Mary Ann Day Brown | |
|---|---|
Mary Ann Brown (née Day), wife of John Brown, married in 1833, with Annie (left) and Sarah (right) in 1851. | |
| Born | Mary Ann Day (1816-04-15)April 15, 1816 |
| Died | February 29, 1884(1884-02-29) (aged 67) |
| Resting place | Madronia Cemetery,Saratoga, California |
| Occupation(s) | Abolitionist,Underground Railroad conductor, California pioneer |
| Spouse | |
| Children | 13, includingWatson Brown |

Mary Ann Day Brown (April 15, 1816 – February 29, 1884) was the second wife ofabolitionistJohn Brown,leader of a raid onHarpers Ferry, Virginia (since 1863, West Virginia) which attempted to start a campaign of liberating enslaved people in theSouth. Married at age 17, Mary raised 5 stepchildren and an additional 13 children born during her marriage. She supported her husband's activities by managing the family farm while he was away, which he often was. Mary and her husband helped enslaved African Americans escape slavery via theUnderground Railroad. The couple lived in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and in the abolitionist settlement ofNorth Elba, New York. After the execution of her husband, she became a California pioneer.
Mary Ann Day was born on April 15, 1816, inGranville inWashington County, New York,[1] to Mary and Charles Day, a farmer and blacksmith.[2][3] When she was a young girl, she moved with her parents toMeadville inCrawford County, Pennsylvania.[2][4]
When she was sixteen, she occasionally came to abolitionistJohn Brown's house inNew Richmond, Pennsylvania, to work on thespinning wheel. Her sister was his housekeeper. Mary was described as tall and sturdy, with striking black hair. John found her to be a hard worker and practical. A shy man, John wrote a letter to her in which he asked her to marry him.[3][5]
At the age of 17, Mary Ann Day was married on June 14[3] or July 11, 1833, inCrawford County, Pennsylvania, toJohn Brown,[2][6] who was a widower previously married toDianthe Lusk.[7]
Mary acquired five stepchildren, aged two to twelve, upon her marriage to John Brown.[1][4][6]
Mary had thirteen children with John.[1] Six of them did not survive to adulthood. Three more died before John's death.[7] The children were:[7]
For the first couple of years of marriage, the Browns lived inNew Richmond, Pennsylvania. In May 1835, they moved toFranklin Mills, Ohio (later renamed Kent, Ohio),[5] and toRichfield, Ohio, in 1842. At that time, the Browns had twelve living children.[2] They also lived in John's home town ofHudson, Ohio, where he had lived from 1805 to 1821.[9]
Anti-slavery institutions were established byWilliam Lloyd Garrison in the early 1830s with the founding ofThe Liberator newspaper and theAmerican Anti-Slavery Society.[10] In the mid-1830s, the Browns were subscribers of the newspaper and Mary was familiar with her husband's and Garrison's positions against slavery. Few people supported the anti-slavery movement in the 1840s and 1850s.[11] Influenced by theSecond Great Awakening, Mary believed it important to bring an end to slavery. She saw African Americans as her equals.[12]
While her husband and sons were away fighting against slavery, she remained at home and worked to support the family, as well as running her household and delivering and raising children.[13] John considered his wife a partner and a "fast and faithful affectionate friend" who made it possible for him to focus on his fight against slavery. He recognized that she took on a life of "poverty, trials, discredit, and sore afflictions" due to his commitments, which resulted in periods of illness and loss.[14]
Their children were raised to be truthful, resist temptation, improve morally, and be useful.[15] Four of her children died in 1843 and another two children died by 1849.[2][5] A religious marker was placed in the cemetery atRichfield, Ohio. Believed to have been written by John, the inscription is: "Through all the dreary night of death / In peaceful slumbers may you rest, / And when eternal day shall dawn / And shades and death have past and gone, / O may you then with glad surprise / In God's own image wake and rise."[2]
In another transition, Mary and the children moved toAkron, Ohio, into a house owned by Simon Perkins, who started a wool business with John inSpringfield, Massachusetts, by 1845.[16]
Gerrit Smith established a land-grant colony for African Americans atNorth Elba, New York, in theAdirondacks wilderness. John Brown moved to the area, with his family, to teach the men how to farm.[17] Having suffered poor health following the death of her children, Mary was described as an invalid by visitorRichard Henry Dana Jr. in 1849. Ruth, her stepdaughter, was taking care of the children at the time.[17][a] Mary traveled toNorthampton, Massachusetts, for awater cure atDavid Ruggles' establishment, which greatly improved her health and well-being.[18] Unique for the times,Frederick Douglass found during his visits that the boys and girls of the family served food to family members and visitors. The boys cleared the table and washed the dishes.[19]
John Brown and Gerrit Smith had hoped that the colony would be a place where African Americans could settle. It was difficult, however, to farm in the cold climate and it did not become a thriving community.Lyman Epps and his family were neighbors. A formerly enslaved man, Cyrus, worked for the Browns as a farmhand and lived with the family. The Browns assisted Blacks who were escaping slavery on theUnderground Railroad, which became more dangerous with the passage of theFugitive Slave Act of 1850.[20] John Brown made his wool warehouse in Springfield, Massachusetts, an Underground Railroad site. The Brown family intended to defend North Elba against slavecatchers with weapons.[21]
