Abstract

Ebb Tide in New England Women, Seaports, and Social Change, 16301800. By Elaine Forman Crane. (Northeastern University Press, 360 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115), $50.00 cloth, $17.95 paper. Using as her evidence an impressive number of public records and local history sources, Elaine Forman Crane argues that women became more and more dependent on men for their economic survival as eighteenth century progressed. The author focuses her study on sources in New England seaports of Boston and Salem, Massachusetts; Newport, Rhode Island; and Portsmouth, New Hampshire. She sets American story in context of English and French law and social theory. The picture she presents is a grim one. She argues that as American society became more and more organized - more legalistic and more capitalistic - women came more firn-dy under control of patriarchal values. She cites Gerda Lerner's thesis that as a state becomes more powerful, women lose their access to activity in public sphere; that women have more agency in informal societies where government procedures and policies are more flexible. Crane believes that her study illuminates roots of feminization of poverty in twentieth century. She examines role of women in Protestant churches for her first cluster of evidence. Although women's membership in churches exceeded men's, she sees an erosion of women's power in governance of those churches. Women received fewer appointments to visitation committees, had less say in appointment of ministers, and, finally, as century progressed, were more often referred to as the wife of' or as a member of a family and not listed with their own names. In other clusters of evidence, Crane looks at women in economy and legal systems of seaports. She describes women's roles in producing and distributing food and clothing and fists a wide variety of women's occupations, but demonstrates that percentage of women of wealth (indexed by their taxes) declined during eighteenth century. The high incidence of widowed or women with husbands at sea in these communities led to an increase in numbers of women in poverty who were dependent on public resources. As market economy became more complex and required access to cash and to credit, Crane explains, women's economic independence declined. While women often received favorable settlements in seventeenth century courts, their situation changed in eighteenth century as law became more standardized. …

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