015101065X
The Women of the House: How a Colonial She-Merchant Built a Mansion, a Fortune, and a Dynasty - Jean Zimmerman
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (2006)
In Collection
#27852

Read It:
Yes
Women merchants - Biography, Merchants - Biography

The remarkable Margaret Hardenbroeck Philipse arrived in New Amsterdam from Holland in 1659, a brash and ambitious twenty-two-year-old bent on making her way in the New World. She promptly built an empire of trading ships, furs, and real estate that included all of Westchester County. The Dutch called such women "she-merchants," and Margaret became the wealthiest in the colony, while raising five children and keeping a spotless linen closet.
Zimmerman deftly traces the astonishing rise of Margaret and the Philipse women who followed her, who would transform Margaret's storehouse on the banks of the Hudson into a veritable mansion, Philipse Manor Hall. The last Philipse to live there, Mary Philipse Morris-the "It" girl of mid-1700s New York-was even courted by George Washington. But privilege couldn't shelter the family from the Revolution, which raged on Mary's doorstep.

Mining extensive primary sources, Zimmerman brings us into the parlors, bedrooms, counting-houses, and parties of early colonial America and vividly restores a forgotten group of women to life.

Product Details
LoC Classification F122.1.P48Z56 2006
Dewey 974.7/1020922
Format Hardcover
Edition 1st ed.
Cover Price $26.00
Nr of Pages 416
Height x Width 236 x 155 mm
Personal Details
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