Wednesday, October 5, 2022

The Negro Act of 1740 Deemed Legal By Our State Supreme Courts

 While white women were out being the first woman to do this or that black women were being held back from their talents.


1.       1740 - Many women were negatively affected by the Negro Act of 1740.  Passed in South Carolina it made it illegal for enslaved blacks to raise their own food, earn money, or even learn to write. It also made it legal for ‘owners’ to kill their slaves without repercussions. The Act spread throughout the South being deemed legal by many State Supreme Courts.

This is an excerpt from the book, "Women's History: Trivia, Firsts, & Musings by Paula C. Henderson https://amzn.to/3C2WWN2


Have You Heard of Nasty napkin Nan? Jan 29, 1726

 This is one of the "musings"

Have you heard of Napkin Nan, aka Nasty Nan, alias Anne Miles?

 

January 29, 1726“(London): On Friday last, on Anne Miles, alias Napkin Nan, alias Nasty Nan the Scot, was, together with a *char-woman, committed to Newgate by Leonard Street, one of his Majesty’s Justices of Peace, for robbing her service the Rose Tavern of a great quantity of napkins, plates, knives, candles, linen and other family necessaries which felonious practice it seems she had carried on in all her places for several years past as appeared by the concession of the char-woman, whose lodging in an alley near Fleet Street was the Waterhouse, or repository for the things stole in that manner and where a great quantity was found upon a search warrant.” ~ The Ipswich Journal, Suffolk, England


This is an excerpt from the book, "Women's History: Trivia, Firsts, & Musings by Paula C. Henderson https://amzn.to/3C2WWN2


Hannah Penn: First Woman to be Granted Status of Honorary citizen of the USA

 December 20, 1726 – It is on this date that Hannah Callowhill Penn, widow of William Penn, dies at age fifty-five. She governed the Province of Pennsylvania during her husband’s six years of disability following a stroke, and then for another eight years after his death in 1718. Hannah Penn was the first woman to be granted the status of Honorary Citizen of the United States which took an Act of Congress (PL 98-516) and was awarded by President Ronald Reagan in 1984.


This is an excerpt from the book, "Women's History: Trivia, Firsts, & Musings by Paula C. Henderson https://amzn.to/3C2WWN2


First Woman to Get a Patent in the New World, Sybilla Masters 1715

 

1.       1715 -  It won’t be until The U.S. Patent Act of 1790 that women will be allowed to file a patent in their own name here in the United States but, in 1715 Colonial America;  meet Sybilla Righton Masters. She lays claim to being the first woman to an invention that was patented in the New World. She created a ‘machine’ that produced grits. Previously grinded from corn by hand, her machine automated the process using wooden cylinders, heavy pestles and mortars and powered by the use of horses or water wheels.

   Because the New World was still under British rule the patent was issued by King George of Great Britain making her the first woman in the English Colony of America to be issued a patent..

   Sybilla Masters went on to be issued a second patent for a process of making hats and bonnets. This patent was then adapted by others for the use in making baskets, mattings and furniture covers.


This is an excerpt from the book, "Women's History: Trivia, Firsts, & Musings by Paula C. Henderson https://amzn.to/3C2WWN2

Women's News from 1600-1650

 

1.       1607 - By 1607 Jamestown, Virginia has been settled and in 1608 Anne Burras becomes the first documented white English woman to marry in the “New World”.  She arrived in the New World with a ship load of supplies in the employ as a maid to Mrs. Thomas Forrest. Within the year she married John Laydon and they had four daughters: Virginia, Alice, Katherine, and Margaret. Her daughter, Virginia Laydon is the first child born in the new English colony of Jamestown.

A statue of Anne Burras can be found at the Virginia Women’s Monument erected in 2018-2019 located at the Virginia State Capitol. The tribute also includes life size statues of Cockacoeske, Mary Draper Ingles, Elizabeth Keckley, Mary Todd Lincoln, Laura Copenhaver, Virginia Randolph and Adele Goodman Clark.

