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Mary Bateman Clark

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American woman who resisted slavery (1795–1840)

Mary Bateman Clark
Bornc. 1795
Kentucky
Died1840
Resting placeGreenlawn Cemetery, Vicennes, Indiana
Known forIndiana Supreme Court case of 1821 that freed her and set the precedent for other indentured servants
SpouseSamuel Clark
Children12 children

Mary Bateman Clark (1795–1840) was an American woman, born into slavery, who was taken toIndiana Territory. She was forced to become an indentured servant, even though theNorthwest Ordinance prohibited slavery. She was sold in 1816, the same year that theConstitution of Indiana prohibited slavery and indentured servitude. In 1821, attorneyAmory Kinney represented her as she fought for her freedom in the courts. After losing the case in the Circuit Court, she appealed to theIndiana Supreme Court in the case ofMary Clark v. G.W. Johnston. She won her freedom with the precedent-setting decision against indentured servitude in Indiana. The documentary,Mary Bateman Clark: A Woman of Colour and Courage, tells the story of her life and fight for freedom.

Background

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Further information:History of Indiana

Beginning in the 16th century, the present-day state of Indiana was part ofNew France (1534–1763), under which slavery was legal. Slavery was practiced by the French, Native Americans, and their allies. For instance,René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle traveled through the area with a Shawnee slave. Native American and Black enslaved people were bought and sold in slave markets inNew Orleans andCanada.[1][a]

Those who were pro-slavery tried to perform an end run around the Indiana constitution by putting in place indentured servitude under which slaves, in theory, appeared to be able earn their freedom. However, the terms often placed on indentured servants were so excessive, many never actually never were able to achieve freedom.

—Rebecca R. Bibbs,It took two Supreme Court cases to end slavery in Indiana[1]

Even though theNorthwest Ordinance of 1787 banned slavery, most of the African Americans were enslaved, some wereindentured servants.[2][3] Many of the slaveholders were influential men like civic and religious leaders, businessmen, and lawyers,[3] who sanctioned going around the law to keep theirbondservants.[4] Slaveholders created a "loophole", that the provision did not apply to African Americans who were already enslaved in the state.[5] In 1816, theConstitution of Indiana made forced labor illegal, stating that "there shall be neither slavery nor involuntary servitude in this state."[2]

Polly Strong, an enslaved woman, was the plaintiff in a case that argued that she should be free. After losing in the Harrison County Circuit Court, she won the case at theIndiana Supreme Court on July 22, 1820, and she was freed.[3]

Early life

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External image
image iconRendering of Mary Bateman Clark

Mary Bateman Clark was born into slavery in 1795.[6][b] She was a teenager living in Kentucky in 1814, when she was sold to Benjamin J. Harrison, who took her north January of the following year toVincennes inIndiana Territory.[4][6][c] Harrison forced Clark to sign an agreement, that she could not read, that required her to remain his servant for 30 years.[6] Blacks were threatened that if they did not signindenture contracts, they would be returned to slavery in the South.[3]

Even though theConstitution of Indiana of 1816 prohibited slavery and servitude,[3] Harrison sold Clark toGeneral Washington Johnston, his wealthy uncle and member of theIndiana General Assembly. He was a recent widower.[4] On October 24, 1816, she was purchased for $350 (equivalent to $6,485 in 2024) and had an indenture contract of 20 years.[7][d]

Court cases

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Petition for Clark's freedom filed in Knox Circuit Court, Vincennes, Indiana

Mary, a woman of color, called Mary Clark v. General W. Johnston, 1821, Knox County, Indiana Circuit Court]]

In 1821, AttorneyAmory Kinney, who one year earlier representedPolly Strong, filed thefreedom suitMary Clark v. General W. Johnston to terminate Clark's indenture.[7] As with Strong's case, Clark lost in the Circuit Court. The court had ruled that she voluntarily entered into indentured contract, and had to finish out the 20-year term.[2][8] Clark was ordered to pay Johnston's court costs.[7]

Clark's attorney appealed the decision with the Indiana Supreme Court in the case ofMary Clark v. G.W. Johnston. She won her freedom on November 6, 1821, when the court ruled that servitude violated the state's 1816 Constitution.[7] This was a landmark contract law case for indentured servants and foretold the end offorced labor in Indiana.[2][8] At some point, Samuel was also freed.[4]

After the Indiana Supreme Court verdicts, Kinney was attacked by mobs, and after a few years moved toTerre Haute, Indiana.[2]

