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This book is a fascinating re-creation of the lives of women in the
time of great social change that followed the end of the French and
Indian War in western Pennsylvania. Many decades passed before a
desolate and violent frontier was transformed into a stable region
of farms and towns. Keeping House: Women's Lives in Western
Pennsylvania, 1790-1850 tells how the daughters, wives, and mothers
who crossed the Allegheny Mountains responded and adapted to
unaccustomed physical and psychological hardships as they
established lives for themselves and their families in their new
homes. Intrigued by late eighteenth and early nineteenth-century
manuscript cookbooks in the collection of the Historical Society of
Western Pennsylvania, Virginia Bartlett wanted to find out more
about women living in the region during that period. Quoting from
journals, letters, cookbooks, travelers' accounts - approving and
critical - memoirs, documents, and newspapers, she offers us voices
of women and men commenting seriously and humorously on what was
going on around them. The text is well-illustrated with
contemporaneous art-- engravings, apaintings, drawings, and
cartoons. Of special interest are color and black-and-white
photographs of furnishings, housewares, clothing, and portraits
from the collections of the Historical Society of Western
Pennsylvania. This is not a sentimental account. Bartlett makes
clear how little say women had about their lives and how little
protection they could expect from the law, especially on matters
relating to property. Their world was one of marked contrasts: life
in a log cabin with bare necessities and elegant dinners in the
homes of Pittsburgh's military and entrepreneurial elite; rural
women in homespun and affluent Pittsburgh ladies in imported
fashions. When the book begins, families are living in fear of
Indian attacks; as it ends, the word "shawling" has come into use
as the polite term for pregnancy, referring to women's attempt to
hide their condition with cleverly draped shawls. The menacing
frontier has given way to American-style gentility. An introduction
by Jack D. Warren, University of Virginia, sets the scene with a
discussion of the early peopling of the region and places the book
within the context of women's studies.
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