Women of Colonial America: 13 Stories of Courage and Survival in the New World

Women of Colonial America: 13 Stories of Courage and Survival in the New World

by Brandon Marie Miller
Women of Colonial America: 13 Stories of Courage and Survival in the New World

Women of Colonial America: 13 Stories of Courage and Survival in the New World

by Brandon Marie Miller

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Overview

New York Public Library Teen Book List

In colonial America, hard work proved a constant for most women—some ensured their family's survival through their skills, while others sold their labor or lived in bondage as indentured servants or slaves. Yet even in a world defined entirely by men, a world where few thought it important to record a female's thoughts, women found ways to step forth. Elizabeth Ashbridge survived an abusive indenture to become a Quaker preacher. Anne Bradstreet penned her poems while raising eight children in the wilderness. Anne Hutchinson went toe-to-toe with Puritan authorities. Margaret Hardenbroeck Philipse built a trade empire in New Amsterdam. And Eve, a Virginia slave, twice ran away to freedom.

Using a host of primary sources, author Brandon Marie Miller recounts the roles, hardships, and daily lives of Native American, European, and African women in the 17th and 18th centuries. With strength, courage, resilience, and resourcefulness, these women and many others played a vital role in the mosaic of life in the North American colonies.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781556525391
Publisher: Chicago Review Press, Incorporated
Publication date: 02/01/2016
Series: Women of Action Series , #14
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 256
Sales rank: 940,139
File size: 4 MB
Age Range: 12 - 17 Years

About the Author

Brandon Marie Miller is the author of Benjamin Franklin, American Genius; George Washington for Kids; and Women of the Frontier. She has received a dozen national awards for her writing. She lives in Cincinnati, Ohio.

Read an Excerpt

Women of Colonial America

13 Stories of Courage and Survival in the New World


By Brandon Marie Miller

Chicago Review Press Incorporated

Copyright © 2016 Brandon Marie Miller
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-55652-539-1



CHAPTER 1

The Natural Inhabitants


* * *

"We were entertained with all love, and kindness, and with as much bounty ... as they could possibly devise."

— Englishman Arthur Barlowe, writing of his welcome by Native Americans, 1584


The sun was just slipping below the treetops when word spread that a rowboat ferrying two white men approached the Roanoke village. The wife of the chief's brother hastened to the water's edge to greet the strangers. She gave a few quick orders and her people dragged the strangers' boat onto the sand and carried the two white men ashore on their backs. The woman escorted the men to her home, a five-room lodge built from sweet-smelling cedar.

Inside, she offered her guests seats by the fire. Her servants dried the strangers' wet clothes and bathed their feet in warmed water. She presented dish after dish for the strangers' pleasure: venison stew, boiled fish, juicy melons, wine, and water flavored with sassafras, ginger, and black cinnamon.

Suddenly, several men entered the house carrying bows and arrows. Fear froze the strangers' faces, and the woman asked the hunters to leave their weapons outside. At the evening's end, her guests rowed back to their ship, laden with gifts of food and invitations to return.

The two guests were English explorers under the patronage of Sir Walter Raleigh. In the written report of their visit to present-day North Carolina, the gracious Native American woman is referred to only as "the wife of Granganimo the king's brother." But the Englishmen praised her beauty, admired her coral and pearl jewelry, and commented on the fine copper earrings worn by her servants. They also heaped praise upon the villagers, "for a more kinde and loving people there can not be found in the worlde."

Like many Native American women before and after her, Granganimo's wife greeted Europeans with generosity and aid. And like many native women before and after her, the reward she received for her hospitality was one of pain. Not many years later, the first English colonists at Roanoke burned her village to the ground.


HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS

In 1600 an estimated 400,000 Native Americans lived in the lands east of the Appalachian Mountains, farming, hunting, and fishing along a coast that stretched from Canada down to Florida. They were diverse peoples who spoke different languages, followed different customs, and worshipped in different ways.

Most Native Americans lived in villages, some a small collection of dwellings, others in large communities of 50 lodges or more surrounded by a stockade of sharpened logs. Within the larger group of the tribe, people banded together by family ties into clans. Villagers hiked networks of trails through towering primeval forests. They canoed rivers far and wide to trade and build alliances for war and peace among other tribes.

