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Michigan League of Handweavers History Project Collection
Michigan has a history rich in the art and craft of handweaving dating back to the region's
settlement by indigenous peoples. During the 20th century interest in handweaving especially
flourished: it was a focus of study at such schools as Cranbrook Academy of Art; Michigan native
Harriet Tidball established her internationally distributed publication Shuttle Craft in Lansing;
and, during the 1930s Hartland, Michigan was the third largest producer of hand woven items in the
United States. The Michigan League of Handweavers (MLH) joined with the Michigan State University
Museum to research, document, and collect this history and, in particular, the history of the MLH
and its members.
The Michigan League of Handweavers (MLH) History Project resulted in a collection of materials
dating primarily from the 1950s to the present and including handwoven garments, textiles, and
handweaving ephemera, including guild histories and scrapbooks; and field notes and oral histories
based on interviews with weavers, teachers, guild officers, shop owners, some of whom were charter
members and presidents of MHL. Those interviewed included Peggy Adams, Susan Aaron-Taylor,
Beatrice Alexander, Eunice Anders, JoAnn Bachelder, Martha Brownscombe, Jean Brudzinski, Elizabeth
Clark, Helen Coats, Bill Colburn (Harriet Tidball's brother), Elizabeth Colburn (Harriet Tidball's
niece), Libby Crawford, Jean Darling, Jochen Ditterich, Reade Dornan, Verda Elliott, Mollie
Fletcher, Sharon Ford, Jim Gibbs (Harriet Tidball's nephew), Dotty Goodwin, Alice Griswold, June
Grossbart, Betty Hagberg, Sally Helvenston, Alice Henwood, Bill Horning, Carol Isleib, Esther
James, Urban Jupena, Robert Kidd, Toini Kipilla, Jeanne Kish, Gerhardt Knodel, Ruth Korzon, Karen
Kunze, Jane Lackey, Elizabeth Leifer, Joyce M. Lemin, Lois Lewis, Brenda Mergen, Muriel Neeland,
Peg Newport, Loretta Oliver, Nancy Peck, Sally Rose, Mary Sayler, Bernice Sizemore, Sherri Smith,
Armida Stewart, Renata Taylor, Pat Williams, Margaret Windeknecht, Barbara Wittenberg, and Karen
Yackell.
Significant donations to the collections include items woven by Rosalind (Roz) Berlin and Bernice
Sizemore, an 18th century wool plaid blanket, and a wool reproduction War of 1812 blanket, woven
and donated by Alice and Howard Griswold, East Lansing weavers whose work has been much in demand
and is included in the collections of the Smithsonian and Ellis Island. These items enrich the
Museum's already existing collection of handwoven items from around the world and a growing
collection of American items, including examples of linen and cotton toweling and sheeting, table
cloths, runners, and wool blankets, many of which date from c. 1816-1840 and most of which are
undocumented as to the maker.
Donors/Fieldworkers:
Rosalind (Roz) Berlin, Patty Beyer, Nadine Cloutier, member from Eastside Handweavers, Marie Gile,
Lestra Hazel, Karen Krause, Kris Krumanaker, Midge Lewis, Marion Marzolf, Loretta Oliver, Nancy
Peck, Bernice Sizemore, Patricia Toczydlowski, Ruth Whitmyer, Margaret Windeknecht, and Karen
Yackell.
Related Collections:
Arab and Arab-American Collections
Ethiopian Material Culture Collection
Southeast Asian Hill Tribe Textiles and Hmong-American Textiles Collection
Finnish-American Rag Rug Collection
Great Lakes Indian Dance Regalia Project Collection
4-H History Collection
The Michigan Quilt Project
North
American Indian and Native Hawaiian Quilt Collection
Michigan
African American Quilt Collection
International
Textile Collection
Merry
and Albert Silber Quilt Collection
Kitty
Clark Cole Quilt Collection
Mary
Schafer Quilt and Ephemera Collection
The
Clarke Family Quilt Collection
Durkee-Blakeslee-Quarton-Hoard
Family Quilt Collection
The
Deborah Harding Redwork Collection
Nineteenth Century American Woven Coverlet Collection
History of MSU Collection
Shao Chang Lee Chinese Textile Collection
Military History Collection
Warren Featherbone Collection
Michigan Heritage Basket Collection
Navajo Rug Collection
Exhibitions:
"Fascination with Fiber: Michigan's Handweaving Heritage", Michigan State University Museum, East
Lansing, Michigan, March - December 2004.
Publications:
Marie A. Gile and Marion T. Marzolf, "Fascination with Fiber: Michigan's Handweaving Heritage". Ann
Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2006.
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