Elizabeth Murray
A Womans Pursuit of Independence in Eighteenth-Century America
A woman shopkeepers struggle to achieve economic
self-sufficiency in eighteenth-century Boston
One of the most compelling figures in colonial America, Elizabeth Murray (17261785) was a Scottish immigrant who settled in Boston in her early twenties and took up shopkeeping. For many years, she practiced her trade successfully while marrying three times, once to a much older man who left her an extremely rich widow. This biography chronicles the life of this extraordinary "ordinary" woman who tried to make a place for herself and other women in the world by asserting her own independence inside and outside of the home.
As an importer and retailer of British goods, Murray conducted business with merchants and manufacturers in England and buyers in the American colonies, even traveling to London to select her own stock. Deeply satisfied by her work and the economic freedom it brought her, she acted as mentor to other women, helping them to establish shops of their own. She also protected her autonomy by demanding prenuptial agreements from her second and third husbands that gave her a measure of control over her property that was rare for a married woman of her day.
The spirit of independence that Murray so valued in herself and nurtured in other women was severely tested by the upheavals of the American Revolution. With strong loyalties to both Britain and America, she was torn by the conflict, especially when close relatives chose opposing sides and her third husband abandoned her, leaving her to defend the family estate alone. Her wartime experienceswild midnight rides, accusations of being a spy, quartering both royal and rebel troops, and brief imprisonmentvividly capture the turmoil of the Revolution and highlight the range of her political commitments.
"Cleary's book on Elizabeth Murray is a welcome addition to the literature on women in early America. Murray was an exceptional ordinary woman for her day. With a portrait by John Singleton Copley, most historians could and would have portrayed Murray as a member of the 'elite.' Fortunately, Cleary mined Murray's own papers, which included not just correspondence but business records, to get past the veneer of gentility and see the complex women underneath....This biography fills in many gaps in the history of Colonial women and does so with an enjoyable writing style."
Choice
"There are so few biographies of women in the eighteenth century grounded on primary materials; Cleary's work is both needed and original. Besides writing a compelling narrative history, Cleary raises important questions about women. She explores issues of work, money, identity, politics, inheritance, and the passing on of 'character' and fortune to female relatives. This book is a lively and important addition to our knowledge of both women and the American Revolutionary era."
June Namias, author of White Captives: Gender and
Ethnicity on the American Frontier, 16071862
Patricia Cleary is associate professor of history at California State University, Long Beach.
Biography / Women's
Studies / American History
296 pp., 14 illustrations
LC 00-030277
$29.95 cloth, ISBN 1-55849-263-1
2000
To order the paperback
edition online, click here
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