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Elizabeth Graeme Fergusson:

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Early American Literature 37.2 (2002): 195-245. www.wegoplaces.com Elizabeth Graeme Fergusson: ... 02:09 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Elizabeth Graeme Fergusson:


1
  • Elizabeth Graeme Fergusson Female Genius of the
    Delaware Valley
  • 1737-1801

2
The Early Years
  • Elizabeth, born into the elite, grew up outside
    of Philadelphia at the familys country estate,
    Graeme Park.
  • Her family was both wealthy and influential.
  • Around 1757 she became engaged to William
    Franklin, son of none other than Benjamin
    Franklin.
  • Because both families opposed the marriage, the
    engagement was ultimately called off.

3
Graeme Park, PA Historical Site
4
  • Between 1764 and 1765 Elizabeth was in London.
  • Here, she met several leading literary and
    scientific figures.
  • Upon her mothers death in 1765, she returned
    home in order to assume her duties as mistress of
    Graeme Park where she established a literary
    salon.

5
The Literature
  • Elizabeth translated Francois de Salignac de La
    Mothe-Fenelons Telemaque during her recovery
    from her broken engagement to Franklin.
  • Her translation was widely circulated and
    contributed towards earning her a prolific
    writing reputation.

6
  • Other writings during this period include a
    metrical version of the Psalms, documented
    correspondences between contemporaries, and a
    journal.
  • Few of her writings were published in her
    lifetime.

7
Upon Marriage
  • In April of 1772, Elizabeth married Henry H.
    Fergusson.
  • After her fathers death in late 1772, she
    inherited Graeme Park and spent much of her time
    there, apart from her husband who spent much of
    his time in England.

8
Revolution!
  • During the American Revolution, Fergussons
    husband devoted himself to the cause of the
    Loyalists (people loyal to England during the
    war) while Elizabeth herself mildly support the
    cause of the Whigs (social reformists in
    opposition to the Loyalists).
  • In October of 1777, her husband asked her to
    retrieve a letter from the Reverend Jacob Duche
    and carry it to General George Washington,
    telling him to surrender.
  • Upon doing so, Washington chided her for her
    part in the episode.

9
Female Revolutionary
  • Fergussons role in such political proceedings
    (that episode with Washington was not her last),
    were neither advantageous to herself nor her
    husband.
  • Following her husbands attainment and
    proscription, authorities confiscated her home,
    Graeme Park.
  • Even after Graeme Park was restored to her in
    1781, she lost it again in 1791 because of
    financial reverses.
  • After divorcing her husband in 1781, she began
    publishing poems in magazines and newspapers.

10
Writing
  • Elizabeth, like many outspoken women of this era,
    used pseudonyms, but female ones.
  • These women wanted to retain their class statuses
    without revealing their individual identities.
  • Simply in being female, they would already be
    recognized as members of the upper or upper
    middle class elite.
  • Elizabeth used an individuated pseudonym, like
    Laura or Sylvia as her writings were
    predominately circulated within a largely female
    community (Cima).

11
  • In much of her writings, both her poetry and her
    prose, Fergusson figures Nature as a kind of
    female-centered green retreat from the gaudy
    shew and noisy scandal of the city
    (Parrish).
  • Elizabeth Graeme Fergusson, according to scholar
    Susan Scott Parrish, was after 1765 considered
    the presiding female genius of the Delaware
    Valley (Shields 138) (Parrish).
  • Because most of her work was unpublished, few
    peer criticisms exist.

12
Bibliography
  • Cima, Gay Gibson. Black and Unmarked Phillis
    Wheatley, Mercy Otis Warren, and the Limits of
    Strategic Anonymity. Theatre Journal 52.4
    (2000) 465-495.
  • http//www.britannica.com/eb/article-9125721/Eliza
    beth-Graeme-Ferguson
  • Parrish, Susan Scott. Womens Nature Curiosity,
    Pastoral, and the New Science in British
    America. Early American Literature 37.2 (2002)
    195-245.
  • www.wegoplaces.com
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