Saturday, September 19, 2015

The real history behind Mary Ellen Pleasant, San Francisco's Voodoo Queen

Via kalw.org by Olivia Cueva and Liz Veale

In the mid 1800’s, boomtown-San Francisco was a city of men, only about 15 percent women. Slavery was illegal in the West but still-- white men were the ones cashing out on the boom. Mostly.

Then there was Mary Ellen Pleasant. She was one of the richest and most powerful people in the state-- and she was a black woman. In fact she was a freedom fighter-- they called her the Black City Hall.

But today, Pleasant is barely remembered. The story that does get told is a mythologized tale about San Francisco’s so-called Voodoo Queen.

We ask why this extraordinary woman fell from the city’s graces and was left to haunt its history as the ghost of the voodoo queen. We started at the last stop on a city tour called San Francisco Ghost Hunt.

The tour brings you to the corner of Octavia and Bush streets, where Mary Ellen Pleasant’s mansion once stood. Six huge eucalyptus trees tower above the spot-- Pleasant planted them herself, over a hundred years ago.

Jim Fassbinder guides the tour. He tells a tale that he admits, is not quite fact, not quite fiction.

He says Pleasant had power over San Franciscans because she practiced “voodoo.” He says, that some claim she was responsible for the death of four people including her longtime business partner. Rumor has it, her servant, “found Mary Ellen pulling apart the bones of his head and picking out bits of his brain,” says Fassbinder.

As the story goes, she’s haunted this corner ever since the day she died. But the story’s been mangled by history. So what really happened?


“It still is a mystery,” says Susheel Bibbs, “her life is still a mystery.”

Bibbs has been studying Pleasant for over 20 years. She says part of the reason it’s so hard to distinguish fact from fiction is because Pleasant herself never kept her story straight.

“It was ingrained from the very beginning that survival meant that you don’t tell. You just keep secrets,” says Bibbs.

By best accounts, Pleasant was born on a plantation in Georgia, but once she got her freedom as a young girl, she began falsifying her identity. Since slavery was still alive, she needed to protect herself from law enforcement.

“If they decided she was an escaped slave and she had no freedom papers,” says Bibbs, “they could just wrest her off the streets and back into slavery.”

Her skin was fair enough to pass - so when she docked in San Francisco in 1852, she arrived as a white woman.

Pleasant was ambitious. She stepped onto the muddy smelly embarcadero wearing a matching black dress and bonnet-- and immediately saw her business opportunity; young men’s boarding houses.

At this time most men, from broke gold miners to rich politicians lived in these crowded flop houses because there were no wives out there to be homemakers.

Pleasant built the first boarding houses for high society men. She hosted luxurious balls and elegant dinners. She brought a little class to the lawless frontier.

Between the several boarding houses she owned and other financial investments she amassed a million dollar fortune by 1865. Bibbs says “she ended up having the most exclusive boarding house in SF.”

Which is how she got access to the elite inner circles in the city. Even the governor lived there, he took his oath of office in her boarding house on Washington Street.

Bibbs says she knew how to create loyalty in these men. “A lot of people said she used blackmail, well she did use blackmail at times but that wasn’t the source of her power. The source of her power was gratitude,” says Bibbs.

But the whole time she was becoming an influential figure in the city, she was living as a kind of double agent. While most of San Francisco knew her as white, the black community knew that she was black, and fighting for abolition.

She was a major link in the underground railroad, a funder of slave revolts across the country, and a pillar of the burgeoning black community in the city.

“All that African Americans knew was that if they wanted something they could go to her and somehow she would use her influence and she would get it,” says Bibbs, “And so they called her the Black City Hall.”

Pleasant got them housing, jobs, loans, legal charges dropped, she made it popular for high society to hire black people. She was determined to make it big and bring her people with her.

Then in 1865, slavery was finally abolished everywhere in the States. So Pleasant decided it was safe to stop passing as a white woman. For the first time she checked the box marked “black” on the census.

In Pleasant’s unpublished memoir she wrote, “You know my cause well my cause was the cause of freedom and equality for myself and for my people and I’d rather be a corpse than a coward.”

But there were consequences for fighting white supremacy. In the late 1800’s, white San Francisco begins to see her not as an insider, but as a villain.

To give some context -- the US was struggling to reconstruct itself after slavery and had fallen into a great depression. It was “a time when horrible things began to happen for African Americans,” says Bibbs.

Newly freed slaves were the ones scapegoated for the downturn. Politicians in favor of civil rights were being replaced by segregationists. This is when the KKK rises to power.

Mary Ellen Pleasant becomes a cautionary tale for the country-- this is what happens when you let a black woman get too powerful.

Lynn Hudson, she also wrote a book about Pleasant. She says rumors filled the papers. “You can find all kinds of accusations in the press.” She says the press tried to cut her down to size by giving her the nickname Mammy. A name that “conjures images of the smiling, happy slave with a hankerchief on her head and she’s so happy to be a slave,” says Hudson.

Some reporters were mocking Pleasant by portraying her as harmless and subservient, but at the very same time others would paint her as a powerful witch.

This was a time period when reporters played fast and loose with facts, and there were no repercussions.

The San Francisco Chronicle spread rumors that she was a madame, that she stole white people’s money, even that she stole babies and sold them on a black market.

“She was accused of putting a spell on a senator,” says Hudson, and of “sprinkling love potion on his undergarments.”

The papers really fixated on Pleasant’s voodoo practice. Because here’s the thing, according to Bibbs, she did practice voodoo-- or rather vodun, not the witch-y jinx-y magic stereotype you might be thinking of-- but the Haitian religion her mother and grandmother passed down to her.

She was trained as a voodun priestess - a role which tasked her with protecting and serving her community; the black community of San Francisco.

And the press ran with it. Think of it, a voodoo queen-- the perfect tabloid spectacle.

But still, somehow, Pleasant never cowered from the press, or anyone else. She mocked the negative media attention and even played into it. Like carrying around a crystal ball as a prop.

She wrote in her unpublished memoir, “them newspapers, they can say what they want about me. When I’m in a fight any byplay doesn’t phase me.”

Eventually the San Francisco Chronicle, after smearing her for decades, admitted some admiration for her. They wrote, “in her whole thirty eight years of residence in California she has laughed at courts, disobeyed the orders of judges and has escaped somehow from every tight corner in which she has been placed.”

So she carried on now known as the Voodoo Queen until the day she died-- in 1904, from heart failure.

Her whole life, Mary Ellen Pleasant was fugitive just by virtue of her skin color, and wicked just by virtue of her gender but Bibbs won’t let that be her legacy.

“When you look at Pleasant you look at a person all alone, brought out of slavery, put into indenture, and how this person rallied everytime, came to the top of everything,” says Bibbs, “It’s just mind blowing.”

And maybe Pleasant liked the fight, maybe it’s the very thing that spurred her on. She wrote in her unpublished memoir, “I don’t want to be carried up to victory on flower beds of ease, I like to go through bloody scenes.”

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