INTRODUCTION: Clio’s Daughters, Lost and Found
CHAPTER ONE: “The Easy Task of Obeying”
Englishwomen’s
Place in Colonial Society
CHAPTER TWO: “They say it is tea that caused it”
Women
Join the Protest Against English Policy
CHAPTER THREE: “You can form no idea of the horrors”
The
Challenges of a Home-Front War
CHAPTER FOUR: “Such a sordid set of creatures in human
Figure”
Women Who Followed the Army
CHAPTER FIVE: “How unhappy is war to domestic
happiness”
Generals’ Wives and the War
CHAPTER SIX: “A journey a Crosse ye wilderness”
Loyalist
Women in Exile
CHAPTER SEVEN: “The women must hear our words”
The
Revolution in the Lives of Indian Women
CHAPTER EIGHT: “The day of jubilee is come”
African
American Women and the American Revolution
CHAPTER NINE: “It was I who did it”
Spies, Saboteurs,
Couriers, and Other Heroines
CHAPTER TEN: “There is no Sex in soul”
The Legacy of
Revolution
Notes
Acknowledgments
Index
CAROL BERKIN received her A.B. from Barnard College and her M.A. and Ph.D. from Columbia University. She taught at Baruch College from 1972 to 2008 and has taught at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York since 1983. She is currently Baruch Presidential Professor of History. Berkin is the author ofRevolutionary Mothers- Women in the Struggle for America's Independence, A Brilliant Solution- Inventing the American Constitution, Jonathan Sewall- Odyssey of an American Loyalist, First Generations- Women in Colonial America, and numerous articles and reviews. She lives in New York City and Guilford, Connecticut.
“Berkin vividly recounts Colonial women’s struggles for
independence—for their nation and, sometimes, for themselves....
[Her] lively book reclaims a vital part of our political legacy.”
—Los Angles Times Book Review
“Compact and informative ... one is simply bowled over by the
courage and fortitude of these women.” —The Washington Times
“Berkin is a great storyteller ... her dedication to telling the
stories of these women is evident.” —The Christian Science
Monitor
“[Berkin] illuminates the many way women on both sides of the
conflict performed as couriers, spies, saboteurs, camp followers
[and] noble and enduring wives.” —The Washington Post Book
World
"Carol Berkin has merged the craft of the skilled historian and the
sensitivity of a master storyteller with her sensibilities as a
pioneering scholar of women to produce the best narrative of how
women of diverse backgrounds experienced the American Revolution."
—Edith Gelles, author of Portia: The World of Abigail Adams
"Revolutionary Mothers is an accessible, lively blend of great
story-telling and recent scholarship, the most comprehensive study
yet published of women in the American Revolution. Readers of all
descriptions will enjoy and learn from it." —Mary Beth Norton,
author of In the Devil’s Snare: The Salem Witchcraft Crisis of
1692
“Revolutionary Mothers is vintage Carol Berkin, incisive,
thoughtful and spiced with vivid anecdotes that add another
dimension to the narrative. Don't miss it.” —Thomas Fleming, author
of Liberty! The American Revolution
"Revolutionary Mothers is a treat to read. Not only is Carol Berkin
a skillful writer, but she has placed women squarely at the
center of the independence movement. By showing the different
roles women played, she moves the battlefield to wherever women
were forced to make choices and employ their talents. Elite, poor,
Euro, Native, and African American women collide in Berkin's book,
as do the rebels and loyalists who were once friends and neighbors.
A valuable and readable book." —Elaine Crane, author of Ebb
Tide in New England: Women, Seaports, and Social Change, 1630-1800
Confronting "the gender amnesia that surrounds the American Revolution," historian Berkin (A Brilliant Solution: Inventing the American Constitution) offers a lively account of women's various roles in the long, bloody conflict. Early forms of resistance included boycotting British cloth-and thus dusting off retired spinning wheels-and tea as women used "their purchasing power as a political weapon." As the conflict became a war in city streets and the neighboring countryside, houses became war zones; ordinary women often served as spies, saboteurs and couriers. Camp followers (often soldiers' wives) provided logistical support (cooking, washing, sewing, nursing, finding supplies) and occasionally even fought; prostitutes kept up soldiers' sexual (and social) morale. Generals' wives, "admired while the ordinary camp followers were often scorned," accompanied their husbands in different style; they boosted morale with dinner parties and dancing. Berkin reaches beyond white "American" women to chart the experiences of Loyalist women ("targets of Revolutionary governments eager to confiscate the property of... traitors"), Native American women (for whom "an American victory would have... tragic consequences") and African-American women (whose "loyalties were to their own future, not to Congress or to king"). First-person accounts lend immediacy and freshness to a lucidly written, well-researched account that is neither a romantic version of "a quaint and harmless war" nor "an effort to stand traditional history on its head." Agent, Dan Green. (Feb.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
"Berkin vividly recounts Colonial women's struggles for
independence-for their nation and, sometimes, for themselves....
[Her] lively book reclaims a vital part of our political legacy."
-Los Angles Times Book Review
"Compact and informative ... one is simply bowled over by the
courage and fortitude of these women." -The Washington
Times
"Berkin is a great storyteller ... her dedication to telling the
stories of these women is evident." -The Christian Science
Monitor
"[Berkin] illuminates the many way women on both sides of the
conflict performed as couriers, spies, saboteurs, camp followers
[and] noble and enduring wives." -The Washington Post Book
World
"Carol Berkin has merged the craft of the skilled historian and the
sensitivity of a master storyteller with her sensibilities as a
pioneering scholar of women to produce the best narrative of how
women of diverse backgrounds experienced the American Revolution."
-Edith Gelles, author of Portia: The World of Abigail
Adams
"Revolutionary Mothers is an accessible, lively blend of great
story-telling and recent scholarship, the most comprehensive study
yet published of women in the American Revolution. Readers of all
descriptions will enjoy and learn from it." -Mary Beth Norton,
author of In the Devil's Snare: The Salem Witchcraft Crisis of
1692
"Revolutionary Mothers is vintage Carol Berkin, incisive,
thoughtful and spiced with vivid anecdotes that add another
dimension to the narrative. Don't miss it." -Thomas Fleming, author
of Liberty! The American Revolution
"Revolutionary Mothers is a treat to read. Not only is Carol Berkin
a skillful writer, but she has placed women squarely at the center
of the independence movement. By showing the different roles women
played, she moves the battlefield to wherever women were forced to
make choices and employ their talents. Elite, poor, Euro, Native,
and African American women collide in Berkin's book, as do the
rebels and loyalists who were once friends and neighbors. A
valuable and readable book." -Elaine Crane, author of Ebb Tide
in New England: Women, Seaports, and Social Change, 1630-1800
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