2026 January issue of InMaricopa Magazine

HISTORY

BINGO IS BACK!

In the reeds In the summer of 1973, Julia Francisco moved with practiced ease through the cattail thickets along the Stanfield Ditch south of Maricopa, near what is now the southern end of State Route 347. Arizona State Museum photographer Helga Teiwes captured her that August afternoon cutting long, straight cattail stalks, the plant that forms the bundle foundation of traditional Pima baskets. The image is part of a remarkable visual record Teiwes created while documenting basketry traditions of the Gila River Akimel O’odham communities. Earlier that spring, Teiwes visited the Gila River Reservation near Bapchule to follow Francisco’s full basket- making process. She photographed the gathering of willow, devil’s claw and martynia, the careful cleaning and drying of the materials, and finally the creation of a woven basket with a squash-blossom design. Teiwes returned in mid-August to Stanfield for the cattail harvest. The work was rhythmic and precise: Stalks were cut, bundled and hauled out of the ditchbank to dry before being stripped and shaped for weaving. For Francisco, the harvest was not simply a materials trip but a link in a generational chain. Cattail has been used for centuries as the supportive core inside coiled Akimel O’odham baskets, giving them structure beneath elaborate exteriors of willow and devil’s claw.

Friday January 9, 2026 9:30 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. 22590 Powers Pkwy, Maricopa, AZ 85138

Tuesday January 20, 2026 10 a.m – 12 p.m. 8969 W. McCartney Road Casa Grande, AZ 85194

InMaricopa.com | Janaury 2026

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Janaury 2026 | InMaricopa.com

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