Iconic McCoy quilt gifted to Tulalip Boys & Girls Club

By Micheal Rios, Tulalip News

As the legend goes, in 2003 John McCoy and his wife Jeannie attended a Boys & Girls Club Auction where they enthusiastically bid on, and ultimately won, a one-of-a-kind quilt. That quilt was so precious to John that he took it with him to Olympia where it remained a fixture for 17 years while he served in the Washington State Legislature.

Senator McCoy (deceased) served in the Washington State Legislature for 17 years, where he was one of the state’s longest-serving Native American lawmakers. 

While he served more than 10 years in the Washington House of Representatives, the quilt hung on his office wall. When he transitioned to the State Senate and proudly represented the 38th Legislative District for another 7 years, the quilt remained with him, still affixed to his office wall.

John retired from public service in 2020 and passed away in 2023, just a few months shy of his 80th birthday. Following his passing, Chairwoman Teri Gobin said, “John had a national recognition for being an innovative and visionary leader. He brought legislation forward not only for the Tribes but for the State of Washington and so many communities throughout Indian Country. He promoted bills on environment protection, health care, Native voting rights and education. Today, our children are benefiting from what John worked tireless to implement on the State, County, and Tribal levels.”

Recently, Jeannie McCoy was doing some reorganizing at her home and came across a particular quilt that had been folded and boxed up with this office things. As quickly as she recognized which quilt it was, she also recognized the need for it to be gifted to a new home. 

“The entire time he was in Olympia, he had this practice of hanging up quilts and Pendleton blankets in his office. That Boys & Girls Club quilt was the very first one he ever hung up. It was a constant reminder that he was always working to make things better for the kids,” explained Jeannie, John’s wife of an astounding 58 years. “I wasn’t sure if the Boys & Girls Club would even want it, but I thought it was important to reach out and ask them. The Club staff were happy to have it and I was thrilled for it to have a new home.”

When Jeannie and her daughter Sheila arrived at the Club with the quilt, they were met by staff who were eager to accept the heartwarming gift. One of those staff members was Diane Prouty, who the kids affectionately call ‘grandma Diane’.

John’s daughter Sheila, Tulalip Club office manager Diane Prouty, John’s wife Jeannie, Tulalip Club director Shawn Sanchey, and B&GC Club of Snohomish County executive director Bill Tsoukalas. (photo courtesy Shawn Sanchey)

“It was a literal blast from the past. When I saw the quilt, it brought me to goosebumps and tears because I remembered making it with two other wonderful ladies, Mona Vallo and Marie Davis, who are both deceased,” shared Diane. The quilt not only found a home, it had found one of its original makers.

“Within the quilt are hundreds of little hearts. Those hearts represent the hundreds of kids our Club serves every day,” she added. “And the hands that form the border, those represent the staff, mentors and coaches who protect the kids and want to help create the brightest, happiest memories for every kid who walks through our doors.”

John and Jeannie McCoy’s grandchildren and great-children are among the countless number of Tulalip youth who’ve found sanctuary at the reservation’s Club. A safe place where kids can just be kids and rely on the consistency of warm meals and warm-hearted staff members. Plans are in the works to have the quilt hung on one of the walls in the gym. Where it can serve as a reminder to make things better for the kids, like it meant to John for all those years.

“The development of the Tulalip Boys & Girls Club and all the partnerships it’s been able to establish that have really made not just the kids’ lives better, but the Tribe better, too, is something John was always proud of,” said Jeannie. “I can’t think of a better place for the quilt to be.”