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 | Early American Women: A Documentary History, 1600 - 1900, 2nd Edition
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 |  | Nancy Woloch, BARNARD COLLEGE
| | Softcover, 408 pages | | ©2002, ISBN-13 9780072418224 | | | Publisher's Retail Price:$63.44
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| | Bookstore's Wholesale Price:$50.75
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|  | | Description | This volume is a collection of over 100 primary sources in women's history that reveals the diversity of women's experience from the colonial era through the 19th century. The documents range from the familiar to the unusual. Collectively, they evoke interest, inspire reflection, and invite commentary from readers. This volume can stand alone, or it can be used in combination with Susan Ware's MODERN AMERICAN WOMEN, 1890 TO THE PRESENT.
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| Table of Contents |
PREFACE ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
PART 1 A NEW WORLD: THE 17TH AND 18TH CENTURIES
1 First Encounters
NARRANGANSETT WOMEN, Roger Williams, 1643 WOMEN’S LIVES AMONG THE DELAWARE, John Heckewelder, 1819 IROQUOIS WOMEN IN GOVERNMENT, Pierre de Charlevoix, 1721 A NEW ENGLAND CAPTIVITY, Mary Rowlandson, 1681 LIFE AMONG THE SENECA, Mary Jemison, 1824 THE FIRST SHIP, A Chinook Tale
2 Well-Ordered Families
HUSBANDS AND WIVES, Benjamin Wadsworth, 1712 EVANGELICAL CHILD-REARING, Susanna Wesley, 1732 TO IMPROVE IN EVERY VIRTUE, Eliza Pinckney, 1750s TIED HAND AND FOOT, Esther Burr, 1756-1757 AN ABOMINABLE WICKEDNESS, Abigail Bailey, 1815 A DECREE ON SEDUCTION, New Spain, 1752
3 The Colonial Economy
LAWS ON SLAVE DESCENT, Virginia and Maryland, 1662-1692 SKILLED SLAVES IN MARYLAND, The Maryland Gazette, 1748-1763 AN INDENTURED SERVANT’S COMPLAINT, Elizabeth Sprigs, 1756 APPRENTICESHIP IN PENNSYLVANIA, List of Indentures, 1771-1773 ADVENTURE SCHOOLS, Advertisements, 1750s-1770s A MAINE MIDWIFE, Martha Ballard, 1785
4 Women and the Law
AN ANTENUPTIAL CONTRACT, Massachusetts, 1653 DIVORCE IN NEW ENGLAND, Connecticut, 1655-1678 A SEPARATION DECISION, Maryland, 1680 FEME SOLE TRADER ACTS, South Carolina, 1712 and 1744 MALEFACTORS AND COMPLAINANTS, Massachusetts, 1675-1680 WIDOWS, WILLS, AND DOWER RIGHTS, Virginia, 1642, and New York, 1721-1759 WOMEN’S ESTATES, Massachusetts, 1664, and New York, 1747-1759 ACCUSATIONS AGAINST ELIZABETH MORSE, Massachusetts, 1679-1680
5 Religious Experiences
A SPIRITUAL AUTOBIOGRAPHY, Anne Bradstreet, ca. 1670 ANNE HUTCHINSON’S TRIAL, Massachusetts Bay, 1637 AN EPISTLE TO QUAKER WOMEN, Lancashire Women’s Meeting, 1675 A REMARKABLE EXPERIENCE OF AWAKENING, David Brainerd, 1746 NARRATIVE OF OLD ELIZABETH, A Former Slave Recalls Her Conversion Experience of the 1770s
6. The Revolutionary Era
AN ADDRESS TO GEORGE III, Phyllis Wheatley, 1768 A CAROLINA PATRIOT, Eliza Wilkinson, 1782 A LOYALIST WIFE, Grace Galloway, 1778-1779 REMEMBER THE LADIES, Abigail Adams, 1776 THOUGHTS UPON FEMALE EDUCATION, Benjamin Rush, 1787 EXCELLENCY IN OUR SEX, Judith Sargent Murray, 1790
Suggestions for Further Reading
PART 2 THE YOUNG NATION, 1800-1860
7 The Middle Class: Domestic Lives
MATRMONIAL RISKS, Emma Willard, 1815 THE DEFERENTIAL WIFE, Caroline Gilman, 1838 SYSTEM AND ORDER, Catharine Beecher, 1841 FIRST TO NONE, Catharine M. Sedgwick, 1828 THE WIDOWED STATE, Sarah Connell Ayer, 1832-1833
8 The School and the Mill
RULES OF THE SCHOOL, Eliza Ann Mulford, 1814 A RATIONALE FOR FEMLE EDUCATION, Emma Willard, 1819 A CHOCTAW MISSION SCHOOL, Miss Burnham’s Report, 1824 REPORTS ON WESTERN SCHOOLS, Letters from Teachers, 1847 RULES OF THE MILL, Lowell and Lancaster, 1820-1840 A LETTER FROM LOWELL, Harriet Farley, 1844 A SPIRIT OF PROTEST, The Voice of Industry, 1846
9 Western Frontiers
