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Fotografie: via University of Virginia School of Medicine

Werken van Martha Ballard

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Spring: A Spiritual Biography of the Season (2006) — Medewerker — 33 exemplaren

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Pseudoniemen en naamsvarianten
Ballard, Martha Moore
Geboortedatum
1735
Overlijdensdatum
1812
Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
USA
Geboorteplaats
Oxford, Massachusetts, USA
Plaats van overlijden
Hallowell, Maine, USA
Woonplaatsen
Hallowell, Maine, USA
Beroepen
Midwife
Diarist
Healer
Korte biografie
Martha Moore was born in Oxford, Massachusetts, to a colonial family. She was related to Clara Barton, the founder of the American Red Cross. In 1754, she married Ephraim Ballard, a farmer, and settled at Hallowell, on the Kennebec River near Augusta, Maine. Martha Moore Ballard and her husband had nine children. She kept a daily diary for 27 years, recording her arduous work and domestic life. Written with a quill pen and homemade ink, the diary recounts babies delivered and illnesses treated as Mrs. Ballard traveled by horse or canoe around the New England frontier. The entries also describe happenings within her own family, local crimes and scandals, and a woman's perspective on the political events of the early American republic. The diary also is a valuable source of information for historians on late 18th-century and early 19th-century medical practices, religious squabbles, and sexual mores. The diary was kept in her family, eventually coming into the possession of her great-great-granddaughter, Mary Hobart, one of America’s first female physicians. Dr. Hobart donated the diary to the Maine State Library. After eight years of research and editing by historian Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, it was published as A Midwife's Tale: The Life of Martha Ballard Based on her Diary, 1785–1812. A Midwife's Tale received the Pulitzer Prize for history in 1991, as well as the Bancroft Prize, and numerous other awards and honors. PBS developed it into a documentary film for "The American Experience" series.

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This book is very interesting way to learn about everyday life in America in the late 1700's-early 1800s. The extracted diary entries themselves are not that interesting; it is Ulrich's extrapolation of events in Martha's life that makes it so. She ties in information from other entries not presented, writings from other contemporaries (usually men), and historical documents to make a cohesive subject. Each chapter seems to develop a specific theme, e.g. medical practice, crime & punishment, marital customs, gardening, local economy and women's contributions, the rebellion of squatters trying to settle land owned by a major corporation. It countered my current assumptions that "women weren't educated" or "women with children out of wedlock were shunned".
While I didn't read all the diary extracts, looking at Martha's spelling was quite interesting and made me wonder that maybe the current theory of encouraging young students to write without regard to spelling might be an excellent way to get them to express themselves.
I hope that Ulrich left a transcript of the diary with the Maine Historical Society for future researchers use.
… (meer)
 
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juniperSun | 34 andere besprekingen | Apr 7, 2023 |
Diary of a midwife in Hallowell, Maine; daily entries give insight into the life of the community, particularly the women’s economic network that is missing from histories; explicated by Ulrich. The diary itself is fascinating, not because what Martha Ballard was doing was extraordinary, but because it wasn't--for rural Maine in 1800. And then there are Laurel Thatcher Ulrich's careful and thorough notes about how Martha's words fit in with what else we know about the society. One of the things I remember most from when I read it is the existence of a whole sub-economy that operated among the women--which was evidently completely invisible to the men's notions of the economic system--or at least to history, until now.… (meer)
 
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kcollett | 34 andere besprekingen | Nov 25, 2021 |
nonfiction/women's economic & social history (1780s-1810s in Maine).
These pulitzer winners are always so meticulously researched; here is a woman's life (the grandmother of Clara Barton) as reconstructed through primary sources. Not all the chapters are going to be interesting to all readers, but a lot of it was for me.
 
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reader1009 | 34 andere besprekingen | Jul 3, 2021 |
Sometimes I need more than 5 stars to review a book, this is one. Fascinating book revealing life on the edge at the beginning of white America. Every day every action, every death, every birth, every sickness, all for the good Lord willing it or allowing it. What a hard life they lived. Every step they took was basically fraught with peril - having a baby could easily mean death, crossing thru the woods to your neighbors house could result in a fall and death...
 
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marshapetry | 34 andere besprekingen | Nov 20, 2018 |

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Statistieken

Werken
1
Ook door
1
Leden
2,174
Populariteit
#11,803
Waardering
4.1
Besprekingen
35
ISBNs
14
Talen
2

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