The ledger that Ann DeWitt Bevier kept from 1802 until 1813 represents a rich primary source that provides perspective on how a rural agriculturalist and household head interacted with the social and cultural environment in the young American nation. Her accounting records expand the gendered history of economic life by illustrating the life and work of a woman who managed a farm, famÂÂily household, brick kiln, rental property, and investments in financial instruments. The costs of educating her children were also detailed in the ledger, helping to inform us about the educational opportunities for females in early America
References to the accounting system used for manors are contained in three early manuscripts on esta...
From the 1810 ledger of Charlton Mills of Manchester, England. See W. E, Stone, An Early English Co...
There is a rich and increasing body of research pointing to the significant role elite women played ...
The ledger that Ann DeWitt Bevier kept from 1802 until 1813 represents a rich primary source that pr...
The accounts of the Hasbrouck family help document how five generations adapted to economic and soci...
This article describes The Gerritson Collection - Women\u27s History Online 1543-1945, an electronic...
This project explores the legal, economic, and social aspects of household and estate management in ...
Sharecropper agreement found in wastebook and customers\u27 ledger dated January 1824 to November 18...
Amanda Vickery\u27s, The Gentleman\u27s Daughter: Women\u27s Lives in Georgian England, [1998] provi...
This thesis explores the evidence for handweaving in antebellum Washington County, Tennessee. The au...
“Gendering the Work of Debt Collection” analyzes women, gender, and the credit-based economies of Ne...
The Ledger, an award‐winning interactive database, contains biographical information about the stude...
The journal of Amos K. Hersey, a 19th century meat merchant from Pembroke, Maine is examined in this...
Early New England women chose to pass down what they owned and valued: clothing, cupboards, pewter d...
References to the accounting system used for manors are contained in three early manuscripts on esta...
From the 1810 ledger of Charlton Mills of Manchester, England. See W. E, Stone, An Early English Co...
There is a rich and increasing body of research pointing to the significant role elite women played ...
The ledger that Ann DeWitt Bevier kept from 1802 until 1813 represents a rich primary source that pr...
The accounts of the Hasbrouck family help document how five generations adapted to economic and soci...
This article describes The Gerritson Collection - Women\u27s History Online 1543-1945, an electronic...
This project explores the legal, economic, and social aspects of household and estate management in ...
Sharecropper agreement found in wastebook and customers\u27 ledger dated January 1824 to November 18...
Amanda Vickery\u27s, The Gentleman\u27s Daughter: Women\u27s Lives in Georgian England, [1998] provi...
This thesis explores the evidence for handweaving in antebellum Washington County, Tennessee. The au...
“Gendering the Work of Debt Collection” analyzes women, gender, and the credit-based economies of Ne...
The Ledger, an award‐winning interactive database, contains biographical information about the stude...
The journal of Amos K. Hersey, a 19th century meat merchant from Pembroke, Maine is examined in this...
Early New England women chose to pass down what they owned and valued: clothing, cupboards, pewter d...
References to the accounting system used for manors are contained in three early manuscripts on esta...
From the 1810 ledger of Charlton Mills of Manchester, England. See W. E, Stone, An Early English Co...
There is a rich and increasing body of research pointing to the significant role elite women played ...