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Elsie Allen

Elsie Allen
Born Elsie Comanche Allen
(1899-09-22)September 22, 1899
California
Died December 31, 1990(1990-12-31) (aged 91)
California
Nationality Pomo
Education Self-taught
Known for Basket weaving

Elsie Allen (22 September 1899 – 31 December 1990) was a Native American Pomo basket weaver from the Cloverdale Rancheria of Pomo Indians of California in Northern California, significant as for historically categorizing and teaching Californian Indian basket patterns and techniques and sustaining traditional Pomo basketry as an art form.

Elsie Comanche Allen was born on 22 September 1899 near Santa Rosa, California. Her parents, George and Annie Comanche (Comanche is an Anglicized version of the Pomo name, Gomachu), were farm laborers. Her father died when she was eight. Soon after, her mother remarried and moved the family to Hopland. Elsie's first language was Pomo. This was the only language she spoke until she was 13, when she began learning English at school near Hopland. In addition to Hopland, Elsie lived in several Pomo communities, including Cloverdale and Pinoleville Rancherias.

Elsie married Arthur Allen, a northern Pomo, in 1919. Together the couple had four children, Genevieve, Leonard, Dorothy, and George.

Elsie came from a family of accomplished basketweavers, including her mother, Annie Ramon Gomachu Burke (1876–1962) and her maternal grandmother, Mary Arnold (1845–1925), both of Cloverdale Rancheria. Elsie's mother, Annie founded the Pomo Indian Women's Club, which promotes the tribe's basketry. She also convinced Elsie to break with tradition and not burn or bury her baskets – instead to keep them for future basketmakers.

Although she learned to weave as a child, Allen was only able to weave full-time at the age of 62, when her children were all grown. During the 1950s and 1960s, interest in basketry among Pomo had waned, so Allen began teaching anyone interested in learning her technique, which created controversy in her tribe. She taught at the Mendocino Art Center. Late in her career, Elsie Allen began using commercial materials in her baskets after receiving a vision. One of her last students was her niece, Susan Billy.

Allen worked with linguist Abraham M. Halpern to document the Southern Pomo language.


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