2.       1613 - Pocahontas, who had, by all accounts, been helping the Jamestown Colonist to secure much needed food and supplies and acting as liaison between the white colonist and the Indians was kidnapped by the colonist in 1613. They held her for ransom after what was considered a hostile event between Captain John Smith and her tribe. They baptized her, giving her the name Rebecca. Whether or not this was against her will is not known. What we do know is that in April of 1614 she married tobacco farmer John Rolfe. They had a son, Thomas in January of 1615.

 

3.       In 1617, Pocahontas, her husband, John Rolfe, and their young son travelled to England with anticipation of meeting the Queen. The Queen consort of England at this time was Queen Anne of Denmark, married to King James I.

 

 

4.       Pocahontas passed away in March of 1617 while still in England. She was buried at Gravesend, England where her grave remains today albeit lost after the nearby parish burned down. She was between 20 and 21 years of age at the time of her death. A statue of Pocahontas stands outside the St. George Church in Gravesend, Kent, England. In 1907 she will become the first Native American to be honored on a U.S. postage stamp. 

Pocahontas. Oldest portrait hanging in the National Portrait Gallery.




Painted of Pocahontas during her trip to London in 1616.

 

5.       1619 - Back in Jamestown, Virginia, the first slave ship arrives on the shores of the New World in 1619, this, and the ships that follow for the next 241 years would culminate into approximately six million slaves in the United States. We can approximate that about half were women.

 

6.       1634 - Enter Anne Hutchinson. Remember that the whole purpose of the “New World” was to have religious freedom and yet when Anne Hutchinson showed up she challenged what the colonist’s true desire was for the New World. Anne hosted women at her home speaking the ‘Free Grace’ or Antinomians theology. The simplified version is that Anne Hutchinson preached a covenant of grace while the colony Puritans preached a covenant of works.

 

 

7.        In 1637 - Hutchinson was arrested for her “unorthodox” teachings. She was convicted and banished from the colony. She, her eleven children and many of her followers established Portsmouth, Rhode Island. As threats loomed of Boston attacking Portsmouth, Anne and half of her children moved to Split Rock, now known as The Bronx, New York. This turned out to be a fatal error. At this time hostilities abounded with the nearby Siwanoy Indians and in August of 1643 Anne, and all but one of her children in Split Rock were killed during the Kieft’s War.

    Susanna, her nine year old daughter was the lone survivor.    Anne is remembered in Massachusetts for her courage to exercise her civil liberties in the face of those less tolerant. Did the English Colonists really flee England believing in an individual’s freedom of religion or did they come only to do exactly what England was doing to them; forcing one religion on everyone? Anne Hutchinson played an important role in our history being the first woman (person) to challenge the truth about what “freedom of religion” really means.

   Anne’s daughter Susanna returned to the Boston area to live with her remaining siblings that didn’t go to Split Rock. She married when she was 18 and had a family. Her and her husband, John Cole had settled back in Rhode Island by 1663. Her husband passed away in 1707 and Susanna died on December 14, 1713 at age 80.

8.       In 1647 Maryland, a 46 year old recent immigrant from England named Margaret Brent became the first female land owner in Maryland when her brother transferred 1000 acres of land to her on Kent Island, Maryland. Add to that the land her brother inherited by his marriage to Mary Kittamaquund who had inherited tribal lands when her father passed away.

 

9.       During this time Margaret Brent had become close friends with the then Governor of Maryland, Leonard Calvert. When he died in June of 1647, Margaret was named executor of his estate. Margaret has long since been considered the FIRST SUFFRAGIST IN MARYLAND since demanding her right to vote before the Maryland Legislation as the executor of Leonard Calvert’s Estate. “I’ve come to seek a voice in this assembly. And yet because I am a woman, forsooth I must stand idly by and not even have a voice in the framing of your laws” Her request was denied.



