Susie King Taylor
(Susan Ann Baker )
(August 6, 1848 – October 6, 1912)
Nurse, Educator, and Author,
Book Authored:
Reminiscences of My Life in Camp
Susie Taylor is the only African-American woman who is confirmed to have published a wartime memoir about the Civil War. Born into slavery, Taylor taught herself to read and when she escaped to St. Simon’s Island in Georgia, she founded a school. Taylor’s husband served in the Union Army, and she was both a nurse and laundress to the Union forces.
Susie is known for being the first Black nurse during the American Civil War. Beyond just her aptitude in nursing the wounded of the 1st South Carolina Volunteer Infantry Regiment, Taylor was the first Black woman to self-publish her memoirs. She was the author of Reminiscences of My Life in Camp with the 33rd United States Colored Troops, Late 1st S.C. Volunteers. She was also an educator to formerly bonded Black people in the postbellum South by opening various schools in Georgia. Taylor would also be a part of organizing the 67 Corps of the Women’s Relief Corps in 1886.
Susie King Taylor, born Susan Ann Baker, was the first of nine children born to Raymond and Hagar Ann Reed Baker on August 6, 1848. She was born into slavery on a plantation owned by Valentine Grest on the Isle of Wight in Liberty County, Georgia. Taylor is recognized as being a member of the Gullah peoples of the coastal lowlands of Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida.
When she was about seven years old, her grandmother Dolly Reed was allowed by the plantation owner to take Taylor to go live with her in Savannah, Georgia. She moved to her grandmother’s house with her younger brother and sister. Taylor’s grandmother would send her and her brother to be educated through something known as an “underground education.” Under Georgia law, it was illegal for enslaved people to be educated. Taylor and her brother would be taught by a friend of Dolly’s, a woman known as Mrs. Woodhouse. She was a free woman of color that lived a half mile away from Taylor’s house. Mrs. Woodhouse would have the students enter one at a time with their books covered to keep from drawing too much attention from the police or the local white population. Taylor would attend school with about 25 to 30 children which would last for another two years. At this point, she would then find instruction from another free woman of color, Mrs. Mary Beasley, (Savannah’s first black nun) who would continue to educate Taylor until May 1860. Mrs. Beasley told her grandmother that she had taught Taylor all that she knew and would have to get someone else to continue.
Dolly worked continuously to support the education of her granddaughter. Taylor would become friends with a white playmate named Katie O’Connor who attended a local convent. Her new friend agreed to continue to give Taylor lessons if she promised not to tell anyone. After four months, this would end due to O’Connor going into the convent permanently. Lastly, Taylor would be educated by the son of their landlord, a boy named James Blouis until he entered the Civil War.
Her education would prove paramount. The ability to read and write would later give Susie King Taylor power and protection for people of color both those free and in bondage. As a young child, she would write passes that would give some amount of security to Black people who were out on the street after the curfew bell was rung at nine o’clock each night. This would help keep the pass holders from being arrested by the watchman and placed in a guardhouse until the fines were paid by their master or guardian in order to release them. It was actions like these that continue to put into mind the struggles faced by Black people living in Georgia. She would be exposed to propaganda that attempted to paint the Yankees as people who would only further subjugate the Black population. Taylor would soon see the importance of supporting the Yankees, and in 1862, she was given the opportunity to obtain her own freedom.
American Civil War
As the Civil War began, Taylor was sent back to the country to her mother on April 1, 1862. During the battle between the Confederate and Union army at Fort Pulaski, Taylor, along with her uncle and his family, fled to St. Catherine’s Island to seek protection from the Union fleet. After two weeks, they were all transferred to St. Simon’s Island. While on the gunboat during the transfer, she was questioned by the commander of the boat, Captain Whitmore, inquiring where she was from. Susie informed him that she was from Savannah. He then asked her if she could read and write. When he learned that she could, he handed her a notebook and asked her to write her name and where she was from. After being on St. Simon’s Island for about three days, Commodore Goldsborough visited her at Gaston Bluff where they were located. It was at this meeting she was asked to take charge and create a school for the children on the island. She agreed to do so, provided she be given the necessary books for study. She received the books and testaments from the North and began her first school.
At the age of thirteen, Susie King Taylor founded the first free African-American school for children and also became the first African-American woman to teach a free school in Georgia. During the day, Taylor educated more than forty children, and at her night school, adults attended her classes.
During the later part of August 1862, Captain C. T. Trowbridge came to St. Simon’s Island by order of General Hunter, a noted abolitionist. Under his orders, all of the able men on the island were to be organized into his regiment. General Hunter was aware of the many skirmish events the men on the island had bravely fought and recruited them to join the 1st S. C. Volunteers, which would later be known as the 33rd U.S. Colored Troops. In October 1862, they received orders to evacuate everyone to Beaufort, S.C. All of the enlisted men were housed at Camp Saxton, and Susie was enrolled with the army as a laundress. During this time she married Edward King, a non-commissioned officer in the Company E regiment. Captain Trowbridge was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel in 1864 and remained with the 33rd Regiment until they mustered out on February 6, 1866.
