
To Her Credit
Women, Finance, and the Law in Eighteenth-Century New England Cities
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
A transformative look at colonial women's pivotal roles as lenders and debtors in shaping the economic and legal systems of Newport and Boston.
Winner of the Berkshire Women Historians Book Prize by the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians
In colonial Boston and Newport, personal credit relationships were a cornerstone of economic networks. During the eighteenth century, the pace of market exchange quickened and debt cases swelled the dockets of county courts, institutions that became ever more central to enforcing financial obligations. At the same time, seafaring and military service drew men away from home, some never to return. The absences of male household heads during this era of economic transition forced New Englanders to evaluate a pressing question: Who would establish and manage consequential financial relationships?
In To Her Credit, Sara T. Damiano uncovers free women's centrality to the interrelated worlds of eighteenth-century finance and law. Focusing on everyday life in Boston, Massachusetts, and Newport, Rhode Islandâtwo of the busiest port cities of this periodâDamiano argues that colonial women's skilled labor actively facilitated the growth of Atlantic ports and their legal systems. Mining vast troves of court records, Damiano reveals that married and unmarried women of all social classes forged new paths through the complexities of credit and debt, stabilizing credit networks amid demographic and economic turmoil. In turn, urban women mobilized sophisticated skills and strategies as borrowers, lenders, litigants, and witnesses.
Highlighting the often-unrecognized malleability of early American social hierarchies, the book shows how indebtedness intensified women's vulnerability, while acting as creditors, clients, or witnesses enabled women to exercise significant power over men. Yet by the late eighteenth century, class differentiation began to mark finance and the law as masculine realms, obscuring women's contributions to the very institutions they helped to create. The first book to systematically reconstruct the centrality of women's labor to eighteenth-century personal credit relationships, To Her Credit will be an eye-opening work for economic historians, legal historians, and anyone interested in the early history of New England.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Series Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Series Editorâs Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1. âTo the advantage of herself & the honorable support of her Familyâ: Women and the Urban Credit Economy
- 2. âShe Hath Often Requested the Sumâ: Credit Relations Outside of Court
- 3. âAnd Thereon She Suesâ: Debt Litigation, Lawyers, and Legal Practices
- 4. âI saw and heardâ: The Knowledge and Power of Witnesses
- 5. âLaboring under many difficulties and hardshipsâ: The Problem of Debt and Vocabularies of Grievance
- 6. âAccording to your judgmentsâ: Redefining Financial Work in the Late Eighteenth Century
- Conclusion
- Appendix: Sources and Sampling for the Quantitative Analysis of Debt Cases
- Notes
- Essay on Sources
- Index