War, trade, and hunting often summoned men away for weeks at a time, but a woman's life revolved around the village and home. "In the management of household affairs the husband leaves everything to his wife and never interferes," explained missionary David Zeisberger, who lived among the Lenni Lenape (the Delaware). Her hard work fed and clothed and sheltered the tribe.

Daily, a woman fetched water and gathered wood to stoke her cooking fires and warm the home. She created the tools she needed and the goods her family used — she wove baskets, made clay pots, sewed leather pouches, and fashioned dishes out of tree bark.

Women also built the family home. Among tribes like the Wampanoag, Narragansett, and Powhatan, women wove mats from dried grasses and cattails, often weaving designs into their work. In the late 1630s, English colonist Roger Williams noted that Narragansett homes were "embroydered" so beautifully that the designs made "as fair a show as Hangings [tapestries] with us." Mat by mat, a woman layered her handiwork over an arching framework of poles. The one-room houses measured about 16 feet long and 14 feet across with a smoke hole in the roof covered by a flap. In hot weather she rolled up the sides of her house to catch cooling breezes. And her house was portable — she could pack poles and mats for a quick move to winter hunting grounds or summer planting fields.

Iroquois women covered their great longhouses with bark. Some of these houses measured 50 to 100 feet long and housed up to 20 families. Women in southern tribes, like the Cherokee and the Choctaw, covered a rectangular frame of poles with a mixture of packed clay and crushed shells, bark, or grasses under a snug thatched roof.


"SHE COOKS VICTUALS REGULARLY"

Men provided meat and fish, but women provided all other foods. Unlike in Europe, where farm labor typically fell to men, women farmed in Native American villages. Just after dawn women headed to the fields with young children in tow. They worked together, singing and chatting, digging and hoeing with clamshells and deer-bone tools. Older women and children protected the crops from animals and birds, and one European settler observed women scolding wayward horses away from tender plants and fretting "at the very shadow of a crow."

Corn, beans, and squash — called the Three Sisters by the Iroquois — proved the main staples of Native American diets. Women planted several types of corn. James Adair, a trader in the Carolinas among the Cherokee, Catawba, and other tribes, described yellow "hommony corn," "small corn" that ripened quickly, and a large white corn called bread corn. Women spent hours grinding dried corn between two stones, turning out coarse whole-grain flour they mixed with water, patted into flat cakes, and baked nestled in hot ashes.

Besides the vegetables they grew, Native American women also picked wild fruits such as strawberries and cranberries. They dug edible roots and tubers in the forest, gathered baskets of nuts, and harvested clams along the shoreline. In late winter they collected sap from maple trees and boiled it into sweet syrup.

Stews of meat, roots, and vegetables simmered over fires. Hunks of fresh meat roasted on spits, layers of dripping fat hissing into the flames. But much of a woman's food work involved drying and preserving food, work she did with sun and fire smoke. Survival depended upon dried corn stashed in large pots and buried in the ground, or the berries and thin strips of pumpkin, fish, and meats she'd carefully hung on racks to dry for the lean winter months.

Native American women controlled that most important of supplies — food. They decided how much and when food was doled out. If women wished to stop their men from going to war, they withheld the dried corn and dried meat needed to feed the war party. David Zeisberger marveled that once a man returned from the hunt he gave up all control over the meat. A woman "may then do what she pleases with it. [Her husband] says nothing, if she even gives the greatest part of it to her friends, which is a very common custom." Women did give generously; in providing for others "when meat has been secured" she earned the respect of her people.


CLOTHES ON OUR BACKS

Animals provided hides for clothing as well as meat. Women soaked a hide in water and scraped off the hair. A second soaking in a chemical mixture of crushed deer brain and water further softened the hide. Next, a woman stretched the skin on a rack and rubbed it repeatedly with a stone, dull hatchet, or shell to force out the water and grease.

