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“…often women aren’t allowed to be characters in history, they have to be stereotypes. Cleopatra was a poet and a philosopher, she was incredibly good at maths; she wasn’t that much of a looker. But when we think of her, we think: big breasted seductress bathing in milk. Often, even when women have made their mark and they are remembered by history, we are offered a fantasy version of their lives.”
— Dr. Bettany Hughes on women’s absence from history, and the ways historians need to actively put women back into the narrative. (via thepoliticalnotebook)
“Greatness and goodness, intellectual superiority, and a correspondent eminence in virtue, are not always found united;—in her the combination was consistent and complete; and human nature has seldom, if ever, more fully or more beautifully displayed its noblest attributes.”
— OBITUARY NOTICE Of the late Mrs. Adams, Lady of President Adams.
Sybil Ludington (1761-1839)
“Listen my children and you shall hear. Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere”; these words written by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow are familiar to many. The Midnight Ride has become so iconic that Paul Revere’s legacy far outlives his reality. The real life events were far less impressive, the real life man far less heroic. In reality, Revere had two other riders with him, and he was captured by British Regulars before finishing his mission. Sybil Ludington’s midnight ride is a story that is rarely told. Ludington’s father was a colonel in the Continental Army. In 1777, a rider came to the Ludington household to warn the colonel that British troops and tories were on their way to attack. The colonel’s sixteen year old daughter, Sybil, volunteered to ride through the night and warn her father’s men that the British were on their way to attack. Sybil rode forty miles that night, more than twice the length Paul Revere did, and as a result the whole regiment was saved.
Phillis Wheatley, born in West Africa and sold into slavery as a child, became one of the most famous American poets of the late 18th century. Exceedingly precocious, she took full advantage of the opportunities for education and social connection offered by her enslavers, Susanna and John Wheatley of Boston, Massachusetts. She was still a teenager when her elegy for the English cleric George Whitefield was published in 1770, leading to international recognition.
The elegiac form continued to be important to her throughout her career. In the broadside above, she addressed the Rev. Timothy Pitkin following the death of his wife Temperance Clap Pitkin in 1772. Like much of her work, it blends Christian faith with classical imagery and her own authoritative voice:
Let Grief no longer damp the sacred Fire,
But rise sublime, to equal Bliss aspire;
Thy Sighs no more, be wasted by the Wind,
Complain no more, but be to Heav’n resign’d.
‘Twas thine to shew those Treasures all divine,
To sooth our Woes, the Task was also thine.
Now Sorrow is recumbent on thy Heart,
Permit the Muse that healing to impart,
Nor can the World, a pitying tear refuse,
They weep, and with them, ev’ry heavenly Muse.
Phillis Wheatley. An elegiac poem, : on the death of that celebrated divine, and eminent servant of Jesus Christ, the Reverend and learned George Whitefield. 1770. New-York Historical Society.
William Pendleton, engraver. Phillis Wheatley frontispiece. circa 1830s. Portrait file. New-York Historical Society.
Phillis Wheatley. To the Rev. Mr. Pitkin, on the death of his lady. circa 1772. Broadside. New-York Historical Society.
There is an issue that a lot of historians do not wish to discuss when it comes to Thomas Jefferson: Sally Hemings. Let’s talk about her. I really want to. I think she has been overlooked a lot in history. I even had a professor deny the Sally Hemings affair tooth and nail.
• Woman’s formal dress worn by the Faneuil family. Date: 1770 Place of origin: Boston, USA
We women are fighters, We can help you win, Oh Johnny, I’m hoping, That they’ll take me in.
me every time someone mentions abigail adams
From John Adams to Abigail Adams “Miss Adorable”, October 1762
[*screams*] I lOvE AbiGaiL AdAmS!
and on twitter
James Monroe and Abigail Adams have five letters together that I’ve seen so far and it basically just him praising her and then asking for her advice
john adams, to whichever poor courier who happens to be within range: wait!! i need you to get this letter to my wife!! it’s been ages since i’ve written to her!!
the courier:
Favorite First Ladies | Abigail Adams
“I desire you would remember the ladies and be more generous and favorable to them than your ancestors. Do not put such unlimited power into the hands of the husbands. Remember, all men would be tyrants if they could. If particular care and attention is not paid to the ladies, we are determined to foment a rebellion, and will not hold ourselves bound by any laws in which we have no voice or representation.”
- Abigail Adams to John Adams, March 31, 1776