For example, in ante-bellum America, local anti-slavery or missionary "sewing circles were complementary, not competing, organisations that allowed [women] to act on their concern for creating a more just and moral society".
[1] Other examples of sewing circles include the Fragment Society, the Mennonite Sewing Circle, and those organized by RMS Titanic survivor Emily Goldsmith aboard the rescue ship RMS Carpathia: Goldsmith, "a talented seamstress, organized sewing circles to make garments out of cloth and blankets for those passengers dressed in nightclothes when they entered the lifeboats.
"[2] During World War II, sewing circles were formed to help people "make do and mend" in response to rationing in the United Kingdom.
[3] Elizabeth II hosted sewing circles twice a week, with both palace staff and aristocrats attending.
[7] Sewing circle is also the phrase used (by Marlene Dietrich, for instance[8]) to describe the group of lesbian and bisexual woman writers and actresses, such as Mercedes de Acosta and Tallulah Bankhead, and their relationships in celebrity circles and in Hollywood, United States, particularly during Hollywood's Golden Age from the 1910s to the 1950s.