{"id":7548,"date":"2011-10-12T09:00:34","date_gmt":"2011-10-12T08:00:34","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=7548"},"modified":"2011-10-12T09:00:34","modified_gmt":"2011-10-12T08:00:34","slug":"unsung-heroes-stagecoach-mary-fields","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/10\/12\/unsung-heroes-stagecoach-mary-fields\/","title":{"rendered":"Unsung Heroes: ‘Stagecoach’ Mary Fields"},"content":{"rendered":"
When you think of the Wild West there are a lot of names that spring to mind,
half-mythologised figures straight out of the legends of the American West. Wild Bill
Hickock<\/a> with his gambling, Calamity Jane<\/a>, Doc Holliday<\/a> and
Wyatt Earp<\/a>
shooting things up in Tombstone. One name that may not come to mind but really
should is that of
‘Stagecoach’ Mary Fields<\/strong> – the most hardcore
postal worker of the last 200 years.<\/p>\n
Mary Fields was born into slavery in Tennessee sometime around 1832, the
exact year being uncertain. Not too much is recorded about this phase of
her life, other than, apparently, a fondness for physical altercations and
bad homemade cigars. (Let\u2019s just stop and consider what a badass
figure Fields must have cut, standing six feet tall, well muscled, and
puffing away on a cheap cigar.)<\/p>\n
It\u2019s a few decades after the abolition of slavery in the US that the
really interesting part of Fields\u2019 story begins. Around 1884 she
moved to Cascade, Montana and sought employment with a group of Ursuline<\/a> nuns
there. She signed on to do the heavy labour – hauling freight, stone
work, carpentry, that sort of thing. She stayed here for a while,
eventually becoming forewoman.<\/p>\n
One somewhat apocryphal story from this era tells of Fields\u2019 freight
wagon being overturned and attacked by wolves. Fields holed up in the
wagon overnight, keeping the wolves at bay with her rifle and revolver,
bringing the cargo in safely the following morning. Whilst this story may
or may not be accurate what is undeniable is that the Great Falls Examiner
(the only paper in the area) records Fields as being the cause of more
broken noses than anyone else in town. She had little patience for the
often inappropriate ways of men in frontier towns, and no problem with
defending herself.<\/p>\n
Why did she leave? Well, remember that fondness for fights? Yeah, she
ended up having a gunfight with a coworker. He had complained that she
earned $2 more than him, despite her being black and female. She dealt
with this the way all sensible people deal with workplace disputes –
she tried to shoot him. She missed on the first shot, a gunfight broke
out, the bishop\u2019s laundry was damaged, and Fields found herself out
of a job.<\/p>\n
So Fields moved on, applying for a job with the United States Postal
Service. She was around 60 at this point, and being a mail carrier was not
an easy job. Riding between frontier communities, living on the road in
all extremes of weather, dealing with outlaws and wild animals; this was
not a job for the faint of heart. But Fields impressed in the interview,
being the fastest applicant to hitch a team of horses, and so the job was
hers. This made her the second woman and the first African American woman
to work for the Postal Service.<\/p>\n
So reliable was Fields, living up to the postal service\u2019s unofficial
motto of being stayed by \u201cNeither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of
night,\u201d that she picked up the nickname ‘Stagecoach’.
Along with her mule, Moses, she spent the next decade or so carrying mail
out to frontier outposts and remote mining posts. <\/p>\n
In the winters Montana gets some serious snow. On more than one occasion
the trails would become impassable to horses because of the depth of snow
drifts. When you\u2019re pushing 70, there\u2019s snow too deep for horses
to pass, and miles to the next outpost, you stay at home and drink by the
fire, right? No, of course not, not when you\u2019re Stagecoach Mary
Fields you don\u2019t. She pressed on through with the mail over one
shoulder and her rifle over the other, walking up to 10 miles between
outposts and depots to ensure the mail arrived on time.<\/p>\n
Everything has to end eventually though, and around 1902 she retired from
the Postal Service to settle down in the town of Cascade. The nuns helped
her buy a laundry business, but she never really enjoyed working there.
Her two loves by this time in her life were the local baseball team, for
whom she often grew flowers, and drinking in the town bar, still smoking
those homemade cigars.<\/p>\n
Just because she\u2019d settled down, though, doesn\u2019t mean Mary
Fields lost any of the grit and pugnacity that had served her all her
life. One customer, according to stories, failed to pay his laundry bill
on time. Fields, drinking in the bar, heard him talking outside. Excusing
herself from her drinking companions she stepped outside and decked him
with one solid blow to the jaw. She may have been in her mid 70s by this
point but Stagecoach Mary Fields was not a woman with whom one messed. The
satisfaction of seeing the guy laid out, so she said, was more than worth
the price of the laundry bill.<\/p>\n
In 1914, after a hard-lived life, Fields’s liver finally gave out.
Her neighbours buried her in Cascade’s Hillside cemetery, and for a
while her birthday was an unofficial holiday, with the town\u2019s schools
being closed to celebrate her.<\/p>\n
For further reading on the West\u2019s toughest postal worker you can
check Robert Miller’s The Story of Stagecoach Mary Fields<\/strong><\/a> (though be aware
that it is a short piece aimed mostly at children, and can be horribly
expensive to find). She\u2019s also mentioned in Cheryl Smith\u2019s Market Women: Black Women Entrepeneurs Past, Present and
Future<\/strong><\/a> and Jessica Ruston\u2019s nicely illustrated Heroines: The Bold, The Bad And The Beautiful<\/strong><\/a>.
<\/p>\n