Personal life

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Mary Bateman married Samuel Clark on July 12, 1817, becoming Mary Bateman Clark.[4][9] Samuel Clark had also come from Kentucky as an enslaved person.[4][e] He wasWilliam Henry Harrison's horse handler at theBattle of Tippecanoe. He may have been owned by Luke Decker of Knox County.[4] The Clarks had twelve children together. The seven known children were born between 1820 and 1837: Mary Eliza Brewer, George, William G. W., Frances, John S., Lovina Mariah Reynolds, and Maria Rollins. The family lived in Vincennes.[4] Bateman Clark was a co-founder of the Bethel AME Church of Vincennes.[2] She died in 1840 of dysentery after drinking poisoned water and was buried in the Greenlawn Cemetery in Vincennes.[4] Samuel death was reported on October 27, 1869.[4]

Legacy

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External image
image iconMary Clark historical marker, Knox County Courthouse
  • Outside the Knox County Court House inVincennes, Indiana, a historical marker commemorates Clark and her landmark Supreme Court case. It was installed on June 27, 2009.[10] Although Vincennes was the first black community in the state, the marker is the only state memorial in the town.[8]
  • Ethel McCane and Eunice Trotter, Clark's three times great-granddaughters perform reenactments of the case in Indiana.[8]
  • The documentary,Mary Bateman Clark: A Woman of Colour and Courage, tells the story of her life and fight for freedom. Produced by theAgency for Instructional Technology, it was televised on local PBS affiliates duringBlack History Month.[2][11]

Notes

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  1. ^In the early 1800s,Knox County was wilderness (Northwest Territory (1797) and thenIndiana Territory (1809)). Many of the French and English Americans who lived there before the 19th century had lived in and then abandoned their simple homes. Travel was conducted along dirt paths. After theRevolutionary War, former soldiers settled in the county.[2]
  2. ^Johnson states that she was born in 1801.[5]
  3. ^Harrison was related to the first governor of Indiana Territory,William Henry Harrison, who later became the president of theUnited States.[2]
  4. ^Don L. Williams stated that she was purchased for $300.[6]
  5. ^In 1890, William H. Stewart wrote a romantic version of Mary and Samuel's arrival in Indiana. Stewart said that Samuel Clark came to Vincennes first and went back to Kentucky to bring Mary to the area.[4]

References

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  1. ^abBibbs, Rebecca R. (February 2, 2020)."Hidden History: It took two Supreme Court cases to end slavery in Indiana".The Herald. RetrievedFebruary 23, 2022.
  2. ^abcdefghiKeierleber, Mark (February 16, 2013). "Woman's battle helped end slavery in Indiana".The Herald-Tribune.
  3. ^abcde"Mary Bateman Clark helped end slavery, indentured servitude in Indiana".Indianapolis Recorder. August 9, 2021. RetrievedFebruary 21, 2022.
  4. ^abcdefghijkBrewer-Trotter, Eunice (September 22, 2015)."Mary Bateman Clark: a woman of color and courage".Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History. Vol. 27, no. 4. Indiana Historical Society Press. pp. 38–46. RetrievedFebruary 20, 2022.
  5. ^abJohnson, Taylor (February 9, 2021)."Polly Strong & Mary Clark remembered as 'pioneers in this ongoing struggle for freedom'".My Wabash Valley, WTWO-TV, Nexstar Media. RetrievedFebruary 21, 2022.
  6. ^abcdWilliams, David L. (2022).African Americans in Indianapolis: The Story of a People Determined to Be Free. Indiana University Press. p. 4.ISBN 978-0253059499.
  7. ^abcdWilliams, Sandra Boyd (1997)."The Indiana Supreme Court and the Struggle Against Slavery".Indiana Law Review. Symposium: The History of Indiana Courts: People, Legacy and Defining Moments.30 (1):307–310.doi:10.18060/3223.
  8. ^abcd"Mary Bateman Clark Project".Indiana Bicentennial Commission, Indiana state government. RetrievedFebruary 21, 2022.
  9. ^"Mary Bateman marries Samuel Clark, Vincennes, Knox County, Indiana",County Court Records at Vincennes, Indiana, Indiana Marriages, 1802–1892, July 12, 1817
  10. ^IHB (December 15, 2020)."Mary Clark".IHB. RetrievedNovember 2, 2023.
  11. ^"Mary Bateman Clark: A Woman Of Colour And Courage (documentary)".PBS.

External links

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