- Mathilda Beasley State Historical
Marker
- Located at Sacred Heart Catholic Church, 1707 Bull
St., Savannah
- 32°03.338, 081°05.954
MOTHER MATHILDA BEASLEY,
O. S. F.
GEORGIA'S FIRST BLACK NUN
Mathilda Taylor was born in 1834 in New
Orleans, and came to Savannah as a young woman. She taught black
children in her home before the Civil War, when it was still
illegal. She married Abraham Beasley, a successful black businessman,
in 1869. After the death of her husband in 1877, Mrs. Beasley
journeyed to York England around 1885 to study as a nun, a Poor
Clare, a branch of the Franciscan sisters. She returned to Savannah
and established an orphanage in 1886 which became the St. Francis
Home in 1892. In 1889, Sister Mathilda founded the first group
of black nuns in Georgia which were of the 3rd order of St. Francis
and became known as "Mother Mathilda." Under her direction,
this small order ran the orphanage for several years until it
dispersed, Mother Mathilda gained help from the Church for her
orphanage and in 1899, took the habit of the Franciscans and
continued working at the orphanage. In 1901, she was given a
cottage near the Sacred Heart Church to which she had earlier
given her husband's landholdings. She began to sew in her home
and give the proceeds to poor blacks. On Dec. 20, 1903, the much
beloved "Mother Beasley" was found dead kneeling in
the cottage's private chapel. Nearby were her burial clothes,
funeral instructions and will.
025-104 GEORGIA HISTORIC
MARKER 1988
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