Holmes was born between 1825 and 1830 in
Washington, D.C. In 1852, as a free woman, she married Melchoir Malachi Holmes, an enslaved man. In 1854, her husband was to be sold at auction and sent to the South. However, through the efforts of abolitionist
Gerrit Smith Melchoir was bought by
William Seaton, the editor of the National Intelligencer and later mayor of Washington D.C., for $1000. Seaton then paid Melchoir $25 a month in wages and Sophia $25 a month for washing in credit towards the debt for Melchoir's freedom. By 1861, the couple had raised sufficient funds to purchase his freedom. While his emancipation papers were being processed, he enlisted in the
Union Army under Col. French's regiment, 4th Maine Company H, as a servant to Captain George J. Burns.
Civil Service Employment Following her husband's death in 1861, Holmes, through the advocacy of
Senator Henry Wilson and
James G. Blaine, among others, Holmes was the first African American woman hired into formal federal employment. In 1862, at the beginning of her initial tenure as an employee for the Treasury, Holmes prevented a massive theft of funds. Her duties at the Treasury Department "consisted of sweeping, scrubbing, dusting, emptying baskets and boxes of waste papers." One evening, as Holmes was cleaning, she discovered a box packed with bills, "some as large as $1,000." Holmes informed Secretary Spinner of her find. This prevention of a major theft of more than $200,000 was described in numerous newspaper articles in great detail in later years and upon her death.
Recognition Holmes' prevention of a major theft from the federal government was one of the largest theft preventions in American history. She was originally interred at the
Harmony Cemetery in Washington D.C., an African American cemetery that was established during the early nineteenth century. Her remains were later disinterred when the cemetery closed and reinterred at the
National Harmony Memorial Park. ==See also==