Jennie Winslow’s remarkable story

SALISBURY — In 1844, Edwin White painted a portrait of Maria (Birch) Coffing, wife of John Churchill Coffing. Included in the background of the painting is a portrait of Jane E. “Jennie” Winslow. There are very few portraits of this time period that include the likeness of a person of color. 

Maria Birch (1782-1865) was the second wife of John Churchill Coffing (1776-1847). His first wife, Jerusha Fitch, had died in 1812 and left him with four young children to raise. He chose Miss Maria Birch, who was at the time teaching school in Furnace Village (Lakeville) in the home of her uncle, Luther Holley. 

On Oct. 25, 1812, he wrote: “Miss Birch, As the first known advance belongs to the part that I am, this is directly to inform you Madam that I have it in contemplation to make some pertinent proposition to you and should you think proper to adhere to nuptial stipulations, candor shall direct the alliance. Yours with esteem, John Churchill Coffing.” 

(This was copied directly from the original in possession of the family.)

From Maria Birch’s memory in her old age we have this reply to the proposal: “I am bound to tell you that my heart is buried with a man who lies I know not where, but if you still wish it, I will marry you, and be a mother to your children to the very best of my ability.” 

Maria’s fiancé, a doctor, had left to go do missionary work among island natives in the South Seas. Having had no word from him for six years she accepted John Coffing’s proposal and they were married. Five years later Dr. Frost finally returned to find that she had married, thinking him dead. Brokenhearted at her refusal to see him, he left once more and died soon after in a foreign country.

In approximately 1830, John and Maria took into their home a 5-year-old orphan girl named Jane Elizabeth Winslow. Jennie, as she was known, was raised by the Coffings and lived with and worked for them until both Coffings had died. John Coffing died in 1847, and Maria and her family and Jennie lived on in the Coffing house (now the Don Buckley house on Route 41/44 near the Scoville Library) until Maria died in 1865. 

Jane stayed on as caretaker for the Coffing house for some five or six years after Maria died. In 1871 she moved to Great Barrington, where she married Egbert Lee, a 71-year-old former slave.

Cemetery records show that Jennie is buried in the Salisbury Cemetery and that she died April 15, 1872, at age 52, just five months after she married. 

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