Mary Fields (Stagecoach Mary) was the FIRST Black American & 2nd woman to deliver the mail in the U.S. At 60, she applied for a mail carrier position in Montana's Cascade region. She aced the job by skillfully hitching her horses faster than anyone else. Despite bandits, wolves, & grueling weather, Mary never missed driving the route with horses & Moses, her mule. She would often trek by foot over 10 miles with sacks over her shoulder.

1/9

@[email protected]@BlackMastodon#BlackMastodon #History

Born in 1832, Mary endured a life of slavery until the Civil War. Though her exact birthplace is uncertain, she was believed to be born in Hickman County, Tennessee. After gaining her freedom in 1863, Mary migrated north and worked as a servant and laundress for traveling families. She eventually settled in Toledo, Ohio, where she found employment at the Ursuline Covenant of the Sacred Heart.

2/9

#BlackMastodon #histodons #History #Montana

In 1894, Mary faced several complaints including cursing and smoking. The situation culminated in an incident where a white man physically assaulted her, refusing to "take orders from a [N-word] woman." When the man reached for his gun, Mary, like a gunslinger, swiftly drew her own pistol from under her coat, and fired back in self-defense. As a result, she was relieved of her duties at the Mission.

3/9

#BlackMastodon #histodons #History #Montana #Pioneers

Mary became a Star Route Carrier, an independent contractor for the U.S. Post Office, around the age of 60. She carried & delivered mail using a stagecoach donated by Mother Amadeus Convent. Mary's preparedness with her revolver and rifle protected the mail from bandits. She was called "Stagecoach Mary" for her ability to drive the stagecoach across all terrains, regardless of the weather.

4/9

#BlackMastodon #histodons #history

Retiring after 8 years, Mary settled down, opening a laundry, tending to her garden, and supporting the local baseball team by selling flowers. The town of Cascade, Montana, granted Mary an exception when women were prohibited from entering bars and closed its schools to celebrate her birthday. After a life that spanned over 80 years, Mary Fields was laid to rest below the mountain trail leading to St. Peter's Mission in 1914.

5/9

#BlackMastodon #histodons

Mary Fields was more than just a mail carrier, a laundress, a housekeeper. She not only defied societal expectations but also transcended the limitations placed upon her by her race, gender, and age. Her perseverance and independence made her an tower of strength and resilience. In an unforgiving era, Mary Fields led an extraordinary life. That life challenges the stereotypes of Black Americans as passive victims of racial oppression.

6/9

#BlackMastodon #histodons #histodons #history

Like Bass Reeves, Mary has been featured as a true to life character in films and TV series. Mary needs her own stamp!

- In the documentary South by Northwest, "Homesteaders" (1976) starring the late Esther Rolle
- TV movie, The Cherokee Kid (1996), played by Dawnn Lewis.
- TV movie, Hannah's Law (2012), played by Kimberly Elise.
- Western film, They Die By Dawn (2013), played by Erykah Badu.
- In the film The Harder They Fall (2021), played by Zazie Beetz

7/9

#BlackMastodon #History #Montana

Books and magazines about Mary Fields

- In 1959, actor & Montana native Gary Cooper, who Mary babysat when he was a child, wrote an article for EBONY in which he wrote, "Born a slave somewhere in Tennessee, Mary lived to become one of the freest souls ever to draw a breath.”

- Fearless Mary: The True Adventures of Mary Fields, American Stagecoach Driver by Tami Charles

- Mary Fields: The Story of Black Mary by James A. Franks

8/9

#BlackMastodon #history #histodons

"Born a slave somewhere in Tennessee, Mary lived to become one of the freest souls ever to draw a breath.”

@Deglassco That gave me shivers. What a life.

@halonine @Deglassco Yeah, it's amazing what she achieved and how hard she worked to do this stuff, cool to learn
@kt_02 indeed, and just think of all the people we never heard of—-whose lives and experiences no one thought was valuable enough to remember.
@Deglassco She's also featured in "Black Heroes of the Wild West," a comic book by James Otis Smith. ❤️
@Deglassco thanks for sharing this story and book recommendations! I’d never heard of Mary before. I ordered “Fearless Mary” to read to my kids this weekend.
@Deglassco Looking for The Harder They Fall movie
@Deglassco Stagecoach Mary - now that’s a movie I def want to see.
@sgraffito she has been featured in a number of TV and movie presentations but, as far as I know, there hasn’t been a movie or series devoted specifically to her life and deeds.
@Deglassco Amazing! So many people we could have learned from as kids, but her story was completely ignored. Thanks for sharing!

@Deglassco @[email protected] @BlackMastodon Very cool but this pic is something else...

Sure... she is hard core and does all the cool things but even the dog... the dog!!!... is hard af. It's like her hardness transfers...

Very cool

@Aviva_Gary @Deglassco @BlackMastodon

I would love to know if the dog was her's or if the photographer thought it added to the composition and captured her mood!

@DToher it does. She could have had the dog as a companion on her treks.
@DToher @Deglassco @BlackMastodon You know... there is that but if she is out in the boonies (rural areas) she would probably want the help and would probably have a dog for that...
@Deglassco @[email protected] @BlackMastodon I would confidently trust my mail to this letter carrier. Ms. Fields does not appear to be one to be toyed with.
@mgkspapa no, I don’t think any bandit in their right mind wanted to mess with her.
@Deglassco @[email protected] @BlackMastodon I want to see the Black History Month posters 3rd grade boys would make about her. Thank you for sharing her story and the stories of other heroes.

@Deglassco @[email protected] @BlackMastodon my last Fallout 4 character was based on her, my head cannon had her as a distant ancestor to the character. In the appocalypse this descendant then follows in her footsteps.
I used the gunslinger tree (Luck in the Game) with lever action rifles, and she wore the postman hat and uniform - a reference to Field's being a mailcoach rider.

Also built settlements and set up trade routes - in-game stage coach equivalent.

@metalpoetnl wow! And to think that she is hardly mentioned in the history of the frontier and/or the Postal Service. I still think she should get her own stamp.

@Deglassco she's both black and a woman, but I'm sure that has nothing to do with the shocking failure of the USPS to celebrate her...

I learned about her when I googled female gunslingers looking for character inspiration. But she was so much more than just a shooter. She was a freed slave who became a career woman in the 19th century. She only became a gunslinging coach rider at age 60!
Before that she owned a restaurant, which failed because she fed people even if they couldn't pay.

@Deglassco sorry I got carried away talking about why I was so inspired that i chose her, you already know all this and I swear wasn't trying to mansplain, I just loved her story THAT much
@metalpoetnl she certainly was an interesting historical figure wasn’t she?

#blackmastodon
My grandma was a US mail carrier. She had a route in rural PA. My dad has many fond memories of doing his homework in the back of the truck and handing out packages to her at each stop.

When people talk about hating the post office I don’t trust them. One of the few decent jobs with benefits black women could get and black women have always been a huge part of the postal workforce— making things function, essential invisible, All American.

@futurebird I love it 95% of the time. Yesterday they lost my package tho, so I’m temporarily fuming.