Biddy Mason was born into slavery reportedly on August 15, 1818, in Hancock County, Georgia, but her exact birthplace and birthdate are unknown.[2][3][4][5] During her enslaved teenage years, she was obligated to learn domestic and agricultural skills. Additionally, she developed skills in herbal medicine and midwifery taught to her by other enslaved women.[citation needed] Her knowledge benefited both enslaved people and Southern enslavers.[6]: 30–33 [7]: 19–21 Documentation has never been found of her sale or sales, but at some point Biddy was sold into Mississippi and became the property of Robert Mays Smith and Rebecca Dorn Smith.[3] Biddy was valuable to the Smiths because of her knowledge of medicine, child care, and livestock care.[7]: 21
Biddy had three children: Ellen, born in about 1838; Ann, born in about 1844; and Harriet, born in about 1847.[citation needed] The fathers of her children are unknown, but some authors have speculated that Robert M. Smith likely fathered at least one of her children.[7]: 21 [citation needed] An enslaved woman named Hannah Smiley (later Embers) worked with Biddy on the Smith farm. Robert and Rebecca Smith had purchased her from the estate of Rebecca's father. Hannah also had three children when the family left for the West.[3]
Relocations in 1847 and 1851
Missionaries from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon) proselytized in Mississippi. They taught Smith, his wife, and their six children, and they converted in 1847.[8] Enslaved people were only allowed to be preached to and baptized with their owner's permission, according to church policy.[9] It is unknown whether Biddy was baptized.[10]
The Smith household joined a group of other church members from Mississippi to meet the Mormon exodus from Nauvoo, Illinois, in 1847. The group traveled to Pueblo, Colorado, and joined with the sick detachment from the Mormon Battalion.[11] During the journey west, Biddy herded livestock, prepared meals, and midwifed while caring for her own children.[2][6][8] They later joined the main body of Mormons crossing the plains, and arrived in the Salt Lake Valley, Utah Territory, in 1848.[10] Thirty-four enslaved people went with their owners to the Utah Territory. The enslaved people built log cabins, cleared fields, and planted in the town of Cottonwood in the Salt Lake Valley.[12]
Church leader Brigham Young sent a group of Mormons to Southern California in 1851. Young instructed the group that California was a free state, and their slaves would be free when they arrived in California.[10] Robert Smith, the people he enslaved, and his family settled in San Bernardino, California. Biddy was among a number of enslaved people in the San Bernardino settlement.[13] As part of the Compromise of 1850, California was admitted as a free state. Nevertheless, some migrants from the South, including Robert Smith, continued to bring enslaved people into the state.[14] California's courts routinely ruled against the freedom claims of enslaved African Americans in support of slave owners.[15] Biddy was under the control of Robert Smith and ignorant of the laws and her rights.[16][17]
Freedom
In 1856, Smith decided to move to the slave state of Texas and sell his slaves there.[18] He told his slaves that they would be free in Texas.[16] Biddy relayed her fears of being separated from her children and remaining enslaved to two free black men: Charles Owens and Manuel Pepper. The men, including sheriffs and others, served Smith with a court order.[8] A Los Angeles court heard the habeas corpus action regarding her freedom.[15] Smith claimed that Biddy wanted to go to Texas.[19] He then bribed her lawyer to not show up.[16] She was not allowed to testify in court since California law prohibited black people from testifying against white people. After Smith failed to appear in court on January 21, 1856, the judge presiding over the case, Benjamin Ignatius Hayes, freed Biddy and her family members.[8] In 1860, she received a certified copy of the document that guaranteed her freedom.[20]
Like every enslaved person, Biddy had no legal last name when she was enslaved. After she became free, she used the last name Biddy Mason. Authors occasionally speculate that she took the name in homage to Apostle Amasa Mason Lyman, but the name "Mason" was more likely her original family name from Hancock County, Georgia.[3]
Los Angeles
