2026 Pub. 5 Issue 1

Henrietta S. Bowers Duterte America’s First Female Undertaker This article has been edited for length and clarity. ​Henrietta S. Bowers Duterte (1817-1903) was a prominent businesswoman and a philanthropist known for her charity fundraising. Born into a well-established free Black family in Philadelphia, she eventually married Francis A. Duterte, an undertaker who started his own business in 1852. The Dutertes were a prominent and well-connected Philadelphia family who exemplified the values of education and hard work that the Black middle class strove to uphold. Such status also included political activism, and Francis Duterte participated in the 1855 National Colored Convention as a delegate. Although Black women during this period often learned their husbands’ trades, they rarely owned their own businesses. Yet, when Mrs. Duterte’s husband died of a sudden illness in 1859, she not only inherited the business but also successfully managed it for the next several decades. Indeed, she defied the gender norms of the undertaking profession, becoming the first woman in America to operate a mortuary. She was extremely successful in this line of work and was noted for being “prompt in her business affairs, and sympathizing and accommodating to all — rich or poor.” Henrietta Duterte used her business for more than just profit; it also enabled her to hide fugitive slaves from detection. She literally turned her trade into a vehicle for emancipation. As a member of the Underground Railroad, she often hid runaways in coffins or disguised them in funeral processions to ensure their safe passage. Additionally, she used her business profits to support the Black community through philanthropic projects. She contributed financially to the First Colored Church in Philadelphia and raised money to pay the pastor’s salary at Allen Chapel. ​She also fundraised on behalf of Stephen Smith’s Philadelphia Home for Aged and Infirm Colored Persons and helped to organize the 1866 Freedman’s Aid Society Fair to aid free Blacks in Tennessee. While she remained socially active throughout her life, she gradually transferred the management of her business to her nephew, Joseph Seth, who continued to operate it after her death. She died on Dec. 23, 1903, at the age of 86 and was buried in Eden Cemetery. Recently, H.S. Duterte has garnered increased attention from scholars, leading to her re-inscription into the history of Black business and abolitionism in Philadelphia. This profile from “The Fight for Black Mobility: Traveling to Mid-Century Conventions,” an exhibit of the Colored Conventions Project, is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0. 20 | MONTANA FUNERAL DIRECTORS ASSOCIATION

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