H-NET BOOK REVIEW
Published by H-SHEAR@h-net.msu.edu (January, 2000)
Julie Roy Jeffrey. The Great Silent Army of Abolitionism: Ordinary
Women in the Antislavery Movement. Chapel Hill and London: The
University of North Carolina Press, 1998. $45.00 (cloth), ISBN
0-8078-2436-4; $18.95 (paper), ISBN 0-8078-47410.
Reviewed for H-SHEAR by Carolyn Williams , University of
North Florida
The Great Silent Army of Abolitionism, by Julie Roy Jeffrey, is an
important contribution to nineteenth-century Women and Gender Studies, and
the history of abolitionism in the United States. This focus on the women
who composed the grassroots rather than the elite and leading figures
illuminates ways in which ordinary women's lives were transformed, and the
invaluable service they rendered to the rise of antislavery sentiment in
the north and west.
Jeffrey combines the insight uncovered by numerous secondary studies on
leading women abolitionists and female antislavery organizations over the
past three decades, with a creative and skillful analysis of primary
materials on ordinary women who have not been examined previously. The
result is a very useful study illuminating how for many of the women who
participated in abolitionist activities in the early nineteeth century,
their perspectives and actions transcended the prescribed female sphere of
the antebellum period. Like their foremothers of the era of the American
Revolution, without becoming feminists, the women foot soldiers of the
abolitionist campaign were politicized and began to move into the public
arena beyond domesticity. Jeffrey's study illustrates that while
supported by the conventional early nineteeth-century view of women as
moral missionaries, charged by God and nature to uplift humanity and
society, these women were able to challenge both secular and religious
patriarchal authority and still claim to conform to the gender status quo.
The impact, of course, was that as they challenged the status quo
regarding race they inadvertently eroded the gender status quo.
In the introduction, Jeffrey explains that her discussion of the role and
contributions of African American women, impeded somewhat by the relative
scarcity of materials, was not as thorough as that of her examination of
white women abolitionists. And this is a minor criticism. There could
have been a greater discussion of one major obstacle African American
women abolitionists encountered -- that is, the racism within the
abolitionist community, prejudices of both males and females. Despite
these limitations, Jeffrey does manage to convey some of the unique
challenges and the special role played by African American women. For
example, black abolitionists, like some white abolitionists, were just as
motivated by the desire to free the slaves as to eliminate racial
discrimination in the nominally free parts of the country. One chief
means of accomplishing this was for African Americans to participate on an
equal basis with whites in the antislavery campaign.
Jeffrey's study is particularly useful becuse of the insight it provides
into the role white and black women abolitionists, both prominent figures
like Lydia Maria Child and Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, and the army of
female abolitionist general troops, played in disseminating antislavery
sentiments in the North and West in the 1840s and 1850s. Despite the
obvious formal disadvantage of not having the franchise, women contiuned
to play a very special function in partisan politics by their public
addresses and appeals to male voters and polticians to support
abolitionism. Also many became accustomed to attending political rallies
and playing an active role. In addition to a growing number of women
abolitionist lecturers, the literature and antislavery fairs sponsored by
women, as well as boycotts by women in their homes of items produced by
slave labor, encouraged a resistance to slavery among many who were not
formal members of abolitionist societies or active in the antislavery
movement. Ordinary women had a profound impact on the antislavery
attitudes and views of the general public that would bear fruit during the
Civil War.
The Great Silent Army is an excellent history of American female
abolitionism. Julie Roy Jeffrey presents very important information about
the contributions of ordinary women who played a pivotal role in a pivotal
era in American history which still resonates in gender and race
relations, religion, and politics in contemporary society.
Copyright (c) 2000 by H-Net, all rights reserved. This work
may be copied for non-profit educational use if proper credit
is given to the author and the list. For other permission,
please contact H-Net@h-net.msu.edu.