After becoming free, Mason and her daughters moved in with Robert Owens, the father of Charles Owens and a well-known Los Angeles businessman.[8] Her daughter Ellen would eventually marry Charles Owens.[6] Mason worked in Los Angeles as a nurse and midwife, delivering hundreds of babies during her career. Using her knowledge of herbal remedies, she risked her life to care for those affected by the smallpox epidemic in Los Angeles.[6] One of her employers was the noted physician John Strother Griffin.[21] Saving carefully, she was one of the first African American women to own land in Los Angeles.[6] As a businesswoman, she amassed a relatively large fortune, which she shared generously with charities. Mason also fed and sheltered the poor and visited prisoners.[6] She was instrumental in founding a traveler's aid center, and a school and day care center for black children, open to any child who had nowhere else to go.[22][23] Because of her kind and giving spirit, many called her "Auntie Mason" or "Grandma Mason".[6][citation needed]
In 1872, along with her son-in-law Charles Owens and other Black residents of Los Angeles, Mason was a founding member of First African Methodist Episcopal Church of Los Angeles, the city's first Black church.[6][8] The organizing meetings were held in her home on Spring Street.[7]: 89, 104 She donated the land on which the church was built.[24][25] She also helped to establish the first elementary school for black children in Los Angeles.[6][citation needed]
Mason spoke fluent Spanish and was a well-known figure in the city.[citation needed] She dined on occasion at the home of Pio Pico, the last governor of Alta California and a wealthy Los Angeles land owner.[26]
Family
Mason's daughter Ellen married Charles Owens and had two sons, Robert Curry Owens (1859-1932) and Henry Louis Owens (1861-1893).[27] For many decades, Robert Curry Owens was noted as the wealthiest Black man in Los Angeles.[28][27] Henry L. Owens died in 1893.[28] Later in life, Robert Curry Owens engaged in politics and real estate. He went on to own the Owens Block, a two-story brick building built on Broadway in the early 1890s that became the first Black-owned business building in Downtown Los Angeles.[28][citation needed]
Legacy
Mason was fond of saying,
"If you hold your hand closed, nothing good can come in. The open hand is blessed, for it gives in abundance, even as it receives."[29]
After Mason's death on January 15, 1891, she was buried in Evergreen Cemetery in the neighborhood of Boyle Heights. On March 27, 1988, in a ceremony attended by the mayor of Los Angeles and members of the church she founded, her burial place was marked with a gravestone.[30]
Mason is an honoree in the California Social Work Hall of Distinction. She was also celebrated on Biddy Mason Day on November 16, 1989. A ceremony at the Broadway Spring Center unveiled a memorial to highlight her achievements.[31][8]
Biddy Mason Park is near the site of Mason's home. It is a downtown Los Angeles city park and the site of an art installation describing her life.[24][25] Artist Sheila Levrant de Bretteville designed an installation called Biddy Mason's Place: A Passage of Time.[32][33] It is an 82-foot-long (25 m) concrete wall embedded with objects that tell the story of Mason's life.[34][21][35][36]
Mason is featured in a mural by Bernard Zakheim originally installed in Toland Hall Auditorium at the University of California, San Francisco during the 1930s. The painting along with others in the series, was removed from the building before it was demolished as part of a campus upgrade.[37][38]
^ abcdefgSims, Oscar L. (1993). "Biddy Mason". In Smith, Jessie Carney (ed.). Epic Lives: One Hundred Black Women Who Made a Difference. Detroit, MI: Visible Ink Press. pp. 369–372. ISBN978-0810394261.
^"The Forgotten Pioneers". Part In Norma B. Ricketts, Crossroads, Vol. 8, No. 2 & 3 (Spring/Summer 1997).
^Tucker, T. Michelle (2021). American Angels of the Old West. Lehi, Utah: Rose of Sharon Publishing. pp. 51–52. ISBN9798640518160.
^The Latter-Day Saints' Millennial Star, Volume 17. 1855. p. 63. Most of those who take slaves there pass over with them in a little while to San Bernardino... How many slaves are now held there they could not say, but the number relatively was by no means small. A single person had taken between forty and fifty, and many had gone in with smaller numbers.
^Hayes, Benjamin (January 24, 2007). "Mason v. Smith". none of the said persons of color can read and write, and are almost entirely ignorant of the laws of the state of California as well as those of the State of Texas, and of their rights
^Greenstein, Albert (1999). "Bridget "Biddy" Mason". The Historical Society of Southern California. Archived from the original on March 3, 2014. Retrieved July 18, 2017.
^"From Slavery to Entrepreneur, Biddy Mason". African American Registry. Archived from the original on May 6, 2014. Retrieved May 5, 2014. Thursday, November 16, 1989 was declared Biddy Mason Day and a memorial of her achievements was unveiled at the Broadway Spring Center located between Spring Street and Broadway at Third Street in Los Angeles.