
![]()
Asheville
Art Museum | Asheville-Buncombe
Library | UNC
Asheville |
YMI
Cultural Center
Allanstand was the creation of Frances Goodrich who
settled in the Brittain's Cove region of Madison County, N.C.. She came
to the North Carolina mountains as a social worker employed by the
Women's Board of Home Missions of the Presbyterian Church around 1895.
While there, she became enchanted with the local traditions of weaving
and other mountain craft. She writes in her monograph Mountain
Homespun, published by Yale University Press in 1937 about her
experiences working with local craftswomen:
Goodrich through her interests began the collection of local practice and patterns and through her efforts, much of what is known about mountain craft began to be documented. Using the old patterns and practice, Goodrich soon trained many of the community women to reproduce work for a market and a thriving industry was established. This industry was named "Allanstand Cottage Industries" after the earlier name of the place known as Allan's Old Stand, an overnight respite for drovers on the Old Drover's Road that ran from Greenville, South Carolina to Greeneville, Tennessee. Again, in the words of Frances Goodrich, the purpose of the Allanstand Cottage Industries was to
A sales shop was soon established in near-by Asheville, N.C. and by 1908 a building was constructed in Asheville to house the shop. By 1917 the industry was incorporated and had, by all accounts, a thriving clientele. Individuals such as Mrs. Woodrow Wilson purchased items from the shop for herself and later in 1913 even upholstered furniture in the so-called "Mountain Room" of the White House with Allanstand mountain homespun. In 1931 the Allanstand Cottage Industries were incorporated into the newly founded Southern Highlands Handicraft Guild, an organization that still thrives today. Frances Goodrich in that year turned over the rights and the title of the Industries to the Guild and said of that transition
|