History scholars prior to the 1970’s believed that the colonial era was that of a “golden age” for women. Was it really a “golden age” for women though? Some more recent research suggests that it was not the most wonderful time in women's’ lives in history. Women were not treated very fair during the colonial era. Taking into account Native women’s lives before, and after the arrival of the white European colonists, and African women’s lives from the colonial era it is very clear to see they are not treated with as much respect as those scholars thought. Native and African women’s lives changed drastically when the Colonials came to America. As for Colonial women they were exposed to the many differences between them and the Natives when they …show more content…
There was a clear division between men and women in the Native American society but each had their own crucial role in the society. Women carried out many important jobs and even “helped develop the elaborate cultural, social, political, and economic patterns that characterized most of the hundreds of Native groups that spanned the continent.” So not only did women influence their own societies but also societies of Native groups across the country. Many Native societies were even matriarchal, where women could rule families and sometimes even tribes. Women participated in elections and most all political roles were elected by the women. Not only did they participate politically, but many women were farmers, in some tribes women produced up to 90 percent of the tribe’s diet, “raising food was considered an honor.” They could control whether the tribe went to war by controlling the food supply. Native women’s roles also extended outside of their homes and fields of crops, they often took roles of businesspeople or even entrepreneurs. Native women were even allowed to have tattoos and wear short skirts, these women had no privacy. Although it is hard to make generalizations about Native women in history because of all of the diversity among the tribes, it is clear to see that they had more freedom before the colonial …show more content…
The Europeans believed that this “new” land and these “new” people could be adapted easily, they had no belief in religious diversity. They viewed Native households as disorderly and sometimes even sinful, because of this the colonists believed that Natives needed to create a colonial household. Colonists believed that men were the head of the household while women were there to do the housework and take care of the children. They also saw the Natives as “lower” people, Europeans were superior to the Natives. They saw Native women as wild and very sexualized, as if they were closer to animals than actual people, sometimes they even viewed the women as whores. Although some men viewed the women as “princesses”, the Europeans even saw them as “exotic creatures decked out in beautifully tanned buckskin and fine quillwork”. These men were able to work with Native women in trading and bartering. Some men even encouraged marriage between colonists and Native women, a few of these men even married Native women and created “mixed-blood offspring”. The colonists unsurprisingly viewed the Native women who were willing to help them in a positive way also. The Native women of this time were treated with the same respect as men for the most part, until the colonists changed it
In First Generations Women in Colonial America, Carol Berkin demonstrates the social, political, and economic circumstances that shaped and influenced the lives of women during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in the colonies. In exploring these women’s lives and circumstances it becomes clear that geography, race, ethnicity, religion, social class, and other factors less fixed such as war each influenced a woman’s experience differently and to varying degrees. In doing this, Berkin first showcases the life of a specific woman and then transposes that life onto the general historical framework and provides a context in which this woman would have lived. The lives of these women exemplified is also explored and demonstrated through the use of comparison to highlight their different experiences. Moreover, this analysis also seeks to identify the varied sources of these women’s power, albeit for many this power was limited. The analysis is broken up primarily by geography, then by race, and lastly by time and war. While these factors provide the overarching context of analysis, more specific factors are also introduced.
To understand the significant change in the role of the women is to understand its roots. Traditionally, women in colonial America were limited in
The Native women were also responsible for raising the family. While being married to a trader, the wife was supposed to act as one of their wives from back home. Usually the wife/mother would wake up early in the morning and start the day such by making food or even preparing the furs for them to be sent back to Europe. Most women would also catch the food for the family, while their husbands were occupied with the trades. They were also responsible for raising their daughters and teaching them the general skills of a woman. The sons would also stay with their mothers at home. However, when they became men they would follow their fathers and learn the business.
Women in European societies enjoyed very little social importance. In Native American societies, women also held inferior positions, but not to the degree instituted among European women. Native Americans determined family membership through the female line, contrary to the European patriarchal system. A woman could divorce her husband if she wished. Europeans regarded this reversal of sexual hierarchy as dangerous and peculiar. Senior women of a village instructed the men during decision-making, determined the chief of a clan, and retained impeaching powers. Europeans regarded this sexual equality as another example of the uncivilized nature of Native Americans.
