More About the Biddle family of Mackinac Island
Edward Biddle was part of a prominent family in Philadelphia. For example, his cousin, Nicholas, was president of the Second Bank of the United States and editor of Lewis & Clark’s report on their journey to the Pacific Northwest. Edward made a name for himself after finding his way to Mackinac Island following the War of 1812. He worked in the booming Great Lakes fur trade for many years and later served both as sheriff and Mackinac Island village president.
But it’s his wife whose story is really interesting. Agatha Biddle was part of the Métis people with both French and Native American heritage. That background gave Agatha the ability to bridge both cultures, becoming a prominent woman on Mackinac Island in a society otherwise dominated by males.
Agatha wore the traditional clothing of her tribe and often welcomed Native American guests into her home, while also partnering with her English husband in their business. In her “Reminiscences of Early Days of Mackinac Island,” author Elizabeth Therese Baird, herself of both European and Native American heritage, wrote that Agatha Biddle “was fair-complexioned for an Indian, although her eyes were very black, and her hair equally so and of the thickest and longest.”