March 31, 1776, Abigail Adams to John Adams: "In the new code of laws which I suppose it will be necessary for you to make, I desire you would remember the ladies and be more generous and favorable to them than your ancestors."
Tag: women
Peg Wesson, the Gloucester Witch
Hannah Jumper leads raid on Rockport liquor establishments, July 8, 1856
The Hello Girls
Mary Perkins Bradbury, Charged as a Witch
Nancyโs Corner
Mary Hayes, the “Little Old Lady from Ipswich” Who Was Seen Around the World
The Ipswich Chronicle wrote, "In Ipswich is the one woman whose face has been portrayed to more men, women and children in this nation than any other woman alive, with the possible exception of the President's wife. The face of the 'Little Old Lady from Ipswich' has been viewed by more than 80,000,000 people in America, Canada, Great Britain and Australia,"
Eunice Stanwood Caldwell Cowles
The North Shore and the Golden Age of Cycling
One Third for the Widow
Under Puritan law an adult unmarried woman was a feme sole, and could own property and sign contracts. A married woman was a feme covert and could not own property individually. Widows regained the status of feme sole but the Right of Dower entitled them to keep only one third of their property. When a woman was left a widow some men like vultures were ready to take the other two thirds.
Emma Jane Mitchell Safford
Anne Dudley Bradstreet, the Colony’s First Published Poet
Moll Pitcher, the Fortune Teller of Lynn and Marblehead
The Mill girl’s Letter: “I Can Make You Blush.”
Dear Sir,
I received the ribbon you sent me by mail, and I thank you ever so much for it. I was asking Asa Howe who you were, and he told me. He also said you were a great man for girls. How is it you never holler at me and my chums? I think you're bashful. If you wasn't, you would of handed me the ribbon instead of sending it by mail.













