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African American History, the Post Office, and an Amazing Woman

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My head has been full of the myriad of terrible stuff in our world; stuff that is not new, but that Covid-19 has placed a magnifying glass over and lit fire to stress and hardships that had been slowly baking under the surface of our everyday USA. And I have been wanting to celebrate something good, because there are still good things out there and good people. We cannot turn away from the terrible stuff, we cannot pretend it is not there, but we can show it something better.

Today, I am celebrating Mary Fields: a pioneer, a mail carrier, a woman, and an African American.

I am not original when declaring that there is something fascinating about the wild west. In my youth, I became obsessed with stories of western pioneers and nere-do-wells after reading Doc Holiday by John Myers Myers. What I didn’t find a lot of in those stories were women or African Americans. Rodger Hardaway, a scholar working in the niche field focusing on African American Women in the west postulates that the small percentage of African Americans out west, and even smaller percentage of women to men leads to a lack of historical treatment. I’d postulate that the prejudices that keep our history books full of white men might have something to do with it as well.

Mary Fields was an independent and powerful woman. Born before the Civil War, she was enslaved to the Warren family in either West Virginia or Arkansas. After emancipation Mary Fields took chamber maid and laundress jobs on steam ships traveling up the Mississippi. It was on the river that she met Judge Dunne, according to one source (Hanshew, 2014). Other sources say Fields first made acquaintance with the Dunne family when one of the Warner family’s daughters married a Dunne (Reindle, 2010). However they met, Fields would take a position among the Dunne family household staff.

When Judge Dunne’s wife died, Mary Fields took his five children to his sister, Mother Mary Amadeus, at the Ursuline convent in Toledo Ohio (Wikipedia). Mother Mary Amadeus asked her to stay and work for the convent. There, Fields earned herself a reputation for being hard working, argumentative, and loyal. She enjoyed a good drink, a cigar, and took to wearing men’s jackets and boots. Field’s employment at the convent in Toledo seems to have been a comfortable arrangement even though the girls at the convent school were reportedly afraid of her wrath should they tread on her freshly cut lawn. Fields only left when Mother Amadeus, who had been sent to Montana to establish a mission, fell ill with pneumonia.

Fields nursed her friend back to health in Montana and then took on many of the same duties at St. Peter’s Mission that she had carried out in Toledo, though possibly without pay. Fields’ happy arrangement with the nuns of St. Peter’s came to an end when Fields and a hired man drew guns on each other in a dispute. This was the last straw for the bishop who had already heard stories of her cussing, drinking, smoking, and wearing men’s clothing. He ordered her to be dismissed from the convent.

Possibly with the help of Mother Amadeus, Fields set herself up in nearby Cascade and opened a restaurant that quickly folded due to her not charging cash strapped patrons. After doing sundry odd jobs Mary Fields won a Star Route contract with the US Post Office because she was the fastest applicant to hitch a team of six horses (Wikipedia). She was only the second woman to be employed as a carrier by the postal service and the first African American woman.

Already in her sixties, Fields would carry the mail between the Cascade train depot and St. Peter’s Mission for two four-year contracts. She acquired the nickname “Stagecoach” Mary for her reliability. She never missed a day. When the snow was too deep to pull the stagecoach through, she donned snow shoes and carried the mail herself. When the coach was overturned she paced in the cold to keep from freezing, and protected her cargo, horses, and mule from roaming wolves. Fields embodied the mission of the post office. She traveled through rain, sleet, and snow to deliver precious supplies and communication. The internet has made it easy today to overlook the great history and service of the US Post Office even as it supplies us in this pandemic and looks toward an uncertain future (Murse, 2020).

While carrying the mail, Fields became so beloved by the people of Cascade that they rebuilt the laundry service she started in retirement after it burned to the ground. She also ate for free at the local restaurant, and was given a special dispensation by the Mayor to drink in the saloons when women were no longer allowed to do so. Gary Cooper, also of Cascade, remembered her fondly in a piece he related for Ebony magazine in 1959. Cooper told of how she babysat most of the children in town, spending most of her earnings from childcare on candy and treats for the children. She was made the mascot of the baseball team for her tireless devotion and providing bouquets and boutonnieres to the star players from her own garden.