 

This occurred during the English Civil War which, by now, had moved into Maryland. Gov. Calvert died before paying the soldiers that had protected his estate as well as the colony. Margaret fed, clothed and paid the soldiers, took in rents due the estate and paid the debts.

Margaret Brent never married. She died in 1671.

10.   1648“In 1648 Margaret Jones was indicted for being a witch, found guilty and executed. This was the first instance of capital punishment for witchcraft in New England.” ~ The Pittsfield Sun, Massachusetts, Oct 3, 1822

 

11.   1650 - According to the Poetry Foundation Anne Bradstreet was the first woman to have her poems published in the Americas. Her most celebrated volumes, “The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up in America” was published in 1650. Born in England around 1612, she died in 1672 in Massachusetts.


This is an excerpt from the book, "Women's History: Trivia, Firsts, & Musings by Paula C. Henderson https://amzn.to/3C2WWN2


First Woman to Have Poems Published in the Americas. Anne Bradstreet

 

1.       1650 - According to the Poetry Foundation Anne Bradstreet was the first woman to have her poems published in the Americas. Her most celebrated volumes, “The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up in America” was published in 1650. Born in England around 1612, she died in 1672 in Massachusetts.


This is an excerpt from the book, "Women's History: Trivia, Firsts, & Musings by Paula C. Henderson https://amzn.to/3C2WWN2

Saturday, October 1, 2022

First Female Ensign Eliza B. Cutter

The first woman to have the title of ensign conferred upon her was Mrs. Eliza B. Cutter, who carried the regimental colors of the brigade in which her husband was colonel at the charge on Fort Donaldson. She died at Garfield hospital in Washington on November 30, 1892. 



Susanna Madora Kinsey Salter, First Woman elected Mayor of an American city 1887 Kansas

 The first woman elected mayor of an American city was Mrs. Susanna madora Salter, nee Kinsey, of Angonia, Kansas. Mrs. Salter was elected in the spring of 1887






The Jersey City News, July 15, 1895 issue



Grace Tabb, First Woman College of Pharmacy 1884

 Miss Grace Tabb, the first woman graduate of a college of pharmacy was a lecturer in the Woman's College of Medicine, Philadelphia, in the year 1884



The Jersey City News, July 15, 1895 issue

First Woman To Work On A Police Force 1894, Edith Walker

 According to this article, it was as early as 1894 when the first female was hired in Bogota, Columbia to work on a police force. Her name was Edith Walker.




Dona Manuella Palido, First Female Lawyer in Spain

 When I google this I get differing answers as to who the first woman lawyer in Spain actually was. Some say it was Maria Marin in 1922.

According to this newspaper article I found in 1895 it was Dona Manuella Palido



Friday, September 30, 2022

First Woman Geographer: Susanna Rowson 1805

 

The bestselling book in American literature, Charlotte Temple, written by author Susanna Rowson, is published in 1791.



 This book remains the bestselling book of the times until Harriet Beecher Stowes

‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin’ is published in 1851.

 

   Susanna Rowson was born in 1762 in Portsmouth, England  but the family almost immediately moved to the America’s. The ship did not even make it to the docks; the ship becoming grounded and considered shipwrecked some distance out the crew and passengers were stuck on the ship until rescued days later.

   With the American Revolutionary War going on, Susanna’s father was immediately placed under house arrest. Following a prisoner exchange in 1778, the family was sent to live in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and then back to England. Their property in America was seized and the family found themselves living in poverty. Susanna would go on to become a famous and beloved writer and the first woman geographer when she published the first human geography textbook, ‘Rowson’s Abridgement of Universal Geography’ in 1805.


This is an excerpt from the book, "Women's History: Trivia, Firsts, & Musings by Paula C. Henderson https://amzn.to/3C2WWN2

Statues of Real Women in the United States

 Did you know there are more than 267 statues of real women in the United States?

Statues of  Real Women: https://amzn.to/3CmK9VH