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History of American Women Blog
History of American Women Blog
Amateur historian Maggie MacLean's blog features accounts of important (but often overlooked) women in American history. Some interesting reads!
kata kunci: female ass-kickers, american, women, female, history, historical, maggie maclean, blog
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I remember visiting this website once...
It was called History of American Women
Here's some stuff I remembered seeing:
Colonial Women | 18th Century Women | 19th Century Women
Since the month of December is taken up with holidays and travel, I have decided to go on hiatus for the rest of this month. I won\'t be slacking off, however; I will be doing some much needed cleanup and updating on my blogs. Unfortunately, I will also be doing that dreaded activity that constantly tries to lure me away from my writing: HOUSEWORK.
I wish you the happiest of holidays, and I hope the gifts you receive are exactly what you wanted.
I will be praying for peace on earth for all people - from my fingertips to God\'s ear.
Mary Ann Brown Patten was the first woman commander of an American Merchant Vessel at the age of nineteen. Her husband, the ship's captain, was severely ill with fever, and the first mate was attempting to incite a mutiny among the crewmen. Her clipper ship
Neptune's Car was ten thousand miles away from its starting point at New York when she faced the unforgiving winds of Cape Horn on the southern tip of South America. And then on to San Francisco, where clients were waiting for her cargo.
Mary Ann Brown married sea captain Joshua Patten in 1853 when she was 16. He was 25, and was ferrying cargo and passengers from New York to Boston. In 1854, Joshua Patten was offered the chance to sail the merchant ship Neptune's Car from New York to San Francisco, through Cape Horn, one of the most dangerous straits in the Western Hemisphere. Reluctant to abandon his young wife, Joshua received permission to bring Mary along on the voyage. With just a matter of hours to prepare, the couple departed on their first trip together.
In the nineteenth century, women artists signed their work with a first initial and last name to conceal their gender. Not until the second half of the 19th century did women artists make significant progress. In the United States, women gradually became a force on the American art scene, winning prestigious commissions and awards.
Image: Kaaterskill Clove by Harriet Cany Peale This deep gorge in New York's Catskill Mountains inspired the Hudson River School of Art, our nation's first artistic style.
Harriet Cany Peale (1800-1869) was born in Philadelphia, where she studied with well-known portrait and historical genre painter, Rembrandt Peale (1778-1860). In 1840 she married Peale and exhibited for the first time at the Artists' Fund Society that same year. Unlike most women artists of the time, she continued to paint and exhibit portraits and still lifes after she married Peale. They had no children.
Mary Young Pickersgill stitched the Star-Spangled Banner, the large flag that flew over Fort McHenry during the naval portion of the Battle of Baltimore in the War of 1812. When he saw the flag still flying above the embattled fort the next morning, the sight inspired Francis Scott Key to write the poem that would become the national anthem of the United States of America.
Early Years Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania February 12, 1776, Mary Young was the youngest of six children born to William Young and Rebecca Flower Young. Mary's father died when she was two years old. To support her family, Rebecca opened a flag shop in Philadelphia. Beginning in 1875, she made the Grand Union Flag, also called the Continental Colors, for the Continental Army. The Grand Union Flag preceded the Betsy Ross flag and is considered the first American flag. Young later moved her family to Baltimore, Maryland, where she taught Mary the craft of flag making from a very young age.
Posted in Philanthropists, Social Reformers, Women in Business
During the 1830s and 1840s, Betsey Guppy Chamberlain (daughter of an Algonquian woman) worked in the textile mills of Lowell, Massachusetts and wrote stories for two workers' magazines. A brave and pioneering author, Chamberlain wrote the earliest known Native American fiction and some of the earliest nonfiction about the persecution of Native people.
Early Years Betsey Guppy was born December 29, 1797 in Wolfeboro, New Hampshire on the shore of Lake Winnipesaukee. She was the daughter of William Guppy and Comfort Meserve Guppy. She was of mixed race: American and Algonquian Indian. Betsey married Josiah Chamberlain on June 25, 1820, and they had two children; he died July 19, 1823. Unable to do the work alone, she was forced to sell their farm and work in the mills in Lowell, Massachusetts to support herself and her children. The mills paid good wages, but the hours were long.
Posted in First Women, Native American Women, Poets and Writers
Status of Women in the New United States In the American colonies it was not uncommon for women to pursue various occupations, such as print...
Women Also Fought for Independence Image: Molly Pitcher Monmouth Battle Monument Monmouth County, New Jersey When her husband was o...
The Daughters of Liberty displayed their loyalty by supporting the nonimportation of British goods during the American Revolution. They refu...
Puritans Have Landed By the time of early European colonization attempts, there were over 30,000 Native Americans in Massachusetts living am...
Massachusetts Bay Colony was a man's world. Women did not participate in town meetings and were excluded from decision making in the chu...
Wife of Founding Father Alexander Hamilton Elizabeth Schuyler was born on August 9, 1757, in Albany, New York. She was the second daughter...
Puritans Lived Under Harsh Rules During the seventeenth century, the combined New England colonies formed a virtual Puritan commonwealth...
During the Revolutionary War, both the British and American armies recruited women as cooks and maids. With their almost unrestricted access...
Wife of British General Thomas Gage Margaret Kemble Gage By John Singleton Copley Margaret began to sit for Copley within three days...
Member of the Culper Spy Ring Image: Map Showing the Routes Taken by the Culper Spy Ring - Long Island, New York The British occupie...
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