Mary Fields
American mail carrier (c. 1832 – 1914)
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Key Takeaways
- Mary Fields ( c.
- Fields had the star route contract for the delivery of U.
- She drove the route for two four-year contracts, from 1895 to 1899 and from 1899 to 1903.
- This enabled the USPS to establish Mary Fields' contribution as the first African-American female star route mail carrier in the United States.
- After the American Civil War ended in 1865, she was emancipated and found work as a chambermaid on board the Robert E.
Mary Fields (c. 1832 – December 5, 1914), also known as Stagecoach Mary and Black Mary, was an American mail carrier who was the first Black woman to be employed as a star route postwoman in the United States.
Fields had the star route contract for the delivery of U.S. mail from Cascade, Montana, to Saint Peter's Mission. She drove the route for two four-year contracts, from 1895 to 1899 and from 1899 to 1903. Author Miantae Metcalf McConnell provided documentation discovered during her research about Mary Fields to the United States Postal Service Archives Historian in 2006. This enabled the USPS to establish Mary Fields' contribution as the first African-American female star route mail carrier in the United States.
Biography
Early life and career
Fields was born into slavery in Hickman County, Tennessee, c. 1832. After the American Civil War ended in 1865, she was emancipated and found work as a chambermaid on board the Robert E. Lee, a Mississippi River steamboat. There, she encountered Judge Edmund Dunne and ultimately worked in his household as a servant. After Dunne's wife died, he sent Fields and his late wife's five children to live with his sister Mother Mary Amadeus in Toledo, Ohio where she was Mother Superior of an Ursuline convent.
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