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WOMEN OF COLONIAL AMERICA by Brandon Marie Miller

WOMEN OF COLONIAL AMERICA

13 Stories of Courage and Survival in the New World

From the Women of Action series

by Brandon Marie Miller

Pub Date: Feb. 1st, 2016
ISBN: 978-1-55652-487-5
Publisher: Chicago Review Press

A collection of brief yet informative biographies of American women of the Colonial era.

Most of the women described in this effort were exceptional for their time. Some, such as Pocahontas, Puritan lay preacher Anne Hutchinson, and poet Anne Dudley Bradstreet, may be familiar to readers. The brief biographies of others will provide new revelations regarding the lives of the women of the era. Elizabeth Ashbridge started as an indentured servant and became a respected Quaker leader; Mary Rowlandson heroically survived being taken prisoner by Indians during King Philip’s War; and Eliza Lucas Pinkney, whose letters reveal much about her life, managed her father’s plantation at the age of 16. With literacy still relatively uncommon among women of the time, and since they only rarely rated the attention of male record keepers, it becomes the exceptional woman for whom biographical information survives. However, each chapter includes enlightening history of the time and place, and the biographies make it clear that these women were not always typical of their time. Parts of the book were originally published in 2003 as the much shorter, juvenile nonfiction work Good Women of a Well-Blessed Land: Women’s Lives in Colonial America. Detailed endnotes and an extensive bibliography round out an excellent nonfiction offering for sophisticated readers.

A valuable and entertaining resource for both budding historians and those seeking biographical information on a few of the many nearly forgotten women of that time.

(index not seen) (Nonfiction. 12-18)