In the mid-1850s, John and most of their sons went to Kansas to fight pro-slavery factions to make the territory afree state, while Brown stayed in North Elba with her daughters and son Watson.[22] In 1857, Franklin Sanborn commented that Mary and her daughters, Ruth and Annie, were "hardworking, self-denying, devoted women, fully sensible of the greatness of the struggle in which Capt. Brown is engaged, and willing to bear their part in it." Brown's life was one of financial hardship,[23] and yet the family set aside money to aid African Americans in North Elba.[24]
John returned to the east in 1856 and began canvassing for support for an anti-slavery raid in Virginia. Mary was managing the family's "hardscrabble" existence in North Elba — as he traveled through Canada and the Northern states.[25]
Mary refused to come to theKennedy Farm, as her husband requested. She did not answer his request at all, and did "everything in her power" to prevent her stepdaughter Annie and Oliver's wife Martha from going in her place.[26]: 1188
John planned and executed theraid on Harpers Ferry on October 16, 1859.[1][27] He was accompanied by their sons Oliver andWatson.[27] Annie and daughter-in-law Martha (Oliver's wife) made preparations and cooked at the Kennedy house for the men who would participate in the raid, who were later calledJohn Brown's raiders.[28] The young women returned to North Elba when the raid was imminent.[29]
The night of the raid, Mary waited at their home in North Elba for news about the fate of her husband and sons. With her were four daughters — Ruth, Annie, Sarah, and Ellen — and her daughters-in-law Martha and Bell. Ruth's husband, Henry, was injured while working with John and did not participate in the raid.[27]
John was captured and two of their sons were killed. He was charged with murder, inciting a slave riot, and treason.[1] When she visited him in jail inCharles Town, Virginia, Mary's likeness was sketched and her life story printed in newspapers.[30] She became a source of interest in the country as the result of the Harpers Ferry raid. Mary met noted abolitionists and funds were raised to help support the family.[31]
Mary was repeatedly tutored by abolitionist leaders (such asWendell Phillips) about how they thought John Brown's wife should behave and speak, to project the image that John had his wife's unqualified support. They wrote letters for publication in her name.[26]

Found guilty of all charges, John was hanged on December 2, 1859.[1] There were some plans to use his body for medical research, but Mary imploredHenry A. Wise, the governor of Virginia, to returnhis remains to her and their children for burial at the family farm, as John had requested. Wise agreed.[1] Some abolitionists — likeWendell Phillips — wanted him to be buried inMount Auburn Cemetery inCambridge, Massachusetts, with a monument and lavish funeral, that would be a catalyst for fund-raising for the anti-slavery movement.[1]
After theAmerican Civil War, she and her daughters abstained from drinking and were members of temperance societies in their communities.[32] Mary, her son Salmon, and her daughter-in-law Abbie Hinckley Brown decided to travel to California. Abbie's uncle had declared that he found it to be a "land of gold opportunity". Mary and the couple sold their farms and headed west with her daughters Sarah and Annie, hoping that it would be a fresh start and an escape from John Brown's notoriety.[1]
They spent the winter in Iowa and were discovered by Confederate sympathizers who were believed to have poisoned two ewes and planned to kill Salmon. On September 22, 1864,The New York Tribune reported that there was an unconfirmed rumor that the Brown family was murdered by Missouri guerillas.[1] Instead, the Browns traveled by wagon to the Union post atSoda Springs, Idaho, arriving three hours before their pursuers. Soldiers traveled with the family to Nevada, a 200 miles (320 km) trip. They continued their journey along theCalifornia Trail and arrived atRed Bluff, California, where they were welcomed by the residents. They received groceries and supplies and Salmon obtained work immediately after their arrival.[1] She was harassed by pro-slavery people while in Red Bluff and decided to leave the town.[33] She moved toRohnerville, California, and thenSaratoga.[2]
In 1882, she made a trip east. She was honored at public receptions in Chicago and Kansas, and visited several places associated with her life and that of her husband. While at the house of her sonJohn Jr. in Ohio, the lost body of her son Watson was unexpectedly brought to her, and she took it with her to North Elba, burying him beside his father.[1]
Mary Ann Day Brown died on February 29, 1884, and was buried in theMadronia Cemetery inSaratoga, California. She had requested to be buried alongside her husband, if it was not too costly or difficult.[1] Her funeral was heavily attended.[34]
Historian Stephen B. Oates called her a "loyal, self-sacrificing wife", and stated, "She had been taught since childhood that a woman's task was to bear children, tend her house, and obey her husband. Thus she subordinated herself completely to Brown's will... enduring his intractable ways."[1]
Her correspondence shows that she was devoted to her husband and abolitionism. Author John Newton stated inCaptain John Brown (1902) that she bore "hardship, poverty, prolonged separation from her husband, yea, even the loss of her noble sons to further the sacred cause of freedom." Of her husband, Mary stated, "It is only those that are capable of appreciating his motives that can see any beauty in them."[1]
Oswald Garrison Villard noted in his 1910 biography of her husband that Mary possessed “rugged physical health and even greater ruggedness of nature… was as truly of the stuff of which martyrs are made as was her husband.[35]
Susan Higginbotham deals with Mary in the novelJohn Brown's Women.[36]
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