Enterprising Women
Gender, Race, and Power in the Revolutionary Atlantic
Title Details
Pages: 256
Trim size: 6.000in x 9.000in
Formats
Paperback
Pub Date: 03/15/2018
ISBN: 9-780-8203-5387-6
List Price: $27.95
Hardcover
Pub Date: 01/15/2015
ISBN: 9-780-8203-4455-3
List Price: $83.95
Web PDF
Pub Date: 01/15/2015
ISBN: 9-780-8203-4779-0
List Price: $83.95
Subsidies and Partnerships
Published in association with Library Company of Philadelphia
Enterprising Women
Gender, Race, and Power in the Revolutionary Atlantic
Recovered histories of entrepreneurial women of color from the colonial Caribbean
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In the Caribbean colony of Grenada in 1797, Dorothy Thomas signed the manumission documents for her elderly slave Betty. Thomas owned dozens of slaves and was well on her way to amassing the fortune that would make her the richest black resident in the nearby colony of Demerara. What made the transaction notable was that Betty was Dorothy Thomas’s mother and that fifteen years earlier Dorothy had purchased her own freedom and that of her children. Although she was just one remove from bondage, Dorothy Thomas managed to become so rich and powerful that she was known as the Queen of Demerara.
Dorothy Thomas’s story is but one of the remarkable acounts of pluck and courage recovered in Enterprising Women. As the microbiographies in this book reveal, free women of color in Britain’s Caribbean colonies were not merely the dependent concubines of the white male elite, as is commonly assumed. In the capricious world of the slave colonies during the age of revolutions, some of them were able to rise to dizzying heights of success. These highly entrepreneurial women exercised remarkable mobility and developed extensive commercial and kinship connections in the metropolitan heart of empire while raising well-educated children who were able to penetrate deep into British life.
—Sylvia R. Frey, author of The British Soldier in America: A Social History of Military Life in the Revolutionary Period
—Richard S. Newman, author of The Transformation of American Abolitionism: Fighting Slavery in the Early Republic
—Danielle Skeehan, Journal of American History