Stories of her exploits, like punching a man down in the street who had not paid his laundry bill, paint a picture of a woman who was larger than life. She was also six feet tall and, according to some, over 200 pounds. But I wonder if just under the surface is the story of a lonely woman as well. Fields never married, she socialized with men, and was the only African American in Cascade. As pointed out by her autobiographer, a subtle racism could have made her an outsider even as she was embraced by the people of Cascade (Hanshew, 2014). Fields left no written record of her own view point, so we may never know the personal thoughts and feelings of this legendary woman.

The archivist at the Ursuline Convent in Toledo mentioned that most inquiries about Mary Fields happen around Black History Month (Reindl, 2010) and the dates on many of the articles I found corroborated this. It’s sad that we restrict our appreciation of underrepresented citizens to one month a year. I say that this month is African American History Month and every month should be African American History Month; every month should be Women’s History Month; every month LGBTQ+ History Month; every month Native American Heritage Month. After all, our history books have taught us that every month has always been White History Month, yes?

References

  1. Amspacher, Shelby (2020) Stagecoach Mary Fields.  Smithsonian National Postal Museum.  blog.  https://postalmuseum.si.edu/stagecoach-mary-fields
  2. Blakemore, Erin. (2019) Meet Stagecoach Mary, the Daring Black Pioneer Who Protected Wild West Stagecoaches.  History Stories.  History.com.  https://www.history.com/news/meet-stagecoach-mary-the-daring-black-pioneer-who-protected-wild-west-stagecoaches
  3. Cooper, Gary as told to Marc Crawford (1959) Stage Coach Mary:  Gun-toting Montanan delivered U.S. mail.  Ebony magazine.  October 1st.
  4. Hanshew, Annie (2014)  The Life and Legend of Mary Fields (2014) Women’s History Matters.  http://montanawomenshistory.org/the-life-and-legend-of-mary-fields/.
  5. Hardaway, Rodger D. “AFRICAN-AMERICAN WOMEN ON THE WESTERN FRONTIER.” Negro History Bulletin, vol. 60, no. 1, Jan. 1997, pp. 11–12., www.jstor.org/stable/24766796.
  6. Mary Fields (2020) Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Fields
  7. Murse, Tom (2020) Why Does the US Postal Service Lose Money? ThoughtCo. April 4. https://www.thoughtco.com/postal-service-losses-by-year-3321043
  8. Pickett, Mary. “’Stagecoach Mary’ Cuts Colorful Swath.” The Billings Gazette, 8 Feb. 2009, www.billingsgazette.com/news/features/magazine/stagecoach-mary-cuts-colo…
  9. Reindl, JC. “’Stagecoach Mary’ Broke Barriers of Race, Gender.” Toledo Blade, 8 Feb. 2010,https://www.toledoblade.com/local/2010/02/08/Stagecoach-Mary-broke-barriers-of-race-gender.html

Black Lives Matter

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The NAACP was founded in 1909.

In 1952 we had corny PSAs discouraging racism.

Black Lives Matter was founded in 2013.

In 2020 we are living through a global pandemic that is disproportionately killing members of the black community in the U.S. due, at least in part, to inequalities in the way our fellow Americans experience life and freedom.

This is terribly far from a full timeline of the reminders we have had to recognize and support our colleagues, our friends, our family, and our fellow citizens. How many more generations will see these reminders falling on deaf ears? Black Lives Matter.

Doodlin

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Melusine

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Long ago I was often inspired to do crazy research on passing thoughts and ideas. Smelling Books and Chromolithography and the mystery of Henri and Anita LeRoy, on why certain books smell the way they do and who was really the artist behind common chromolithography prints, respectively, are past products of my ardent desires to answer a question. It’s been a long time since I’ve given myself time to fall down that rabbit hole, but I am feeling the inclination once again. I have a list of curiosities I wanted to return to. Melusine is on that list. For better, or worse, I’ve only geared up to capsule research. The ridiculously extensive posts may still come.

