PRAISE FOR
Lives of American Women
Finally! The majority of studentsby which I mean womenwill have the opportunity to read biographies of women from our nations past. (Men can read them too, of course!) The Lives of American Women series features an eclectic collection of books, readily accessible to students who will be able to see the contributions of women in many fields over the course of our history. Long overdue, these books will be a valuable resource for teachers, students, and the public at large.
Cokie Roberts, author of Founding Mothers and Ladies of Liberty
Just what any professor wants: books that will intrigue, inform, and fascinate students! These short, readable biographies of American womenspecifically designed for classroom usegive instructors an appealing new option to assign to their history students.
Mary Beth Norton, Mary Donlon Alger
Professor of American History, Cornell University
For educators keen to include women in the American story, but hampered by the lack of thoughtful, concise scholarship, here comes Lives of American Women, embracing Abigail Adamss counsel to Johnremember the ladies. And high time, too!
Lesley S. Herrmann, Executive Director,
The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Students both in the general survey course and in specialized offerings like my course on U.S. womens history can get a great understanding of an era from a short biography. Learning a lot about a single but complex character really helps to deepen appreciation of what womens lives were like in the past.
Patricia Cline Cohen, University of California, Santa Barbara
Biographies are, indeed, back. Not only will students read them, biographies provide an easy way to demonstrate particularly important historical themes or ideas . Undergraduate readers will be challenged to think more deeply about what it means to be a woman, citizen, and political actor . I am eager to use this in my undergraduate survey and specialty course.
Jennifer Thigpen, Washington State University, Pullman
These books are, above all, fascinating stories that will engage and inspire readers. They offer a glimpse into the lives of key women in history who either defied tradition or who successfully maneuvered in a mans world to make an impact. The stories of these vital contributors to American history deliver just the right formula for instructors looking to provide a more complicated and nuanced view of history.
Rosanne Lichatin, 2005 Gilder Lehrman Preserve
American History Teacher of the Year
The Lives of American Women authors raise all of the big issues I want my classes to confrontand deftly fold their arguments into riveting narratives that maintain students excitement.
Woody Holton, author of Abigail Adams
Lives of American Women
Carol Berkin, Series Editor
Westview Press is pleased to launch Lives of American Women. Selected and edited by renowned womens historian Carol Berkin, these brief, affordably priced biographies are designed for use in undergraduate courses. Rather than a comprehensive approach, each biography focuses instead on a particular aspect of a womans life that is emblematic of her time, or which made her a pivotal figure in the era. The emphasis is on a good read, featuring accessible writing and compelling narratives, without sacrificing sound scholarship and academic integrity. Primary sources at the end of each biography reveal the subjects perspective in her own words. Study Questions and an Annotated Bibliography support the student reader.
Dolley Madison: The Problem of National Unity by Catherine Allgor
Lillian Gilbreth: Redefining Domesticity by Julie Des Jardins
Alice Paul: Perfecting Equality for Women by Christine Lunardini
Rebecca Dickinson: Independence for a New England Woman by Marla Miller
Sarah Livingston Jay: Model Republican Woman by Mary-Jo Kline
Betsy Mix Cowles: Bold Reformer by Stacey Robertson
Sally Hemings: Given Her Time by Jon Kukla
Shirley Chisholm: Catalyst for Change by Barbara Winslow
Margaret Sanger: Freedom, Controversy and the Birth Control Movement by Esther Katz
Barbara Egger Lennon: Teacher, Mother, Activist by Tina Brakebill
Anne Hutchinson: A Dissident Womans Boston by Vivian Bruce Conger
Angela Davis: Radical Icon by Robyn Spencer
Catharine Beecher: The Complexity of Gender in 19th Century America by Cindy Lobel
Julia Lathrop: Social Service and Progressive Government by Miriam Cohen
Mary Pickford: Women, Film and Selling Girlhood by Kathy Feeley
Elizabeth Gurley Flynn: The Making of the Modern Woman by Lara Vapnek
First published 2014 by Westview Press
Published 2018 by Routledge
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Series design by Brent Wilcox
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Miller, Marla R.
Rebecca Dickinson : independence for a New England woman / Marla R. Miller, University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
pages cm.
(Lives of American women) Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-8133-4765-3 (pbk.)ISBN 978-0-8133-4766-0 (e-book)
1. Dickinson, Rebecca, 17381815. 2. WomenMassachusettsHatfield Social conditions18th century. 3. Single womenMassachusetts Hatfield Social conditions18th century. 4. Hatfield (Mass.)Social conditions18th century. 5. Hatfield (Mass.)Biography. 6. United StatesHistoryRevolution,
17751783Social aspects. I. Title.
HQ1439.H37M55 2013
974.402092dc23
[B]
2013005322
ISBN 13: 978-0-8133-4765-3 (pbk)
Rebecca Dickinson, an eighteenth-century New England artisan, does not appear in the grand accounts of the movement for American independence. She did not rise in the Massachusetts assembly to demand the repeal of the Stamp Act; she did not command a regiment of soldiers at Valley Forge or Yorktown. Yet in her own life, she too waged a long struggle for independence and did battle with both the internalized and external pressures to marry and raise a family. Dickinsons experiences reveal much about the turbulent era in which our nation was born; her life serves as a window onto the role played by ordinary women and men in the political protests that led to a revolution, the importance of craft labor in a preindustrial world, the endurance of the spiritual in the age of Enlightenment and, perhaps most important, the complex legacy of a rhetoric of independence in the lives of Americans.