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Wives Slaves And Servant Girls Advertisements For Female Runaways In American Newspapers 17701783 1st Edition Don N Hagist

  • SKU: BELL-51676162
Wives Slaves And Servant Girls Advertisements For Female Runaways In American Newspapers 17701783 1st Edition Don N Hagist
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Wives Slaves And Servant Girls Advertisements For Female Runaways In American Newspapers 17701783 1st Edition Don N Hagist instant download after payment.

Publisher: Westholme Publishing
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 2.34 MB
Pages: 131
Author: Don N. Hagist
ISBN: 9781594166549, 1594166544
Language: English
Year: 2016
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Wives Slaves And Servant Girls Advertisements For Female Runaways In American Newspapers 17701783 1st Edition Don N Hagist by Don N. Hagist 9781594166549, 1594166544 instant download after payment.

A Surprising Source of Information About a Largely Forgotten Segment of the Colonial Population In an age when individuals could be owned by others, people were lost and found just like other property. Indentured servants and slaves absconded from the custody of their masters, and their value prompted the masters to seek their return. Wives ran from abusive husbands or into the arms of another. Newspapers in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries carried large numbers of advertisements offering rewards for the return of runaways or announcing the detention of fugitives. Each ad provided a description of the individual and often included some circumstances of their elopement. The overall effectiveness of these advertisements cannot be measured, but the sheer number of ads suggests they were perceived as useful tools by those who placed them. What could not have been known at the time was the substantial contribution to history that these ads make. The descriptive advertisements provide textual snapshots of thousands of individuals who would otherwise be lost to history, people whose names might not otherwise be recorded. In Wives, Slaves, and Servant Girls: Advertisements for Female Runaways in American Newspapers, 1770-1783, historian Don N. Hagist focuses on the American Revolutionary period to provide a striking portrait of a substantial but largely forgotten segment of the population. Comprised of four hundred advertisements presented chronologically, the volume provides invaluable descriptions of women's clothes, footwear, jewelry, physical appearances, education, nationalities, occupations, and other details.

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