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SOUTH
DAKOTA LEGENDS
Lucretia "Aunt Lou" Marchbanks -
The Greatest Cook in the Black Hills |
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Except
for “Aunt Sally” Campbell who came with the
Custer
Expedition in 1874, most believe that
Lucretia
Marchbanks was the first black woman in the
Black Hills
of
South Dakota.
Born a
slave in Putman County, Tennessee on March 25, 1832,
Lucretia
belonged to a slave owner named Martin Marchbanks, whose father had
settled east of Algood, Tennessee.
Lucretia's
father was half African American and half white and the half brother of
Martin Marchbanks. Before the Civil War even began, her father was
able to purchase his freedom for $700, which he had spent years very
carefully saving.
Lucretia,
the oldest of eleven children, grew up on the Marchbanks plantation where
she was trained in cooking and housekeeping. She was “given” to
Marchbanks’ oldest daughter who she traveled west with prior to the Civil
War. Once she was freed by the Emancipation Proclamation,
Lucretia
continued to travel, spending time in
California,
before returning to her home in Tennessee.
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However, having gotten a taste of the West, she soon
headed that way again, working in the gold camps of
Colorado
before being lured by the reports of gold in the
Black
Hills. Arriving in
Deadwood
on June 1, 1876, she soon found work as the Kitchen Manager in the
Grand Central Hotel.
In no time, the hotel, which really wasn’t so grand, was better known
for the great food served in its restaurant and
Lucretia
had become better known as “Aunt
Lou” in
Deadwood
Gulch.
But
Lucretia
was more than just a friendly face with great cooking talents; she was
also a tough manager and brooked no intimidation from her customers.
On one day she proved that when a Mexican man came into the
restaurant boasting that he had killed an Indian and acting as though
he’d like to kill someone else. As the nervous customers looked on,
Aunt Lou
soon confronted him, while brandishing a large knife and in no time,
the stranger took his leave.
Two years later
she was offered a better position working as a cook for the Golden
Gate Mine in nearby Lead. Word of her culinary skills continued to
spread and she was soon lured away again as a cook and housekeeper for
a boarding house owned by Harry Gregg in Sawpit Gulch, also in Lead. Catering to the DeSmet Mine workers, one story tells that when she was
late from a meeting she was able to fix supper for the miners in 25
minutes, plus fixing lunch buckets for those on the night shift.
During her
tenure at Gregg’s boarding house, she made some $40 per month. But like her father, she was a frugal woman and saved nearly every
dime.
By 1883,
Aunt Lou
had earned a reputation as the best cook in the
Black
Hills and having
carefully saved her money, soon opened her own establishment called
the Rustic Hotel in Sawpit Gulch. The restaurant of the hotel, which
was really more of a boarding house, was soon overrun with customers.
Excelling at making plum puddings as well as numerous
other culinary delights, one of her boarders once asked for a recipe,
her reply was, “Oh,
just a handful of this and a handful of that.”
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Her
legendary cooking skills became so widespread that the New York Stock
Exchange, in discussing a
Black Hills
Mining News article, asked “Who is
Aunt Lou?
The Black Hills Daily Times soon answered in a commentary entitled
“We’ll Tell You Who She Is,” which read:
“Aunt
Lou is an old
and respected colored lady who has had charge of the superintendent’s
establishment of the DeSmet mine as housekeeper, cook and superintendent
of all superintendents who have ever been employed at the mine. Her
accomplishments as culinary artist are beyond all praise. She rules the
house where she presides with autocratic power by Divine right brooking no
cavil or presumptuous interference. The superintendent may be a big man in
the mines or the mill but the moment he sets foot within her realm he is
but a meek and ordinary mortal.
A skillful nurse as well as a fine cook and housekeeper,
her services to the victims of mountain fever never have received an
infinitesimal part of the praise to which they
are richly entitled.”
On
another occasion during a festival to raise money for the Congregational
Church in 1880, the prize of a diamond ring was raffled off and given to
the most popular woman in the
Black Hills.
Though many popular white women were her competed against her for the
honor, men and women alike voted for
Aunt Lou,
who easily won the coveted prize.
Continuing to accumulate her hard earned
money,
Aunt Lou
decided that she had cooked long enough and sold the Rustic Hotel in 1885
to a Mrs. A.M. Porter. She soon purchased a ranch in between Sundance and
Beulah,
Wyoming. There, she was actively engaged in raising horses and cattle with the help
of a hired a man named George Baggely, who worked for her for the next
twenty years.
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Also See:
Black
Hills Historic Characters & Tales
Deadwood -
Rough & Tumble Mining Camp
Deadwood, South Dakota Timeline
HBO's Deadwood - Facts & Fiction

Book Your Lodging in Deadwood
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The DeSmet Gold Stamp Mill.
This image available for
photographic prints and downloads
HERE!
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Legends
Exclusive Custom Products -
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and more; and our line of exclusive
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a number of items that you've never seen before! Click
HERE to see the entire line.
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