Annie Kennedy Bidwell (June 30, 1839 – March 9, 1918) was a 19th-century pioneer and founder of society in the Sacramento Valley area of California. She is known for her contributions to social causes, such as women's suffrage, the temperance movement, donating parks for travelers to camp and sleep in and education. Annie Bidwell was a friend and correspondent of Susan B. Anthony, Frances Willard, and John Muir.
She married John Bidwell on April 16, 1868, in Washington, D.C. Their wedding guests included Elizabeth Cady Stanton, President Andrew Johnson and future president Ulysses S. Grant. After their marriage, Annie returned with her new husband to his home in Chico, California. While her husband was alive, Bidwell was concerned for the future of the local Mechoopda Native Americans. She was active in state and national Indian associations. An amateur botany, she collected the first known specimen of a small annual plant, which was named Bidwell's knotweed ( Polygonum bidwelliae), after her. Bidwell Park - Park Plant Inventory After her husband's death, Bidwell continued to live in Chico, the town her late husband had founded. Before her death, she donated to the city of Chico on July 10, 1905, some 2,238 acres (almost ten square miles) of land, along with a Children's Park in downtown. Since then the land has remained in the public trust and is now known as Bidwell Park.
She died on March 9, 1918, in Chico, California.
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