Please note: In order to keep Hive up to date and provide users with the best features, we are no longer able to fully support Internet Explorer. The site is still available to you, however some sections of the site may appear broken. We would encourage you to move to a more modern browser like Firefox, Edge or Chrome in order to experience the site fully.

Harlots, Hussies, and Poor Unfortunate Women : Crime, Transportation, and the Servitude of Female Convicts, 1718–1783, Hardback Book

Harlots, Hussies, and Poor Unfortunate Women : Crime, Transportation, and the Servitude of Female Convicts, 1718–1783 Hardback

Part of the Atlantic Crossings series

Hardback

Description

In Harlots, Hussies, and Poor Unfortunate Women, Edith M.

Ziegler recounts the history of British convict women involuntarily transported to Maryland in the eighteenth century. Great Britain’s forced transportation of convicts to colonial Australia is well known.

Less widely known is Britain’s earlier programme of sending convicts - including women - to North America.

Many of these women were assigned as servants in Maryland.

Titled using Basing much of her powerful narrative on the experiences of actual women, Ziegler restores individual faces to women stripped of their basic freedoms.

She begins by vividly invoking the social conditions of eighteenth-century Britain, which suffered high levels of criminal activity, frequently petty thievery.

Contemporary readers and scholars will be fascinated by Ziegler’s explanation of how gender-influenced punishments were meted out to women and often ensnared them in Britain’s system of convict labour. Ziegler also clearly describes the methods and operation of the convict trade and sale procedures in colonial markets.

Readers will travel with her to the places where convict servants were deployed and will come to understand the role these women played in colonial Maryland and their contributions to the region’s society and economy.

Ziegler’s research also sheds light on escape attempts and the lives that awaited those who survived servitude. Mostly illiterate, convict women left few primary sources such as diaries or letters in their own words.

Ziegler has masterfully researched the penumbra of associated documents and accounts to reconstruct the worlds of eighteenth-century Britain and colonial Maryland and the lives of these unwilling American settlers.

In illuminating this little-known episode in American history, Ziegler also discusses not just the fact that these women have been largely forgotten, but why.

Harlots, Hussies and Poor Unfortunate Women makes a valuable contribution to American history, women’s studies, and labour history.

Information

Information

Also in the Atlantic Crossings series  |  View all