Rhoan celebrates her 100th birthday
MEMBERS OF THE RHOAN FAMILY RECENTLY CELEBRATED THE 100TH BIRTHDAY OF AMY HARRISON RHOAN, CENTER.
About 75 family members gathered recently at the Oakhurst Masonic Lodge to celebrate the 100th birthday of Amy Harrison Rhoan of Ahwahnee.
Rhoan was born on Jan. 29, 1910, at Mono Lake to Willie Harrison and Ida Tom and is the second oldest of five sisters. She also has five half sisters and brothers.
Rhoan, a full-blooded Paiute, was born and raised at Farrington Ranch at Mono Lake, which was owned by her grandfather, Bridgeport Tom. The ranch has the nickname "Po mo go te bi," or "frog rock," because of the loud croaking frogs that live nearby.
Rhoan attended government Indian boarding schools, including Greenville and Fort Bidwell in California. When she returned to Farrington Ranch in 1928, she discovered the property had been sold to the Los Angeles Water Aqueduct.
For the next four years, 1928 through 1932, Rhoan worked as a housekeeper at the Tioga Lodge near Lee Vining.
In 1929, Rhoan attended the Yosemite Indian Field Days, an Indian gathering, where she met Alvin Rhoan, who worked in Yosemite for the National Park Service. They married in 1930 and moved to the old Indian village near Big Creek in Yosemite Valley.
In October 1931, the couple's first child, Joseph, was born. They had three more children over the next 11 years: George, Beatrice and Patrick.
Rhoan worked for the Curry Company for nearly 60 years. Her first job was cleaning tents at Yosemite Lodge. She and her sister, Irene, also worked for Mother Curry, who ran a store in Yosemite at the time, as housekeepers.
When her son, Pat, was 7- years-old, Rhoan began working for the Curry Company laundry room.
In 1965, the couple moved to Wawona, where Rhoan worked as a maid at the Wawona Hotel, sometimes cleaning as many as 21 rooms a day.
After her husband died in 1984, Rhoan continued to work at the Wawona Hotel until her retirement in 1989. At age 80 Amy participated in the annual traditional walk from Mono Lake to Yosemite. She started at Tuolumne Meadows and walked to Yosemite Valley.
In addition to her four children, Rhoan has 14 grandchildren, 17 great-grandchildren and one great, great-grandchild.
Rhoan credits good home cooked Indian food -- acorns and pine nuts -- along with home grown vegetables, hard work and prayer for her long life. She advises to stay away from microwave cooking and fast food.



Auntie Amy
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