North Carolina women : making history

cover image

Where to find it

Carolina Women's Center Collection

Call Number
Smith
Status
Contact Library for Status
Item Note
cwc@unc.edu or (919)962-8305
Call Number
Smith
Status
Contact Library for Status
Item Note
cwc@unc.edu or (919)962-8305
2007 printing

Davis Library (6th floor)

Call Number
HQ1438.N8 S55 1999
Status
Available

Davis Library — Folio (6th floor)

Call Number
HQ1438.N8 S55 1999 c. 2
Status
Available

North Carolina Collection (Wilson Library)

Call Number
C396 S655n
Note
Dustjacket.
Call Number
C396 S655n
Status
In-Library Use Only
Call Number
C396 S655n c. 2
Status
Available
Call Number
C396 S655n c. 3
Status
Available
Call Number
C396 S655n c. 4
Status
In-Library Use Only
Item Note
pbk. 2007 printing.

North Carolina Collection (Wilson Library) — Cotten

Call Number
CC396 S655n
Note
Dustjacket.
Call Number
CC396 S655n
Status
In-Library Use Only

Park Library (School of Media & Journalism)

Call Number
HQ1438.N8 S55 1999
Status
Available

Undergrad Library

Call Number
HQ1438.N8 S55 1999 c. 4
Status
Available

Summary

For generations, books on North Carolina history have included the names of only a few women. But in addition to such well-known and legendary figures as Queen Elizabeth I and Virginia Dare, a multitude of other women influenced the making of North Carolina. These women's stories have rarely been told, in part because their contributions tended to occur in the relative privacy of their families and communities.



This lively and comprehensive volume finally accords North Carolina women their long-awaited place in history. Margaret Supplee Smith and Emily Herring Wilson bring together a wealth of materials to demonstrate how North Carolina women lived, from the days of early native settlements to the end of World War II. Filled with names, places, colorful anecdotes, and more than two hundred photographs and documents that bring to life important moments in history, North Carolina Women establishes the critical influence of women in shaping the character and economy of the state and the values of its citizens.



The narratives embedded in women's history, presented chronologically, create an enormous landscape across time--broadly analyzed and meticulously detailed. By considering the particular contours of gender, race, class, religion, and geography, the authors reveal the diversity and complexity of women's lives and experiences. Interspersed throughout the book are biographies of twenty-two North Carolina women, from Cherokee Beloved Woman Nanye'hi and frontierswoman Rebecca Bryan Boone to civil rights scholar and priest Pauli Murray and political activist Gladys Avery Tillett.





Contents

  • Foreword: Circumstances and Winners Change Doris Betts
  • Preface Elizabeth F. Buford
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • Part I Prehistory through the Eighteenth Century
  • Chapter 1 The First Settlers of This Land: Native American Women Nanye'hi/Nancy Ward, 1738?-1822
  • Chapter 2 The Most Industrious Sex in That Place: Women on the Carolina Frontier, 1587-1729
  • Chapter 3 A Pattern of Industry: Women from the Colonial to Republican Eras Rebecca Bryan Boone, 1739-1813 Ann Matthews Floyd Jessop, 1738-1822 Moravian Women, 1753-1836 The Bondswomen of Somerset Place, 1786-1860
  • Part II The Nineteenth Century through Reconstruction
  • Chapter 4 A Hardier Mold: Women, Family, and Society, 1800-1860
  • Chapter 5 The Labor of Her Own Hands: Women and Work, 1800-1860
  • Chapter 6 Women Enter the Struggle: War, Emancipation, and Reconstruction, 1860-1876 Harriet Jacobs, ca. 1813-1897 Catherine Devereux Edmondston, 1823-1875 Cornelia Phillips Spencer, 1825-1908 Rhoda Strong Lowry, 1849-1909
  • Part III Reconstruction through World War II
  • Chapter 7 The Task That Is Ours: Women, Work, and Advocacy, 1877-1910 Anna Julia Haywood Cooper, 1858-1964 and Sallie Southall Cotten, 1846-1929 Julia Westall Wolfe, 1860-1945
  • Chapter 8 More Was Expected of Us: Women Making a Difference, 1910-1941 Charlotte Hawkins Brown, 1883-1961 Jane Simpson McKimmon, 1867-1957 Olive Dame Campbell, 1882-1954 Gertrude Weil, 1899-1971 Ella May Wiggins, 1900-1929 Mary Martin Sloop, 1873-1962
  • Chapter 9 Turning Point or Temporary Gain: Women and World War II, 1941-1945 Minnie Evans, 1892-1987 Elizabeth Lawrence, 1904-1985 Pauli Murray, 1910-1985 Gladys Avery Tillett, 1893-1984
  • Epilogue
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index

Other details