Tuesday, February 12, 2019

Stagecoach Mary

Mary Fields was born into slavery around 1832 in Hickman County, Tennessee southwest of Nashville.  Most famously home to Hurricane Mills, where Loretta Lynn has her home.  Following the Civil War Mary worked her way up the Mississippi River working as a servant and laundress on the boats.  She finally stopped in Toledo OH, where she worked for the Ursuline Convent of the Sacred Heart.  It is believed that the Mother Superior of the order, Mother Amadeus Dunne was the child of Mary’s former owner and the 2 were companions in their earlier lives.  At the convent Mary performed heavy labor.  It was said that she had a fierce temper and a rough personality and she liked her hard liquors.


Several years later Mother Amadeus was called to mission in the Montana Territory working with Jesuits to establish schools for Blackfeet children.  She became ill and sent for Mary to come to her.  Mary didn’t hesitate she hopped on the stage coach and went west.  After nursing Mother Amadeus back to health, her foul tempers and rough behaviors would come to bite her, when the Bishop began to voice his concerns about Mary’s suitability to be a part of the convent.  Following an armed disagreement with a man who also worked at the convent, she was dismissed from her position.  She worked her and was able to handle many difficult situations.  One of her duties had been supply runs to Helena for the convent.  There was story circulated that on the route her horses were overwhelmed by hungry wolves.  It was said that she held the wolves off until daybreak with her revolver, rifle and a camp fire. 



It wasn’t long after her dismissal that she acquired a contract at a star route carrier, or independent contractor who used a stagecoach to deliver mail for the US Postal Service.  Here her rough exterior would serve her well.  She was a woman, a black woman at that, in a male dominated world where she excelled.  She was so dedicated that she was the embodiment of the postal carrier’s motto (not official motto) “Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds.” For 8 years she ran her stagecoach efficiently, her demeanor discouraged bandits and thieves but she was also known to have a kind and generous nature when she wanted with a special soft place for children. Her age and lifestyle took its toll and she retired.  During her retirement she took in laundry and did odd jobs around town. She was also known to babysit the town’s children so that the parents could have a break.  She was a beloved figure in Cascade and often was given her meals at local restaurants at no charge and could spend time in the saloons passing time with cowboys or at least she could until the local government put restrictions on who patronize the saloons. 
Her death in December 1914 from liver failure was one of the saddest events in the town with her funeral being one of the largest the townspeople had ever seen.  She and her story were larger than life, she made friends with actor Gary Cooper, was beloved by an entire town and would go down in history as a tough and rugged woman who lived her life on her own terms.  In an era where women didn’t have rights and black women had even less, she made a way.  She took the hardest path imaginable and rode it smooth.  If you want to learn more about Stagecoach Mary Fields, check out the websites below.


https://americacomesalive.com/2014/01/05/mary-fields-ca-1832-1914-known-as-stagecoach-mary/

Friday, February 8, 2019

Bass Reeves





Born as a slave in Arkansas, there was no future at the time for someone like Bass Reeves.  He would not only find his way to freedom, he went on to make history.  He became the first black U.S. Marshal in history and one of the greatest lawmen to ever ride the Indian Territories. Although largely illiterate, he learned enough letters to be able to present the correct warrants when approached his fugitive.  His reputation was such that Belle Starr chose to surrender herself rather than to have him pursue her.  He always got his man and although he was forced to retire under the Jim Crow laws of the early 20th century, he couldn't let his sense of justice retire.



When the Civil War broke out, George Reeves (master) joined the confederacy, like many young and idealistic hotheads in the south
and dragged Bass right along with him.  It was said that during one intense battle that Bass was able to escape into the western Indian territory, where he learned the cultures and languages.  Hiding in the territories allowed him to wait out the period of time from his escape until the Emancipation Proclamation became effective.  Once he discovered that he wouldn't be returned to the the Reeves family, Bass settled in near Van Buren, Arkansas and became a farmer.

Following the Civil War, there was a great deal of unrest in the western territories, you had the western push of settlers and the fact that those areas were an excellent place to hide from the law.  In May 1875 the Western District Court was moved to Fort Smith, Arkansas, where Judge Isaac Parker employed Marshal James Fagan, to find and hire those individuals with the best knowledge of the territories to track down fugitives.  Bass Reeves came to Marshal Fagan's attention because of his time spent in the Indian Territory.  It would turn out that his time there would become invaluable to Bass as a lawman.




Bass was imposing figure standing over six feet tall with his handlebar mustache and a physique honed by years of hard work.  He rode a large white stallion and was a master of disguises.  The rule handed down by Judge Parker was to bring in the fugitive alive or dead, but bring them in.  Bass spend 30 years tracking down fugitives before the states took control of  law enforcement.  Once that happened Jim Crow laws made it impossible for Bass to continue as a Marshal and he was forcibly retired.  Settling in Muskogee, Oklahoma, Reeves joined that police force walking a beat.  The section assigned to him had one of the lowest crime rates in the city.  When Reeves died in January 1910 he would be remembered in the newspaper:

       


               “Eighty miles west of Fort Smith was known as “the deadline,” and whenever a deputy marshal from Fort Smith or Paris, Texas, crossed the Missouri, Kansas & Texas track he took his own life in his hands and he knew it. On nearly every trail would be found posted by outlaws a small card warning certain deputies that if they ever crossed the deadline they would be killed. Reeves has a dozen of these cards which were posted for his special benefit. And in those days such a notice was no idle boast, and many an outlaw has bitten the dust trying to ambush a deputy on these trails.” – Oklahoma City newspaper article, 1907.



Today a monument stands in memory of this legendary frontier lawman. If you would like to learn more about Bass Reeves please check out the following websites.