Throughout their time in the regiment, both Susie and her husband, Sergeant Edward King, continued to expand the education of many colored soldiers by teaching them how to read and write in their spare time. Although Susie’s occupation title was laundress, while on Morris Island, she spent little time doing these duties. Rather, she packed haversacks and cartridge packs for the soldiers to use in combat and carried out orders for the commanders. She is also believed to have been entrusted with rifled muskets by the regiment’s officers and is rumored to be a dead shot. She was even trusted to engage in active picket line duty, contributing more to the war than education and nursing services.
In her memoirs published in 1902, Taylor shares many of the sickening sights she encountered and how willing she was to help the wounded and try to alleviate their pain, and how she cared for them while serving with the regiment. In a letter to her from Colonel C. T. Trowbridge, an officer of the 33rd regiment, he discusses the fact that she is unable to be placed in a pensioner’s role for her actions but was in fact an army nurse. He explains she is a person that is the most deserving of this pension regardless. Susie King freely gave her service willingly to the U.S. Colored Troops for four years and three months and never received any pay. In February 1862, she shared how she assisted in helping nurse a comrade in the military company she was serving with during the American Civil War. Edward Davis contracted varioloid, a form of smallpox that happens once a person is vaccinated against the disease. She would attend to him every day in hopes of aiding his recovery. However, despite the effort and attention, he passed. She also helped in the recovery of smallpox as she had been vaccinated for the disease. She insisted that sassafras tea if drank consistently, would help ensure that one could ward off the terrible disease. During her time as a nurse, she met Clara Barton, who later founded the American Red Cross. Taylor visited the hospital at Camp Shaw in Beaufort, South Carolina, and would tend to the wounded and sick
After the American Civil War ended and the Reconstruction Era began, Susie and her husband Edward King, left the 33rd regiment and returned to Savannah, Georgia. While Taylor opened a school for African-American children, whom she called the “children of freedom,” and an adult night school on South Broad Street, Edward tried to find a job in his trade as a carpenter. However, strong prejudices against the newly freed African Americans prevented Edward from securing a job despite being a skilled carpenter. In September 1866, Edward King died a few months before his child with Susie was born. Edward King died in a docking accident while he worked as a longshoreman. Although sources are a bit unclear on how many schools Taylor opened, they all state that she had to eventually close them all as charter schools for African Americans were established and she could no longer make a living through teaching. Susie put her baby with her mother and took the only job available as a domestic servant to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Green, a wealthy white family In 1870, she traveled with the Greens to Boston for the summer, and while there Susie won a prize for her excellent cooking at the fundraiser the ladies held to raise funds to build an Episcopal Church.
Taylor would travel again to Boston in 1874 and entered into service for the Thomas Smith family in the Boston Highlands. After the death of Mrs. Smith, she next served Mrs. Gorham Gray, of Beacon Street. Taylor remained there until she married Russell L. Taylor in 1879.
During the Reconstruction Era, Taylor became a civil rights activist after witnessing much discrimination in the South, where Jim Crow and the Ku Klux Klan mocked and terrorized African Americans.[4] In her book, Taylor mentions the constant lynching of Blacks and how Southern laws were against anyone who was not white. Towards the end of her life, Taylor sought to provide aid to Afro-Cubans after the end of the Spanish American War. Taylor noticed that Afro-Cubans were being discriminated against in a similar way to what African Americans faced during Reconstruction. Her history as an educator also fueled her activism as she challenged the Union Daughters of the Confederacy in their campaign to rid slavery from school curriculums.
Woman’s Relief Corps
Susie King Taylor was part of the organizing of Corps 67 of the Women’s Relief Corps in 1886. She held many positions, including guard, secretary, and treasurer. In 1893, she was elected president of Corps 67. In 1896, in response to an order to take a census of all of the Union Veterans now residing in Massachusetts, she helped create a complete roster for the veterans of the American Civil War which would benefit many of her comrades. Susie King Taylor was specifically a member of the all-black corps in Boston, Massachusetts called the Robert A. Bell Post.
Burial and resting place
Taylor was buried in 1912 at Boston’s Mount Hope Cemetery in the same plot as her husband, Russell L. Taylor (1854–1901). In 2019, a researcher discovered that Susie’s name had not been added to the headstone. In October 2021, Boston Mayor Kim Janey dedicated a new memorial headstone which included Ms. Taylor’s name and likeness, paid for by the Massachusetts branch of the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War.
Legacy
In 2018, Taylor was elected to the Georgia Women of Achievement Hall of Fame (HOF) for her contributions to education, freedom, and humanity during her lifetime. Aside from being the first Black army nurse, Taylor was also the first Black woman to teach in a school dedicated to the education of former slaves. Between 1866 and 1868, she opened and taught at least three schools all in the state of Georgia.
In 2015, the Susie King Taylor Community School was dedicated in her birthplace of Savannah, Georgia. A few miles from the school, near the Midway First Presbyterian Church, stands the first historic marker for Taylor. This marker was constructed in 2019 by the Georgia Historical Society and commemorates Taylor’s life and career in education, literature, and medicine.
The Susie King Taylor Women’s Institute and Ecology Center was established in 2015 in Midway, Georgia by historian Hermina Glass-Hill.