Terry, a very simple home made dead weight tester would solve your calibration issues.
Basically you screw the sensor to be tested into the base of a small vertical test cylinder with accurate known bore diameter. Then place some light oil into the cylinder.
A closely fitting piston is then inserted with a disc shape weight attached to the top of the piston rod. If total weight of piston and disk is known, and bore diameter is known, the test pressure can be easily calculated.
To remove any sliding friction from the piston, the piston and disc shaped weight can be made to slowly revolve by hand. It will continue to rotate by itself for quite a long period just through inertia, and the developed pressure will be exact.
A thing device like this is very easy to construct, and a range of weights can be provided to check the pressure calibration of all sorts of gauges and transducers.
Nationally accredited standards labs use dead weight pressure references as pressure standards. A real laboratory one would be ferociously expensive. But a home made job should be well within the capability of most of us here. They are extremely accurate and repeatable.