What if the founding of the United States could be heard not only in speeches and volleys but in quilts mended by firelight, farm ledgers balanced in winter, and poems that dared to test the nation’s conscience? We open the door to the women who made those sounds and shaped the structure beneath the stories most of us learned in school.
First, we trace Martha Washington’s steady presence at icy encampments, where morale could make or break a campaign. Then we turn to Abigail Adams, whose letters sharpened political thought while her work on the family farm kept a statesman’s world from collapsing at home. Together they show how leadership is sustained by logistics, trust, and partnership. From there, we step into the writing rooms of Mercy Otis Warren and Judith Sargent Murray. Warren’s essays pushed the young republic toward specific freedoms, helping catalyze the Bill of Rights. Murray advanced a clear claim for women’s equal civic capacity, planting seeds for suffrage and education reform long before law caught up.
We also sit with Phillis Wheatley, enslaved yet unflinching, whose poetry praised virtue and quietly exposed the central contradiction of a revolution for liberty that tolerated bondage. Her words reached George Washington and echo forward to abolitionists who later carried the same torch. Rounding out the hour, we highlight a soldier who fought in disguise, endured battlefield wounds, and earned an honorable discharge—proof that courage often hid in plain sight to be allowed to serve at all.
Across these stories, one theme holds: the founding wasn’t only drafted in halls; it was forged by presence, persuasion, and principle. If you’re ready to hear how women’s labor, letters, and lyrics changed the arc of the American experiment, press play. If this conversation expanded your view of the founding era, follow the show, share with a friend, and leave a review so more listeners can find it. Who’s the founding-era woman you think everyone should know?
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