“They
are so much part of our fabric as a people that I was dying to know more about
them,” says Roberts, who was named one of the 50 greatest women in the history
of broadcasting by the American Women in Radio and Television. The results are
found in Ladies of Liberty (Morrow),
the follow-up to Roberts’ best-selling book, Founding Mothers (2004), in which she examines the lives and times
of some of the women who helped shape
The
author says that even though women were central to the survival of the country,
female contributions have been overshadowed by the Founding Fathers. Without
the patriotism of women on the home front, Roberts says, the colonies could
well have lost the Revolutionary War.
“[Historian]
David McCullough wrote that [George]
Other
women on the home front played a vital role as well. “They were the people
supporting the family,” Roberts notes. “Their men were off to war or on a
diplomatic or governmental mission, where they weren’t making any money. They
were fending off the British in their own front yard. It was quite remarkable
what these women were doing.”
At
times, the Revolutionary War appeared lost. “1780 was a bleak, bleak year,”
Roberts explains. “The women held a fund-raising drive for the soldiers and
they raised an unbelievable $300,000 in the space of a few weeks. It boosted
morale incredibly and kept things going until the French arrived.”
Ladies of Liberty continues the story told in Founding Mothers, taking the reader from
the election of John Adams in 1796 to the election of Andrew Jackson in 1828.
“This
period of time was a lot less dramatic in a way, but I think a lot harder,”
Roberts says. “They were not talking about the nitty-gritty of government, nor
the glory of defeating the oppressor. It was about the nitty-gritty of these
desperate states. When people referred to ‘my country,’ they meant their state.
There was not that real sense of union.”
Roberts
says that her two history books resonate with readers because “fundamentally,
they are really interesting women we don’t know about.” There was a need for
the books, she suggests, “because when I went out to find this information, it
hadn’t been written.”
Drawing
on personal correspondences of the time, private journals and other primary
sources, and filled with what she saw as entertaining gossip from the early
days of the capital, Roberts tries to bring these women alive through their
experiences.
“I
chose these women because we did have their own words,” she says.
Roberts
says she hopes readers see how essential women were to the development of our
country. “And I can even make the case we might not have survived without women
making men behave better,” she concludes. “Because the partisanship was so
fierce, and the press so irresponsible and the country so fragile and young,
without women providing social spaces where men could come together and break
bread and behave together, fractiousness could [have ruled].”
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