My fellow Americans, the summer is the perfect time to brush up on your history and stir your patriotic passions. There are buzz-worthy political biographies, deep dives on the Revolutionary War, and hefty new treatises on Hard Choices. Which have you read? And which do you remember? Test your literary chops by identifying the quotes […]
Abigail Adams is the best known of the women who influenced the founders, but there are many more, starting with Martha Washington, who once referred to herself as a “prisoner of state” for the constraints placed on her as the first First Lady. She was the one charged with balancing the demands of a Republic of the "common man" on the one hand, while insisting on some modicum of courtliness and protocol so that the former colonies would be taken seriously by Europe. She also took political heat in the press from the president’s political opponents when he was too popular to criticize.
And there are women like Esther Reed, married to the president of Pennsylvania, who, with Benjamin Franklin’s daughter Sarah Bache, organized a drive to raise money for Washington’s troops at Valley Forge. In 1780 the women raised more than three hundred thousand dollars. Reed wrote a famous patriotic broadside titled The Sentiments of an American Woman, calling on women to wear simpler clothing and hairstyles in order to save money to contribute to the cause. It worked! The women who ran the boarding houses of Philadelphia where the men stayed while writing the now sacred documents of America had their quite considerable say about the affairs of state as well.
This will be the story of some of those women, as learned through their seldom seen letters and diaries, and the letters from the men to them. It will be a story of the beginnings of the nation as viewed from the distaff side.
Abigail Adams is the best known of the women who influenced the founders, but there are many more, starting with Martha Washington, who once referred to herself as a “prisoner of state” for the constraints placed on her as the first First Lady. She was the one charged with balancing the demands of a Republic of the "common man" on the one hand, while insisting on some modicum of courtliness and protocol so that the former colonies would be taken seriously by Europe. She also took political heat in the press from the president’s political opponents when he was too popular to criticize.
And there are women like Esther Reed, married to the president of Pennsylvania, who, with Benjamin Franklin’s daughter Sarah Bache, organized a drive to raise money for Washington’s troops at Valley Forge. In 1780 the women raised more than three hundred thousand dollars. Reed wrote a famous patriotic broadside titled The Sentiments of an American Woman, calling on women to wear simpler clothing and hairstyles in order to save money to contribute to the cause. It worked! The women who ran the boarding houses of Philadelphia where the men stayed while writing the now sacred documents of America had their quite considerable say about the affairs of state as well.
This will be the story of some of those women, as learned through their seldom seen letters and diaries, and the letters from the men to them. It will be a story of the beginnings of the nation as viewed from the distaff side.
Founding Mothers: The Women Who Raised Our Nation
384Founding Mothers: The Women Who Raised Our Nation
384Paperback(Reprint)
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780060090265 |
---|---|
Publisher: | HarperCollins Publishers |
Publication date: | 02/15/2005 |
Edition description: | Reprint |
Pages: | 384 |
Sales rank: | 37,101 |
Product dimensions: | 5.31(w) x 8.00(h) x 0.86(d) |
About the Author
Customer Reviews
Explore More Items
At first glance, Three Lives seems to be three straightforward portraits of women living in the early twentieth century. “The Good Anna” describes an exacting German house servant;
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Ron Chernow presents a landmark biography of Alexander
“Eminently readable but thick with import . . . Grant hits like a Mack truck of
With the same breadth of vision and narrative élan he brought to
With his previous books The House of Morgan, which won the National Book Award, and the critically acclaimed The Warburgs, Ron Chernow has proved himself a first-rate biographer as well as
Set in the
From America’s “Historian-in-Chief” (New York magazine), The Presidential Biographies boxed set—featuring the Pulitzer Prize-winning author’s beloved and bestselling
Hailed by the New York Times as “the most penetrating, fascinating political
It was the storm of the century, boasting waves over one hundred feet high—a