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Manuscript Women’s Letters and Diaries from the American Antiquarian Society,
1750-1950
PREPUBLICATION ANNOUNCEMENT
I think we ought to understand each other’s
love for each other, and we can do it no other way than by writing.
—Harriet Chamberlain to William H. Mason,
November 2, 1866
Alexander Street’s Manuscript Women’s
Letters and Diaries from the American Antiquarian Society brings
together 100,000 pages of the personal writings of women of the eighteenth,
nineteenth, and twentieth centuries, displayed as high-quality images of the
original manuscripts, extensively indexed and online for the first time. The
letters and diaries reveal, in each woman’s own hand, the details of the
authors’ daily lives, their activities and concerns, and their attitudes
towards the people and world around them. The collection is drawn entirely
from the extensive holdings of the American Antiquarian Society in
Worcester, Massachusetts.
CONTENT
Spanning 1750 to 1950, the database is
particularly strong in nineteenth-century material. Highlights include:
- The letters
of Annie Sullivan detailing her teaching of Helen Keller, written to Michael
Anagnos, director of the Perkins Institution and Massachusetts School of the
Blind;
- One hundred
letters written by Ellen Tucker Emerson, eldest daughter of Ralph Waldo
Emerson, describing life in Concord during the Civil War;
- The papers
of Abby Kelley Foster, noted women’s rights advocate and abolitionist,
depicting the activities of the antislavery movement in New England, New
York, and Ohio.
Thousands of letters and diary entries from
less well known women vividly document even the smallest details of their
lives and shed light on the roles women played within their families, their
communities, and the social and political movements of their times. In many
cases, we also include the replies, from both men and women, placing the
letters in their full context. Detailed biographical notes illuminate the
lives of the authors, including multigenerational details, as exemplified in
the letters and diaries of three generations of women within the same
family.
The writings in Manuscript Women's Letters
and Diaries are by women from New England families, but this is by no
means a “New England collection.” The women wrote from the many places
throughout the U.S. in which they lived, traveled, worked, studied, and
observed the lives and historical events around them—including John Brown’s
raid, the activities of the Ku Klux Klan, numerous wars, and:
- Experiences
in a Colorado mining camp, through Nancy Colburn Hartford’s log of her time
there;
- Frontier
conditions in Florida in 1830, as lived and described by Julia Ann Draper
Lazelle;
- World War I
Army training camps and the American Expeditionary Forces in France, through
Lizzie Bliss Dewey’s correspondence with friends in service;
- Charitable
work in the South, documented by the Chase sisters’ writings of their
experiences.
Other topics include female education and
intellectual development, medical conditions, religious life, and domestic
work, including Anna Quincy Thaxter Cushing’s thirty-six-year diary
documenting her literary interests, the education of her daughters, and her
minutely detailed descriptions of housework; Catharine Flint’s 1860-1867
“household notebook,” in which she kept careful track of the tasks performed
by her domestic servants; and Lizzie Wilson Goodenough’s documentation of
the life of a servant in Brattleboro, Vermont. (Mine is a hard & lonely
life day after day comes and brings its work. It seems my life is made up of
nothing but long days for nothing but work…for others.)
SEMANTIC INDEXING FOR SEARCHING IN NEW WAYS
Each letter and diary entry will be indexed
using Alexander Street’s Semantic Indexing™, allowing researchers to
identify and locate content in ways never before possible, with pinpoint
searching possible to the level of the individual letter and passage. Search
by the type of document, date and place written, where sent; the writer’s
age, occupation, date and place of birth, date and place of death, marital
status, maternal status, religion; and other search entry points, such as
historical event. The letters and diaries will be displayed as images of the
manuscripts, giving users access not only to the women’s words, but also to
details revealed by the physical documents themselves. A selected
twenty-five percent of the collection is also rekeyed, allowing for
full-text searching.
SEARCH ALL ALEXANDER STREET HISTORY TOGETHER
Manuscript Women's
Letters and Diaries from the American Antiquarian Society, 1700-1950
is part of Alexander Street’s Social and Cultural History Series.
Other projects in the series include:
- North
American Women’s Letters and Diaries
- British
and Irish Women’s Letters and Diaries
- The
American Civil War: Letters and Diaries
- Harper's
Weekly 1857-1912
-
Illustrated Civil War Newspapers and Magazines
- The
Gilded Age
- Oral
History Online
- Women and
Social Movements in the U.S.
- North
American Immigrant Letters, Diaries, and Oral Histories
- North
American Indian Thought and Culture
- Early
Encounters in North America
- and future
history projects
Manuscript Women's
Letters and Diaries
will be available on the Web through annual subscription or a
one-time purchase of perpetual rights in 2008.
You expect a frank letter. I trust you shall
have it. I must forbear writing, or write my whole heart.
—Ann Brewer to Leander Gage, August 24, 1819
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