Life for the colonial woman was a mix of imprisonment and freedom in their marriages, homes, and in the American Colonial legal system. Women who chose to come to the American Colonies had a 100 percent
For Europeans, the to be a member of a family you had to be related to the eldest male in the household. This was a total opposite to the Indian society. For example, in the Iroquois society, family membership was determined by the family of the female. At the head of each family was an elder woman, followed by her daughter, their husbands and children, and finally her unmarried granddaughters and grandsons. When one of the men married, he moved to the family of his wife. This was a very sharp contrast to the Europeans, whom had for centuries, been the top of their social hierarchy. In Europe, the women had a very relatively primitive, limited role in society. They were not allowed to attend or partake in political affairs, with very few exceptions. Now, on the other hand, in Indian society there was a council of chiefs, whom was all male, but they were appointed by an elder women. Also, during their deliberation over issues, the males made the final decision, but would be expelled from the council, if they didn?t conclude to the same decision that the elder woman came to. The women's main job in Indian society, was being in charge of cultivation of, harvest of, and distribution of food. When the men left to go hunting, women were left to run society. The Europeans simply believed that the males were far superior to the family, which is why women could not have jobs, and were left to
The book First Generations: Women in Colonial America written by Carol Berkin shares the power of control of a women’s role in the early part of American society was linked to her race and where she lived. In the book Berkin does a great job of giving examples of the life of the colonists. For example, we know that women white women had more freedom than slaves African Americans especially when it came to marriage. If a African American would want to get married to a white man it would be considered a “criminal offensive” ( Berkin 109).
As Martha Ballard writes in her diary, "A womans work is never Done as the Song says and Happy is shee [sp] whose strength holds out to the end of the rais [race]." Women, like Ballard, contributed useful and skilled labor, though it was often derided, mocked, or overlooked. However, the work of women varied greatly, due to location, social class, race, time-period, and more. This essay will focus on two very different groups of women, early female settlers of the Chesapeake area during the seventeenth century and the Native American women of the Iroquois Confederacy, spread across northeastern New York and Ontario during the same time period. Through the analysis, the necessity of the study of women 's work will become evident; it aids historians in understanding women 's past: including gender perceptions, the myriad of experiences faced by different women, and the changes over that occurred over time.
Slave women had the hardest role to play in Colonial American women. They started out having to do unskilled work, such as building a fence. Then later on, when slaves became more expensive, women were seen more equal to the slave men. They were then responsible to duties that men were. Women had to work long, hard hours, side by side with men, on plantations. Then, suddenly, the north started having them take care of domestic duties for the owner’s wife. Eventually Southern states caught on, once the wives of the
With Native Americans being the first inhabitants of North America, many people often question what traditions they have created on their own, before the ideas of the pale settlers. When taking a look into their interesting beliefs, it is obvious to see an intricate basis or animals and spirits that guide the lifestyles of Indians all over the country. Even their society had a special way of doing things, including gender roles of both men and women. There are many customs that have seemed odd to the average American throughout the centuries, but Indians found these a normal way of life. Even the lifestyles of Native Americans were unique, from hunting animals to tanning buffalo hides. Gender was a major
Life in the colonies was different for a female indentured servant and for a native-born female. The law forbade indentured servants to marry until they finished out their contract, which was generally about four to five years of service. Unless she found a man to uplift her contract, she would have to bear a rough beginning (Hawke 63-64). The exposure to malaria left women vulnerable to more deadly diseases, the physical work was harder in the colonies than in England due to the fact that in addition to all of the common household chores, there were also fields to tend, so many did not make it to their freedom. If they did make it to the end of their services however, they received: food, clothing, and tools to give them a start in life. The plan was for women to go into the world looking for a husband, but many married their employers, those who did not, married quickly since men outnumbered women seven to one. (64).
Today, women are believed to be equal to men however this was not always the case. During colonial times, women did not have the same roles as women do today; men and women had fixed roles in society. Roles between men and women do not exchange due to strict gender roles. Additionally, married women were not exactly considered as companions instead, as the husband’s property. Although gender roles were a significant issue among women in early America, another issue was the background of these women. Factors such as race, religion, geography/region, and social class were substantial to the extent of control a woman had over her own life. These factors significantly shaped the lives of these women. For instance, white women had differences
There were fewer women than men throughout the colonial period. Because of the shortage, women had a higher status in North America than in Europe. In the English colonies, more men than women were being transported as slaves from Africa. Women often arrived ill and were enslaved as laborers right away. (v.1 3)
When European settlers arrived, they had a pre-decided vision of what women ought to behave like based on the European women, which the indigenous women didn’t align with. Indigenous women were comprehended and characterized in ambiguous and conflicting terms. They could firstly be viewed as “noble savages” where they were seen as classic Indian Princesses, virginal, childlike, naturally pure, beautiful, helpful to European men, and open and willing to
Their social and political systems ranged from highly centralized empires and sprawling confederacies to village level chiefdoms and roving. The ideas of Native American about men and women were no less varied. That might