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Location Call # Volume Status
 LAW Johnny C. Burris Collection - 3rd Floor  HQ1034.U5 C54 2014    AVAILABLE  
Author Cleves, Rachel Hope, 1975-
Title Charity and Sylvia : a same-sex marriage in early America / Rachel Hope Cleves.
OCLC 860944032
ISBN 9780199335428
0199335427
9780199335442
0199335443
9780199335459
0199335451
9780199335435
0199335435
ISBN/ISSN 40023903026
Publisher New York : Oxford University Press, [2014]
Description xix, 267 pages, 7 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 25 cm
LC Subject heading/s Bryant, Charity.
Drake, Sylvia, 1784-1868.
Other
Subject heading/s
Bryant, Charity. (OCoLC)fst01512773
Drake, Sylvia, 1784-1868. (OCoLC)fst01924899
To 1865
LC Subject heading/s Same-sex marriage -- United States -- To 1865.
Other
Subject heading/s
Same-sex marriage. (OCoLC)fst01104555
United States. (OCoLC)fst01204155
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 207-254) and index.
Contents Preface -- A child of melancholy, 1777 -- Infantile days, 1784 -- O the example!, 1787 -- Mistress of a school, 1797 -- So many friends, 1799 -- Discontent and indifferent, 1800 -- Never to marry, 1800 -- Charity and Mercy, 1805 -- Charity and Lydia, 1806 -- Charity and Sylvia, February 1807 -- The tie that binds, July 1807 -- Their own dwelling, 1809 -- Wild affections, 1811 -- Miss Bryant was the man, 1820 -- Dear aunts, 1823 -- Stand fast in one spirit, 1828 -- Diligent in business, 1835 -- The cure of her I love, 1839 -- Sylvia Drake / W, 1851 -- Afterword.
Summary Explores the lives of Charity Bryant and Sylvia Drake, two ordinary middle-class women who serve as a window on historical constructs of marriage, gender, and sexuality in late 18th-century and early 19th-century America. Both were born in Massachusetts, but in different towns, 11 years apart. Charity's attachment to women was so blatant that after she turned 20, her father told her to leave the house. She worked as a schoolteacher, but was forced to leave jobs several times because of hurtful gossip about her relationships with other women. In early 1807, Charity moved to Vermont to stay with a friend, and there she met Sylvia. The two fell in love, set up housekeeping, and considered themselves married. Gradually, their family members and the residents of Weybridge did as well. Charity and Sylvia became integral to the community, attending church, running their tailor shop, and contributing to charitable endeavors. Most of all, Charity and Sylvia remained passionately committed to each other and refused to hide their relationship. An important work of history that resonates with one of today's most public debates.
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