By Heinrich Vogeler – http://www.worpswede.de/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/Heinrich_Vogeler_Melusine.jpg, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=23490529

The story of Melusine is a fairy tale legend wherein a fairy queen and the king of Scotland had a daughter. Melusine angered her fairy queen mother by imprisoning her father and was cursed to turn into a half-snake beast on Saturdays. Her beast form is often depicted as a two tailed mermaid or something more akin to a naga, a creature from Hindu mythology that has the bottom half of a cobra.

I could not find any more food to feed my passing thought that Melusine is a rogue Naga Kanya, if the Naga Kanya are in fact an entire race of fairy creatures instead of one. I did find that several pinterest boards have noticed the similarity in the two tailed stone depictions of Melusine and those of the fertility goddess Sheela Na Gig. These similarities intrigue me. While poking around in the easily locate-able online sources, I did find that stories of a half serpent, half beautiful woman can be found across Albania, Germany, and France.

In the most well known story from France, Melusine married a nobleman and brought agricultural advances and fortune to the people over which he ruled. But, curiosity became too much for her husband, leading him to break the promise he made to leave her in seclusion on Saturdays. He spied on her, witnessing her changed form. Upon learning of this, Melusine sprouted wings and flew away, never to return (British Library – European Studies Blog).

Most interesting is how, before her husband’s transgression and her disappearance, Melusine bore several sons, making her a founding mother of European nobility. This fairy lineage would eventually be referred to as dragon blood, referencing Melusine’s final winged form. Of course, her split serpent tales has become familiar to many of us as an image of the commercial depiction of Starbuck (Ancient Origins).

Variations on a theme

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Snakes on Richard

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Permanently Halloween

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John Margolies Dragon and pumpkin, Magic Carpet Golf, Key West, Florida Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/mrg.03060

I was inspired by images from road-side America, and went digging through more photo collections to find more magic in Florida. I really hope that this mini-golf course still exists, though I imagine it’d be awfully faded by now.

it speaks

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St. Augustine

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Happy Easter

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10 Movies/Books to Know Me

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I heard from my informants that social media has thing thing: 10 movies to know you, and I was inspired. These are the 10 movies, and then 10 books that have shaped me (in no significant order).

Movies

  1. Alice in Wonderland (multiple versions, but mostly the one with Carol Channing)
  2. The Witches (1990)
  3. The Ruling Class (1972)
  4. Real Genius (1985)
  5. Zorro the Gay Blade (1981)
  6. Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975)
  7. Rock ‘n Rule (1983)
  8. Streets of Fire (1984)
  9. White Christmas (1954)
  10. Earth Girls are Easy (1988)

Books

  1. Dynamic Anatomy by Burne Hogarth
  2. Art of War by Sun Tzu
  3. Dancing Cats of Applesap by Janet Taylor Lisle
  4. ABCs of Human Mind a Reader’s Digest Family Answer Book
  5. Little Women by Louisa May Alcott
  6. Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand
  7. The Guilty Head by Romain Gary
  8. Doc Holiday by John Myers Myers
  9. Russian Fairy Tales translated by Norbert Guterman from the collections of Aleksandr Afanas’ev
  10. Hocus Pocus by Kurt Vonnegut

A new witch

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Clement Skitt’s Word of the Day

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ClementSkittsays007

“I’ve gotta wrinkle that’ll turn your Friday face to a giggle-mug”

What was that now?

WRINKLE:  an idea, or fancy:  an additional piece of knowledge which is supposed to be made by a wrinkle a posteriori   (Cab Calloway’s Hepster’s Dictionary)

FRIDAY-FACE. A dismal countenance. Before, and even long after the Reformation, Friday was a day of abstinence, or jour maigre. Immediately after the restoration of king Charles II. a proclamation was issued, prohibiting all publicans from dressing any suppers on a Friday. (1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue by Francis Grose)

GIGGLEMUG:  “An habitually smiling face.” (1909 Passing English of the Victorian era : a dictionary of heterodox English, slang and phrase by James Redding Ware)

So, basically, “I’ve got an idea that’ll turn your frown upside down.”

Sea monster

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Florida love

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