Freedman, and his contribution to Black history in California
Thomas Gilman (1830–1911), nicknamedUncle Tom Gilman,[1] was an American freedman, miner, farmer, and businessperson. He was an enslaved African American who self–purchased his freedom from mining during the mid-19th-century, and notably contributed to African American history in California.
Biography
Thomas Gilman was Black and born enslaved in 1830, in Tennessee, U.S..[2] He was owned and enslaved by Joseph B. Gilman of Greene County, Tennessee.[1] Thomas was brought to California by his enslaver in 1850, during the California gold rush in order to work in the mines in Dragoon Gulch.[3][1] After two years of mining, he was able to purchase his freedom,[2][4] however Joseph B. Gilman tried to continuously delay the purchase of freedom, until the self–purchase was recorded by the state court on August 1852.[1][5][6]
Gilman spent the remainder of his life in Tuolumne County in his small cabin located on the Sonora–Shaws Flat Road, mining, and farming.[1] He never learned to read or write. When he reached an age in which he could no longer farm, his local friends supported him.[1] Not all freedman in California were able to live such long, and peaceful lives.
Gilman died at age 85 on December 15, 1911, in Shaw's Flat,[7] and he is buried at the Shaw's Flat Cemetery.