Frances Thompson

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Frances Thompson
Frances wearing a dress, an 1876 illustration for The Days' Doings
Born1840
Alabama
Died1876(1876-00-00) (aged 35–36)
Known forMemphis Riots of 1866 testimony, living as a black trans woman in the 19th century

Frances Thompson was a formerly enslaved black transgender woman and anti-rape activist who was one of the five black women to testify before a congressional committee that investigated the Memphis Riots of 1866. She is believed to be the first transgender woman to testify before the United States Congress. Thompson and a housemate, Lucy Smith, were attacked by a white mob and were among many freedwomen who were raped during the riots.[1] In 1876, Thompson was arrested for "being a man dressed in women's clothing".[2]

Early life

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Thompson was born into slavery in Alabama and assigned male at birth. By the time she was 26 years old, Thompson was living as a free woman in a Black community in Memphis, Tennessee. She made a living doing laundry and lived openly as a woman, keeping her face clean-shaven and wearing brightly colored dresses.[3]

Memphis Massacre of 1866

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The Memphis Riots of 1866 began after a group of black soldiers, women, and children began to gather in a public space in South Memphis. After the police attempted to break up the group, arresting two soldiers, gunshots broke out which subsequently led to rioting.[4] For three days, a white mob targeted communities of black residents, starting fires, killing black people and raping black women.[5]

During these attacks, Thompson's and Smith's house was targeted by white men who questioned their affiliation with Union soldiers.[1] Thompson would later testify during the congressional committee that the men demanded that they (Thompson and Smith) make them food, and they obliged. After which, the men demanded a "woman to sleep with", which Thompson refused; the men then gang-raped both Thompson and Smith and robbed them. The group of white men who attacked the women included two police officers.[1][3]

Congressional testimony

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Thompson, along with 170 women and men testified before the US Congress during a committee hearing to document the terror, death, rape, arson and theft they experienced during the riots.[6][7] In the testimony, Thompson stated that she and her housemate, Smith, did not consent.

After the hearing, Thompson's testimony became known throughout the South, leading to ten years of raised awareness and persecution for her gender identity. She dealt with both harassment and false accusations, including the claim that she ran a brothel.[3]

1876 arrest

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In July 1876, Thompson was fined $50 (~$1,431 in 2023) and jailed for "cross-dressing." She was forced to undergo numerous physician's examinations in which four physicians "confirmed" that her "biological sex" was male.[8] She identified as a woman.[2] Southern Democrats used her arrest as a "man dressed in women's clothing" as ammunition to discredit her story of being raped during the riots 10 years prior. This fueled an even larger campaign to refute white racial terror against black people in the south.[2] The discovery of Thompson's identity was also used to discredit other black women's claims of rape by white men, and suggested that the entire congressional report that Thompson had testified in was only manufactured propaganda in support of Reconstruction.[1]

Death

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After she was arrested for "cross dressing," she was sentenced to the city's chain gang, where she was forced to wear men's clothes and abused while serving time. Thompson moved to North Memphis after she was released, but died within the same year of her initial arrest. She was found seriously ill and moved to a hospital where she died of dysentery. Coroner's reports say that Thompson was anatomically male, but newspaper reports stated that some in Memphis had understood her to be intersex, and that she had stated she was "of double sex".[9]

Historical relevance and impact

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Thompson's story is an example of a Black woman reclaiming her body after the injustices of slavery, when enslaved people didn't have the rights to their own bodies. In addition, she sought justice before the US Congress at a time when free Black women did not often have access to legal support, particularly against the aggressions of white men.[3][10]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Rosen, Hannah (1999). Hodes, Martha (ed.). Sex, Love, Race: Crossing Boundaries in North American History. New York and London: New York University Press. pp. 267–286. ISBN 0814735568.
  2. ^ a b c Rosen, Hannah (2009). Terror in the Heart of Freedom : Citizenship, Sexual Violence, and the Meaning of Race in the Postemancipation South. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 9780807888568.
  3. ^ a b c d Mahn, Krishna (2021-02-25). "These 5 Black women made history — and here's why you should know their stories". ideas.ted.com. Retrieved 2021-09-17.
  4. ^ Ash, Stephen (2013). A massacre in Memphis : the race riot that shook the nation one year after the Civil War. New York: New York : Hill & Wang, a division of Farrar, Straus and Giroux. pp. 100–. ISBN 978-0809067978.
  5. ^ Valdivia Rude, Mey (November 15, 2015). "10 Trans Women Pioneers They Definitely Didn't Tell You About In History Class".
  6. ^ House, United States Congress (1866). The Reports of the Committees of the House of Representatives, Made During the First Session, Thirty-ninth Congress, 1865-'66. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 1.
  7. ^ "A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U.S. Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774 - 1875". memory.loc.gov. Retrieved 2021-09-17.
  8. ^ Spencer, Andrea (6 February 2019). "Frances Thompson, Survivor of the Memphis Massacre".
  9. ^ Bond, Beverly Greene; O'Donovan, Susan Eva (2020). Remembering the Memphis Massacre: An American Story. University of Georgia Press. p. 96. ISBN 9780820356495.
  10. ^ Berry, Daina Ramey; Gross, Kali Nicole (2021). A Black Women's History of the United States. Beacon Press, Penguin Random House. ISBN 9780807001998.