The Sea Captain's Wife: A True Story of Love, Race, and War in the Nineteenth Century

The Sea Captain's Wife: A True Story of Love, Race, and War in the Nineteenth Century

by Martha Hodes (Author), Martha Hodes (Author)

Synopsis

Award-winning historian Martha Hodes brings us into the extraordinary world of Eunice Connolly. Born white and poor in New England, Eunice moved from countryside to factory city, worked in the mills, then followed her husband to the Deep South. When the Civil War came, Eunice's brothers joined the Union army while her husband fought and died for the Confederacy. Back in New England, a widow and the mother of two, Eunice barely got by as a washerwoman, struggling with crushing depression. Four years later, she fell in love with a black sea captain, married him, and moved to his home in the West Indies. Following every lead in a collection of 500 family letters, Hodes traced Eunice's footsteps and met descendants along the way. This story of misfortune and defiance takes up grand themes of American history-opportunity and racism, war and freedom-and illuminates the lives of ordinary people in the past.

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More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 384
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Published: 02 Oct 2007

ISBN 10: 039333029X
ISBN 13: 9780393330298

Media Reviews
[Hodes] has done an extraordinary job of writing the story of an ordinary New England woman who was a prolific letter writer and who made unusual decisions for her time. -- Washington Post
Few researchers have the imagination or tenacity to reconstruct a lost life as carefully as Hodes has done...an absorbing account of a life reclaimed from obscurity. -- Times Literary Supplement
Eunice Richardson Stone Connolly's life is a road map to learning about 19th-century America...Those who love books about history will revel in the book's detail. -- Cape Cod Times
Author Bio
Martha Hodes, a professor of history at New York University, is the author of White Women, Black Men, which won the Allan Nevins Prize for Literary Distinction. She lives in New York City and Swarthmore, Pennsylvania.