Stagecoach Mary #1109

$ 10.00

Caption from poster__

 

 

" I am Mary Fields

People call me "Black Mary." 

 People call me "Stagecoach Mary." 

 I live in Cascade, Montana

 I am six feet tall. 

 I weigh over two hundred pounds. 

 A woman of the 19th Century, 

 I do bold and exciting things.

 I wear pants. 

 I smoke a big black cigar. 

 I drink whiskey. 

 I carry a pistol. 

 I love adventure. 

 I travel the country, 

 driving a stagecoach, 

 delivering the mail to distant towns. 

 Strong, I fight through rainstorms. 

 Tough, I fight through snowstorms. 

 I risk hurricanes and tornadoes. 

 I am independent. 

 No body tells me what to do. 

 No body tells me where to go. 

 When I'm not delivering mail, 

 I like to build buildings. 

 I like to smoke and drink in bars with the men. 

 I like to be rough. 

 I like to be rowdy. 

 I also like to be loving. 

 I like to be caring. 

 I like to baby sit. 

 I like to plant flowers and tend my garden. 

 I like to give away corsages and bouquets. 

 I like being me, Mary Fields."

 

 

Born a slave, grew up an orphan, never married, had no children, no formal education. The nuns were her family; Mother Amadeus was her mother. She loved the children of Cascade County and supported the local baseball team as their number one fan. Mary Fields lived by her wits and her strength. She traveled north to Ohio, settled in Toledo and worked for the Catholic convent. She formed a strong bond with Mother Amadeus. When the nuns moved to Montana and Mary learned of Mother Amadeus' failing health, she went west to help out. Having nursed Mother Amadeus back to health, she decided to stay and help build the St. Peter's mission school. She protected the nuns. Mary was a pistol-packing, hard-drinking woman, who needed nobody to fight her battles for her. When turned away from the mission because of her behavior, the nuns financed her in her own business. She opened a cafe. Mary's big heart drove her business into the ground several times because she would feed the hungry. In 1895 she found a job that suited her, as a U.S. mail coach driver for the Cascade County region of central Montana. She and her mule Moses, never missed a day, and it was in this capacity that she earned her nickname of "Stagecoach", for her unfailing reliability. One day, while on the job, Mary was involved in an insulting dispute with one of the handymen at the school. This situation escalated into a shootout, and Mary Fields was fired from her job. Mary went on to open a restaurant in Cascade, but this was a failure. Again, Mother Amadeus helped Mary to land work as a mail route courier with a route between the Mission School and the town of Cascade. For eight years, Mary drove her stagecoach on the mail route dressed in a man's hat and coat. She also smoked a big cigar and everyone knew her as "Stagecoach Mary." 

 

Now available 11" x 17"
Print with Black Frames $25.00

For 24" x 36' Size prints
please call 678-608-7892 to order

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