Clara “Aunt Clara” Brown
Clara
Brown was a kind-hearted, generous woman whose determination led her on a
life-long quest to be reunited with her daughter. Born in Spotsylvania
County, Virginia in January 1803, her earliest memory was of being sold
on the auction block. She grew up in Logan County, Kentucky, married at age 18, and had four children. At age 36 her master,
Ambrose Smith, died and her family was sold off to settle his estate. Despite
her continued enslavement, Clara Brown vowed to search for her ten-year-old
daughter, Eliza Jane.
When
the Civil War ended in 1865 Clara Brown returned east, first to Logan County,
Kentucky and then, Sumner County, Tennessee in search of her daughter Eliza
Jane. Brown offered her $10,000 in savings and earnings as a reward for
news of her daughter. When her search proved unsuccessful Brown returned to
Gilpin County, Colorado, bringing with her impoverished freed people she had
befriended.
In
1879, at the age of 76, Brown traveled to Kansas as an official representative
of Colorado’s Governor Frederick Walker Pitkin who had offered to assist
thousands of destitute “Exodusters” to relocate in Colorado. Clara Brown’s
continual search for her daughter, her support for local churches and
charities, and her financial assistance to young women who were educated at
Oberlin College in Ohio eliminated most of her wealth.
In
February 1882, however, when Brown was almost 80 years old, she received news
that her daughter, Eliza Jane had been located in Iowa. In 1884
79-year-old Brown traveled to Iowa to reunite with her 56-year-old
daughter. The same year Brown became the first woman member of the
Colorado Pioneer Association which also provided a stipend for her lifetime of
good works. Clara Brown died in Denver, Colorado in 1885. Slightly over a
century later Brown was inducted into the Colorado Woman’s Hall of Fame in
1989.
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