Introduction: This first class introduces women as the typical healers of families and communities in the late seventeenth through early nineteenth centuries before the rise of professional medicine—and even later in rural areas. Because of low literacy rates for women and African Americans at the beginning of the nineteenth century, few first-hand accounts of women's healing work exist. Martha Ballard, a successful midwife and community healer in rural Maine who kept a diary from 1785 to 1812, is an exception. She gives her own account of several deliveries, followed by historian Laurel Thatcher Ulrich's deeply contextualized interpretation of Ballard's role as a midwife whose community relied on her more than on doctors. Anne Bradstreet's brief memorial poems (1678) on the deaths of two grandchildren provide a window into the experience of childhood mortality and, indirectly, the great need for skilled healers. Ami McKay's historical fiction novel, The Birth House, dramatizes an experienced midwife's work through the perspective of a young apprentice. Historian Sharla Fett focuses on the antebellum South and offers a compelling view of enslaved women's expertise as well as their compulsory labor in plantation healing work.
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Secondary:
Present the biography project in which students will identify and research a nineteenth-century woman physician and write her biography as a class. This project begins with asking students to consider writing history and biography using the following questions:
Students take discussion notes and post them on an online learning system or keep them to use in Classes 2 and 3.