CROSSING THE PLAINS, Amelia Stewart Knight, 1853 A NORWEGIAN IMMIGRANT IN WISCONSIN, Jannicke Saehle, 1847 A WOMEN’S VIEW OF THE GOLD RUSH, Mary B. Ballou, 1852 CHEROKEE WOMEN RESIST REMOVAL, Petitions of the Women’s Councils, 1817,1818 LIFE AMONG THE PIUTES, Sarah Winnemucca, 1883 A WOMAN KILLS HER DAUGHTER, A Sioux Tale
10 Mistress and Slave
AN ALABAMA DIARY, Sarah Haynesworth Gayle, 1828, 1833 THE CRUEL MISTRESS, Angelina Grimke Weld, 1839 A REPLY TO HARRIET BEECHER STOWE, Louisa S. Cheeves McCord, 1853 MRS. CHESNUT’S COMPLAINT, Mary Boykin Chesnut, 1861 AN ATMOSPHERE OF LICENTIOUSNESS AND FEAR, Harriet A. Jacobs, 1861 ROSE WILLIAM’S STORY, Federal Writers’ Project Interviews, 1941
11 The Reform Impulse
SEDUCED AND ABANDONED, The Advocate of Moral Reform, 1838 O, YE DAUGHTERS OF AFRICA, AWAKE!, Maria W. Stewart, 1831 A LETTER TO THE LIBERATOR, Andover Female Antislavery Society, 1836 REPLY TO THE MASSACHUSETTS CLERGY, Sarah Grimke, 1837 DECLARATION OF SENTIMENTS, Seneca Falls Convention, 1848 LUCY STONE’S MARRIAGE PROTEST, Henry B. Blackwell and Lucy Stone, 1855 SOJOURNER TRUTH SPEAKS, 1851
Suggestions for Further Reading
PART 3 THE LATE 19TH CENTURY, 1860-1900
12 Women’s Civil War
A UNION NURSE, Louisa May Alcott, 1863 NORTHERN WOMEN ON FARMS, Mary A. Livermore, 1890 A WARTIME MISTRESS, Louticia Jackson, 1863 CONFRONTING DEFEAT, Eva B. Jones, 1865 MOMENTS OF EMANCIPATION, Accounts of Former Slaves, 1865-1937 A Virginia Woman, Harriet Tubman, Clarissa Burdet, Fanny Berry A Tennessee Woman, Mary Anderson, Katie Darling
TEACHING THE FREEDOM, Sarah Chase and Lucy Chase, 1866-1868 A FORMER SLAVE REMEMBERS THE WAR, Susie King Taylor, 1902
13 Urban Wage Earners
NEW YORK PROSTITUTES, William Sanger, 1858 XIN JIN’S CONTRACT, San Francisco, 1886 SHOP GIRLS AND PIECE WORKERS, Helen Campbell, 1893 OBJECTIONS TO DOMESTIC SERVICE, Lucy Maynard Salmon, 1897 BLACK SERVANTS IN PHILADELPHIA, Isabel Eaton, 1899 THE OFFICE CLERK, Clara Lanza, 1891 A LABOR ORGANIZER, Leonora Barry, 1888 A SWEATSHOP GIRL’S STORY, Sadie Frowne, 1902
14 College Women
MISS D. AND MISS E., Edward H. Clarke, 1873 SEX IN EDUCATION ATTACKED, Julia Ward Howe et al., 1874 A DEBATE OVER COEDUCATION, Olive Anderson, 1878 A COLLEGE ROMANCE, M. Carey Thomas, 1877 AN AFRICAN-AMERICAN AT OBERLIN, Mary Church Terrell on the 1880s THE MARRIAGE QUESTION, Millicent Washburn Shinn, 1895
15 Clubs, Causes, and Reform
A TEMPERANCE TALE, Mary Clement Leavitt, 1888 THE WOMAN’S CLUB, Cleveland Sorosis, 1893 THE BLACK CLUB MOVEMENT, Fannie Barrier Williams, ca. 1900 AN INDIAN TEACHER AMONG INDIANS, Zitkala-Sa, 1900 EARLY DAYS AT THE HULL HOUSE, Jane Addams, 1892 A WHITE WOMAN’S FALSEHOOD, Ida B. Wells, 1894
16 Woman Suffrage/ Women’s Rights
THE JOYS OF ACTIVISM, Julia Ward Howe, 1899 POLITICAL LESSONS, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, 1882 WE ARE ALL BOUND UP TOGETHER, Frances Ellen Harper, 1866 WORKING WOMEN DEBATE WOMAN SUFFRAGE, The Shoemakers of Lynn, Massachusetts, 1874 AN “ANTI” SPEAKS OUT, Amelia Barr, 1896 THE SOCIAL HOUSEKEEPING RESPONSE, Anna Garlin Spencer, 1898 THE ILLS OF THE HOME, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, 1903
Suggestions for Further Reading
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| About the Authors | Nancy Woloch teaches history and American Studies at Barnard College, Columbia University. She is the author of 'Muller vs. Oregon: A Brief History with Documents' (1996); co-author of 'The American Century: A History of the United States Since the 1890s' (1998), with Walter Lafeber and Richard Polenberg; and co-author of 'The Enduring Vision: A History of the American People' (4th ed., 2000).
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| New Features | This edition includes more readings on slavery and indentured servitude. There are more documents on African-American women in all eras as well as documents on Native American women. These inclusions allow the experiences of diverse groups of women to be better represented. Sections on religion and women's suffrage have been expanded.
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