WOMEN'S PROGRESS IN AMERICA
Frost-Knappman, Elizabeth
ABC-CLIO (1994)

In seventeenth-century colonial America, a married woman could not own property, including her own wages. She had no right to custody of her children and couldn't even buy or sell anything without her husband's permission. While American women today enjoy a far greater amount of freedom, it took nearly 300 years of struggle to get where they are now. WOMEN'S PROGRESS IN AMERICA documents this fascinating struggle with carefully cross-referenced, A to Z entrees.

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