Maryon Allen at her home on Cliff Road in Birmingham, Alabama, with three wedding dresses belonging to women of the Bankhead family.

She used the dresses (the earliest of which was from 1866) to create a new gown for Elizabeth Perry Baker of Montgomery. (That dress is now part of the museum collection of the Alabama Department of Archives and History.) After the death of her husband, Senator James B. Allen, in June 1978, Governor...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bruchac, Edouard
Format: Electronic
Published: Alabama Department of Archives and History
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cdm17217.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/amg/id/127422
Description
Summary:She used the dresses (the earliest of which was from 1866) to create a new gown for Elizabeth Perry Baker of Montgomery. (That dress is now part of the museum collection of the Alabama Department of Archives and History.) After the death of her husband, Senator James B. Allen, in June 1978, Governor George Wallace appointed Maryon to fill the vacant seat until a special election could be held in November. The winner of that election would serve out the remaining two years of James Allen's original term; Maryon ran for the seat but lost to fellow Democrat Donald Stewart, who ultimately defeated his Republican opponent to win the seat. She remained in Washington until 1981, when she moved to Birmingham and established the Maryon Allen Company, which specialized in redesigning and restoring antique textiles.