Frances Louisa Goodrich Explained

Frances Louisa Goodrich
Birth Date:September 15, 1856
Birth Place:Binghamton, New York
Death Place:Asheville, North Carolina
Field:Weaving, Fiber Arts
Alma Mater:Yale School of Fine Arts

Frances Louisa Goodrich (September 15, 1856 – February 20, 1944) was an American weaver, writer, and archivist. She is best known for founding the Allanstand Cottage Industries in 1887.[1]

Biography

Goodrich was born on September 15, 1856, in Binghamton, New York.[2] Her father was a Presbyterian minister and a proponent of the Social Gospel movement.[1] She attended Yale School of Fine Arts and in 1890 she located to North Carolina where she was a volunteer teacher at College Hill.[3] In 1895 she was given a handmade, overshot-woven Double Bow Knot coverlette.[4] She admired the craftsmanship and she then turned her attention to the craft.

In 1897 Goodrich established Allanstand Cottage Industries with the mission of providing a way for rural women to earn money and to keep the craft of Appalachian weaving alive.[5] Weaving was particularly suitable as a cash craft for rural women as it could be completed as time allowed, with the weaver simply marking their stopping point with a pin.[1]

In 1900 Goodrich held the first exhibition of Allanstand crafts, and in 1908 she opened a store in the populated city of Asheville, North Carolina.[1] In 1930 Goodrich helped organize the Southern Highland Handicraft Guild (now the Southern Highland Craft Guild) .[2] [6]

Goodrich collected the traditional patterns for the looms. She also wrote a book entitled Mountain Homespun: The Crafts and People of the Southern Appalachians. It was published in 1931 by Yale University Press.[7]

Goodrich donated her textile collection to the Southern Highland Craft Guild.[8] [9]

She died on February 20, 1944, in Asheville, North Carolina.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Koplos . Janet . Metcalf . Bruce . Makers: a history of American studio craft . 2010 . University of North Carolina press . Chapel Hill . 9780807834138 . 135–136.
  2. Web site: Goodrich, Frances Louisa . NCpedia . 9 January 2024.
  3. Web site: Frances Louisa Goodrich . Swannanoa Valley Museum & History Center . 9 January 2024 . 20 May 2020.
  4. Web site: Double Bow Knot Coverlet . Historic Weaving . 9 January 2024 . 3 April 2013.
  5. Web site: Craft Revival: Shaping Western North Carolina Past and Present . Western Carolina University . 9 January 2024.
  6. Web site: Southern Highland Craft Guild . Southern Highland Craft Guild . 9 January 2024 . 6 April 2024.
  7. Web site: Goodrich . Frances Louisa . Mountain homespun . New Haven, Yale University Press; London, H. Milford, Oxford University Press, 1931. . 9 January 2024 . 1931.
  8. Web site: Danielle Burke on Frances Louisa Goodrich . Asheville Made . 9 January 2024.
  9. Web site: Frances Louisa Goodrich . Buncombe County Special Collections . 10 January 2024 . 30 March 2015.