Once rubbed and dried, she had supple, pale leather ready to cut with a knife and sew into clothes using a bone needle and deer sinew (tendon) for thread. Skirts, shirts, leggings, and moccasins made from tanned skins felt buttery soft to the skin but easily withstood a harsh outdoor life. For winter warmth, Native American women fashioned thick fur robes and blankets. Women expressed their creative sides by decorating clothes and other objects with shells, bone beads, dyed porcupine quills, and paints.


"DOING JUST WHAT THEY LIKE"

Native American women labored at physically demanding jobs. But they set their own work pace and usually shared the burden of chores. They also saved time for fun. In the 1630s, French missionary Gabriel Sagard grumbled that native women found "plenty of time to waste." Women enjoyed themselves "in gaming, going to dances and feasts, chatting and killing time," he wrote. Even worse, complained Sagard, the women were used to "doing just what they like with their leisure."

Many Native American women kept house with a single spouse. In some tribes a husband lived with more than one wife. A man might be expected to marry his brother's widow as a way of providing care for her. Some tribes believed a man should marry all the sisters in one family. The first or eldest wife usually held an honored status. The more wives, the more workers a household shared.

A would-be husband wooed his sweetheart — and her family — with gifts and sought permission from the bride's parents or an older female relative to court the girl. Often the man had to prove his worth. Could he provide meat and protection for a new wife? Some tribes subjected prospective grooms to a year-long test, observing him and his intended as the two lived with her family. In tribes of the Iroquois confederacy — the Cayuga, Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, and Seneca — the husband joined his wife's clan.

Either partner might freely end an unhappy union. The choice of walking away gave Native American women an independence not shared by white women. Yet the ease of dissolving a marriage did not make divorce common. "I know many couples," reported colonist Roger Williams, "that have lived twenty, thirty, forty yeares together." Rarely did one spouse put the other aside if they had children, who remained in the care of the mother and her clan. "The mother's title rests on the law of nature," noted Antoine de la Mothe, Sieur de Cadillac in the 1690s, "since no one can dispute that she is the mother of the children whom she had brought into the world."


MOTHERHOOD

Most native peoples believed pregnancy linked a woman to mysterious and dangerous forces of nature. "Pregnant women among them cause, they say, many misfortunes," reported Jesuit priest François du Peron, "for they cause the husband not to take anything in the hunt; if one of them enters a cabin where there is a sick person, he grows worse; if she looks at the animal that is being pursued, it can no longer be captured."

When she went into labor, a native woman left her home for a specially prepared hut. A midwife or relative might assist her, but she might also give birth on her own. As a warrior tested his bravery in battle, a woman displayed hers by not crying out through the pains of childbirth; surrendering to pain brought shame. An astounded Roger Williams observed that native women "are scarcely heard to groane" during childbirth. Not realizing native women were simply being brave, European males concluded native females must be formed differently than white women. "The [native] Women of America have very easy Travail [labor] with their children," noted southern trader John Lawson. "Besides, they are unacquainted with those severe Pains which follow the Birth in our European Women."

Native American mothers toted their infants upright in snug wooden cradle boards fashioned by the fathers. The mother decorated her child's cradle board with paint, beads, and feathers. Carrying the baby on her back freed her arms for work and, if needed, she propped the cradle board against a tree trunk or hung it from a branch. Mothers "diapered" their babies by stuffing moss or cattail fluff inside the cradle board around the child.

Early on, mothers taught their children to endure discomfort — dousing them with cold water or snow — to teach them survival skills. Mothers trained their daughters in the ways of women's work, encouraging even young girls to pound corn, gather sticks, and pull weeds. Native American mothers rarely struck their children, but relied on shame to mend bad behavior. Many Europeans, raised on the stern belief that beatings or whippings provided a good "correction," found this neglect of punishment shocking.

If a Native American mother wanted to scold her daughter, she might simply burst into tears and say, "Thou dishonourest me." Jesuit priest Pierre de Charlevoix declared, "It seldom happens that this sort of reproof [scolding] fails." The greatest punishment he witnessed was a mother flicking water in her child's face. "It would seem ... that a childhood so ill instructed, should be followed by a very ... turbulent state of youth," he wrote, "[but] the Indians are naturally quiet and ... masters of themselves." Native American mothers set that example for their children from birth.

