Thus the evidence leads us to believe that a colonial woman’s education consisted in the main of training in how to conduct and care for a home. It was her principal business in life and for it she certainly was well prepared. In the seventeenth century girls attended either a short term public school or a dame’s school, or, as among the better families in the South, were taught by private tutors. In the eighteenth century they frequently attended boarding schools or female seminaries, and here learned—at least in the middle colonies and the South—not only reading and writing and arithmetic, but dancing, music, drawing, French, and “manners.” In Virginia and New York, as we have seen, illiteracy among seventeenth century women was astonishingly common; but in the eighteenth century those above the lowest classes in all three sections could at least read, write, and keep accounts, and some few had dared to reach out into the sphere of higher learning. That many realized their intellectual poverty and deplored it is evident; how many more who kept no diaries and left no letters hungered for culture we shall never know; but the very longing of these colonial women is probably one of the main causes of that remarkable movement for the higher education of American women so noticeable in the earlier years of the nineteenth century. Their smothered ambition undoubtedly gave birth to an intellectual advance of women unequalled elsewhere in the world.
FOOTNOTES:
[43] Vol. I, p. 231.
[44] Vol. I, p. 161.
[45] Vol. I, p. 165.
[46] Vol. I, p. 344.
[47] Letters of Abigail Adams, p. 24.
[48] Memoirs of an American Lady, p. 27.
[49] Humphreys: Catherine Schuyler, p. 8.
[50] Smyth: Writings of Ben Franklin, Vol. III, p. 203.
[51] Smyth: Writings of Ben Franklin, Vol. III, p. 4.
[52] Ford: Writings of Thomas Jefferson, Vol. III. p. 345
[53] Selections from Fithian’s Writings, Aug. 12, 1774.
[54] American Nation Series, England in America, p. 116.
[55] Vol. I, p. 299.
[56] Vol. I, p. 301.
[57] Vol. I, p. 311.
[58] Institutional History of Virginia, Vol. I, p. 454.
[59] Ravenel: Eliza Pinckney, p. 50.
[60] Ravenel: Eliza Pinckney, p. 51.
[61] Ravenel: Eliza Pinckney, p. 49.
[62] Turell: Memoirs of Life and Death of Mrs. Jane Turell.
[63] Letters of Abigail Adams, p. 11.
[64] Letters of Abigail Adams, p. 9.
[65] Grant: Memoirs of an American Lady, p. 136.
[66] Grant: Memoirs of an American Lady, p. 267.
[67] Letters of Abigail Adams, p. 401.
[68] Smyth: Writings of Franklin, Vol. I, p. 344.