Los Angeles - Biddy Mason Day
By David Ellis
|
|
Los Angeles - Biddy Mason Day |
|
Chances are you know nothing of a remarkable 19th century African-American woman named Biddy Mason.
But
crammed away in the concrete canyons of Downtown Los Angles is a tiny
park that pays homage to Biddy... a slave forced to walk over 3000kms
in the wagon-train tracks of her master from Mississippi to Utah
Territory, and who extraordinarily went on to become the wealthiest
black woman in her time in LA.
A slave who won her freedom in
bizarre circumstances from a sympathetic white judge, and after
becoming the first black woman to own land in Los Angeles, gave away
everything she earned to help black poor and needy.
Biddy Mason
was born to a slave in Mississippi in 1818, named Bridget with no
surname, and as a young child was given as a wedding present to wealthy
plantation owner Robert Smith and his bride.
She learned
midwifery and the use of herbal medicines from fellow slaves of Smith,
and after Smith converted to the Mormon faith in the 1840s she set off
in a wagon-train with his family and fourteen slaves from Mississippi
to Great Lake City, Utah.
Biddy had to walk the whole 3,200kms,
driving Smith’s herd of cattle by day, cooking the family’s meals when
they pitched camp for the night, washing their clothes and tending the
sick amongst family and slaves.
And still young she bore three
daughters, with the father widely believed to be her master, Robert
Smith – whom the Mormon Church’s leader, Brigham Young constantly
counselled, unsuccessfully, to free Biddy and his other slaves.
In
1851 Smith decided to move again, to Southern California where the
Church was establishing a branch in San Bernardino… but it proved his
undoing as far as Biddy and her fellow slaves were concerned: just a
year earlier, California had abolished slavery and any slave brought
into the State had to be set free.
Smith refused to comply,
declaring Biddy, her daughters and others “his property,” and instead
decided to move yet again, to Texas where slavery was still legal.
However
before he could do so Biddy, through an educated friend, filed a court
application seeking her freedom – but extraordinarily was blocked from
pleading her case before Judge Benjamin Hayes, because then-laws
prevented blacks from testifying in court.
To everyone’s
surprise, Judge Hayes noted that the law said nothing of them speaking
to him in his chambers, and after inviting Biddy there and hearing her
plea, he returned to the courtroom and declared she and her fellow
Smith slaves “free forever and without fear.”
Biddy then adopted
a surname for the first time – Mason after a Mormon anti-slavery
crusader. A doctor friend of Judge Hayes in Los Angeles impressed with
Biddy’s nursing and midwifery skills gave her work, and after living
frugally and saving virtually everything she earned, bought a house on
Spring Street, Los Angeles in 1866 – the first black woman landowner in
LA.
She bought other land, sold one block just a few years after
buying it for six times what she had paid, invested this money in a
warehouse, and with the rental income from this helped build the First
African Methodist Episcopal Church – LA’s first black church.
She
had already thrown open the doors of her home, dubbed “The House of the
Open Hand” to homeless black women, welcoming them with her favourite
quote: “If you hold your hand closed, no good can come in.” She
provided food to hungry families, visited black prisoners in jails, and
built an orphanage and elementary school for black children.
When
she died in 1891 aged 73, “Grandma Mason” as she was known left an
amazing US$300,000 in cash and property (equivalent to US$7.3 million
today) with the instructions that it was to go towards the continuation
of her work for the poor and the needy.
If you are visiting LA,
take the trip Downtown to 333 Spring Street where Biddy Mason Park has
been established on what was the site of her original home, later
became a parking lot, and was finally given over for a small and leafy
park dedicated to Biddy and her work.
Plaques
and murals on the walls tell the story of her life, and thousands
gather there every November 16 to celebrate Biddy Mason Day
|