. He has also become a teacher.

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An inmate's first quilt goes to charity; his second goes home.

Kenneth Yount sent one home to Orange, Va., when his first grandchild, also named Kenneth, was born. The baby died three months later of crib death. He was buried in the quilt.

Two quilts the inmates produced as group projects display other sorrows. One, called "To Daddy With Love," features 22 panels derived from letters and multicolored crayon drawings made by prisoners' children.

"I love you, Dad. I wish you could come home tomorrow," says a stick-figure girl in one of the panels.

"Memories of Men Behind Bars" incorporates 33 images: a guitar behind bars, a rose encircled by thorns, and Reginald Johnson's cryptic sketch of a courtroom, captioned, "Judge me by twelve before you carry me with six."

The quilts have won prizes at contests sponsored by the Schoolhouse Quilters Guild, some of whose members volunteer as quilting coaches at the 250-bed prison camp.

"To be perfectly honest, the first time we came, we were a little nervous," says coach Linda Leathersich.

Steven Finger, executive assistant for the prison camp and adjacent medium-security prison, said quilting is just one of the community-service projects inmates are encouraged to join.

The prison quilters are not paid -- they have other jobs in the institution -- and the handiwork doesn't reduce their prison time, Finger says.

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