Her papers are available at Special Collections, University of Nevada, Las Vegas.[3]
Early life
Warren was the sixth of eight children born in Brooklyn, New York, to Louis Alois von Till and Mary Ellen von Till née McNulty.[1]
She attended Barnard College,[4] where she earned her bachelor's degree in anthropology in 1955. She then attended Northwestern University as a Carnegie Fellow in the African Studies Program. While at Northwestern Warren met and, in December, 1955, married Claude Warren, who was also attending Northwestern as a Carnegie Fellow in the African Studies Program.[1]
Warren earned her Ph.D. from Washington State University with a dissertation on the history of the Las Vegas springs.[6] Her work chronicled the boom and bust of water development in the Southern Nevada Mojave Desert, from 1844 to the late 20th century.[7]
She was an archivist for the Women's Archives in the Special Collections Department of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas Library.[8]
She testified in support of the Nevada Wilderness Act of 1985 which created the Great Basin National Park[9] at both the Ely and Las Vegas hearings. As the Director of Cultural Focus, the tourism outreach program of the Allied Arts Council of Southern Nevada, she spoke of the need to preserve the Nevada wilderness in support of tourism in the state.
She was instrumental in the creation of the Neon Museum.[12]
She was a former national President of Old Spanish Trail Association and President of the Nevada Chapter.[13] Warren was also a Past President of Southern Nevada Historical Society, Preservation Association of Clark County and a former Southern Nevada representative to National Trust for Historic Preservation.
She won numerous awards for public service and historic preservation, including the Daughters of the American Revolution’s National Preservation Award for 2004–2005. In May of 2021 she posthumously received the Excellence in Preservation award from the Las Vegas Historic Preservation Commission.[8]
A video interview[14] of her was produced by the Nevada Women's Virtual Center as part of their "Nevada Women’s Legacy – 150 Years of Excellence"[15] project.
Publications
Warren, Elizabeth von Till (1974). Armijo's Trace Revisited: A New Interpretation of the Impact of the Antonio Armijo Route of 1829–1830 on the Development of the Old Spanish Trail (MA thesis). Las Vegas, Nevada: University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
Coombs, Gary B.; Crabtree, Robert H.; Warren, Elizabeth; Ritter, Eric W.; Archaeological Research, Inc. (1979). The archaeology of the northeast Mojave Desert (Technical report). Riverside, California: United States Bureau of Land Management.
Warren, Elizabeth (1980), Las Vegas Fort: old values, new meaning : an exhibition, Las Vegas, Nevada: Preservation Association of Clark County (Nevada)
Warren, Claude N; Knack, Martha C; Warren, Elizabeth; Ritter, Eric W; United States Bureau of Land Management Desert Planning Staff (1980). A cultural resource overview for the Amargosa-Mojave basin planning units (Technical report). Riverside, California: United States Bureau of Land Management.
Lyneis, Margaret M; Weide, David L; Warren, Elizabeth; Ritter, Eric W; United States Bureau of Land Management Desert Planning Staff (1980). Impacts, damage to cultural resources in the California desert (Technical report). Riverside, California: United States Bureau of Land Management.
Warren, Elizabeth; Roske, Ralph Joseph; United States Bureau of Land Management Desert Planning Staff (1981). Cultural resources of the California desert, 1776–1880 : historic trails and wagon roads (Technical report). Riverside, California: United States Bureau of Land Management.
Warren, Elizabeth; Ritter, Eric W; United States Bureau of Land Management Desert Planning Staff (1981). A Cultural resources overview of the Colorado desert planning units (Technical report). Riverside, California: United States Bureau of Land Management.
Warren, Elizabeth von Till (2001). The History of Las Vegas Springs, A Disappeared Resource (Ph.D. thesis). Pullman, Washington: Washington State University.
Warren, Elizabeth von Till; Eskenazi, Suzanne Beryl (2007). Passing through : the history of Clark County Wetlands Park, Henderson, Nevada. United States Bureau of Reclamation, Lower Colorado Region (Report). Boulder City, Nevada: HRA, Inc., Conservation Archaeolog.
Roberts, Heidi; Warren, Elizabeth von Till; Eskenazi, Suzanne Beryl (2007). Coyote named this place Pakonapanti : Corn Creek National Register Archaeological District, Desert National Wildlife Refuge, Clark County, Nevada. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Desert National Wildlife Refuge (Report). Las Vegas, Nevada: HRA, Inc., Conservation Archaeolog.
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Winslow, Diane Lynne; Wedding, Jeffrey R.; Schneider, Joan S. (2000). "Claude Nelson Warren: An introduction to his life and times". In Schneider, Joan S.; Yohe II, Robert M.; Gardner, Jill K. (eds.). Archaeological Passages: a volume in honor of Claude Nelson Warren. Number 1. Hemet, California: Western Center for Archaeology and Paleontology, Publications in Archaeology. pp. 1–7. ISBN0-9713558-0-0.
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Warren, Elizabeth von Till (1974). Armijo's Trace Revisited: A New Interpretation of the Impact of the Antonio Armijo Route of 1829–1830 on the Development of the Old Spanish Trail (MA thesis). Las Vegas, Nevada: University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
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Warren, Elizabeth von Till (2001). The History of Las Vegas Springs, A Disappeared Resource (Ph.D. thesis). Pullman, Washington: Washington State University.