CHAPTER 2

In This New Discovered Virginia


* * *

"In a newe plantation it is not knowen whether man or woman be the most necessary."

— Virginia House of Burgesses, an elected legislature, July 1619


In May 1607, just over 100 Englishmen established a foothold along a wide river flowing into the Chesapeake Bay. They called their Virginia settlement "James Towne," named in honor of King James I. Most colonists considered themselves "gentlemen" and believed "Rooting in the ground" beneath their dignity — even if it meant growing the crops they needed to eat. They'd signed on for adventure and profit, expecting a quick return to a comfortable life in England. But grim realities soon set in. "Our men," wrote George Percy, "were destroyed with cruell diseases ... but for the most part they died of mere famine. There was never Englishmen left in a forreigne Countrey in such miserie as wee were in this new discovered Virginia."

Less than a year and a half later, Captain John Smith recorded the intrusion of English women into this struggling male world: "The first gentlewoman and woman-servant ... arrived." The new arrivals were Mistress Forrest, wife of a colonist, and her teenage maid, Anne Burras. As a single female, 15-year-old Anne's status soared from simple servant to great prize. Within two months she married John Laydon, a carpenter, in the colony's first wedding.

The raw condition of their new home most likely shocked the two women. Crowded huts with dirt floors served as houses. Such heat and sweltering humidity they'd seldom experienced in England. Didn't heat sap fluid from a person's blood? "Great Sweating," warned medical writer William Vaughan, left the "inner parts" cold and withered. Colonists fell ill with "ague" (probably malaria) and suffered through waves of chills and fevers, nausea and vomiting.

This new land, though beautiful, seemed wild and savage, infested with insects and vermin. Unable to raise enough crops, the colonists relied mostly on corn supplied by Native Americans and the dwindling foodstuffs brought on their ships. Mistress Forrest, around 35 years old, died the same year she arrived, her remains buried within the fort at Jamestown.

In August 1609 Jamestown welcomed a new wave of colonists, swelling the population to about 500 souls, including more women and some children. But the dark days continued in Virginia. Colonists died of sickness, hunger, and skirmishes with the Native Americans. Starvation stalked the colony, aided by disease and a drought that worsened food and water issues. Tribal people suffered with the drought as well, and harvested fewer baskets of food for their own needs, let alone the ever-increasing demands of the colonists.

By the spring of 1610, only 60 men, women, and children had survived what became known as the starving time. They had gnawed acorns, roots, rats, snakes, horses, and dogs. John Smith reported one man murdered "his wife as she slept ..., and fedd upon her till he had clean devoured all her parts saveinge [except] her head."

Many wondered if Smith exaggerated, but according to recent research, one of those consumed was a 14-year-old girl, her name lost to history, but called "Jane" by the archaeologists who discovered her remains. Jane had died of starvation or disease, and her bones tell a story of desperation: the girl's skull and a leg bone show clear butcher marks of knife and hatchet blades.


"THE WANT OF WIVES"

As early as 1609 broadsides posted in England urged single women to emigrate to Jamestown "for the better strengthening of the colony." Virginia offered men eager to wed, a new home, and a new life — if only a woman grasped this brass ring of adventure. The colony's need for women grew so desperate that kidnappers snatched females off English streets and sold them in Virginia as servants. One song lilting through London's taverns told the tale of "The Woman Outwitted: or the Weaver's Wife cunningly catch'd in a Trap, by her Husband, who sold her for ten Pounds, and sent her to Virginny."


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Women of Colonial America by Brandon Marie Miller. Copyright © 2016 Brandon Marie Miller. Excerpted by permission of Chicago Review Press Incorporated.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgments,
A Word About Language,
1 THE NATURAL INHABITANTS,
2 IN THIS NEW DISCOVERED VIRGINIA,
3 GOODWIVES TO NEW ENGLAND,
4 WEARY, WEARY, WEARY, O,
5 UP TO THEIR ELBOWS IN HOUSEWIFERY,
6 DAUGHTERS OF EVE,
7 A CHANGING WORLD,
8 A TAPESTRY OF LIVES,
Notes,
Bibliography,
Index,

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