by Woody Clermont (Author)
Mary Ellen Pleasant's story is one of the most extraordinary-and overlooked-in American history. Born in the early nineteenth century, she rose from obscurity to become a millionaire entrepreneur, an abolitionist mastermind, and the woman history now calls the Mother of Civil Rights in California.
In the gold-dusted streets of San Francisco, Pleasant built an empire of laundries, boarding houses, and real estate, transforming domestic labor into financial power. But her wealth was never just for herself. She sheltered fugitives, funded escape routes, sued streetcar companies for segregation, and, by her own account, gave John Brown tens of thousands of dollars to strike at the heart of slavery.
This book traces her journey through triumph and betrayal-her bold lawsuits, her entanglement in the sensational Sharon v. Sharon trial, her stewardship of the Bell mansion, and the scandals that sought to tarnish her name. It also follows the legend beyond her lifetime: the parks, plaques, art, literature, and films that keep her memory alive, and the blueprint she left for later generations of civil rights activists, entrepreneurs, and community builders.
Mary Ellen Pleasant did not wait for permission to rise-she built her own Black Wall Street before the name ever existed. Her legacy is wealth as resistance, law as weapon, audacity as survival.
For readers of Black history, women's history, and true stories of resistance, this is the definitive narrative of a woman who truly is legend.
Number of Pages: 160
Dimensions: 0.34 x 9 x 6 IN
Publication Date: September 20, 2025