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Martha Wadsworth Brewster

Martha Wadsworth Brewster (April 1, 1710 – c. 1757) was an 18th-century American poet and writer. She is one of only four colonial women who published volumes of their verse before the American Revolution and was the first American-born woman to publish under her own name.[1][2]

Martha Wadsworth Brewster
Born(1710-04-01)April 1, 1710
Diedc. 1757(1757-00-00) (aged 46–47)
Occupation(s)Poet and writer
Notable workPoems on Diverse Subjects
SpouseOliver Brewster
ChildrenRuby, born January 5, 1733/34
Wadsworth, born April 14, 1737
Parent(s)Joseph Wadsworth, Jr.
Abigail Waite
RelativesRobert Noyce
Diane Brewster

Biography edit

Early life edit

She was born on April 1, 1710[3] in Lebanon, New London County, Connecticut,[2][4] a daughter of Joseph Wadsworth, Jr. and the granddaughter of Joseph Wadsworth, Sr. and Abigail Waite.[3] Her mother was Lydia Brown, whose parents were Captain John Brown of Swansea, Massachusetts,[5] and Anna Mason.[6][7][8]

Marriage edit

She married, at an undetermined place, on Wednesday, March 22, 1732, Oliver Brewster,[9] who was born at Duxbury, Massachusetts, on July 16, 1708, the son of William Brewster and Hopestill Wadsworth.[9][10] Oliver died, possibly in Bernardston, Massachusetts, sometime after October 19, 1776, as this is the date when he deeded land in Lebanon, Connecticut, to his son, Wadsworth.[11]

Children edit

They were the parents of two children. Their son, Wadsworth Brewster,[9][12][13] born April 14, 1737, at Lebanon, New London County, Connecticut and died at Columbia, Tolland County, Connecticut, on March 30, 1812. He married on May 24, 1759, at the Second Congregational Church at Lebanon, Connecticut, by the Rev. Dr. Eleazar Wheelock,[14] Jerusha Newcomb,[12][15] born January 6, 1740/41 at Lebanon, Connecticut the daughter of Silas Newcomb and Submit Pinneo.[16] She died on February 9, 1813, at Chatham, New York.[9][10][12][17][18]

Their daughter was Ruby Brewster,[9][19][20] born January 5, 1733/34 at Lebanon, New London County, Connecticut, and died at an unknown date in Bernardston, Massachusetts. She married on December 22, 1749, at Longmeadow, Massachusetts, Henry Bliss. He was born on August 21, 1726, at Lebanon, Connecticut and died on February 8, 1761. He was the son of Thomas Bliss and Mary Macranney.[21]

Death edit

Martha Wadsworth Brewster died sometime after 1757, possibly at Lebanon, Connecticut. Her husband, Oliver, had relocated to Bernardston, Massachusetts prior to October 28, 1765[20] and she is not mentioned in any of the records in that town. The location of her grave is unknown. Nothing is known of her early life or education and her life remains an enigma.

Career edit

She was one of a handful of American women poets who produced imaginative verse in the two centuries that mark the beginning of an American poetic literary tradition. Previous colonial American women poets, Anne Bradstreet and Jane Colman Turell, focused primarily on religion and family life. Brewster's 21 poems vary widely in theme and form: the more than 1100 lines include letters, farewells to friends who are moving, epithalamiums, eulogies, scriptural paraphrases, a love poem, a quaternion, a dream (in prose), and meditations.[4]

While she does write about more conventional religious and family themes, her work is also the first to tackle radical subject matter[2] for a woman of the eighteenth-century and reflects a shift from those themes to focus on the evils of war, military invasion and conquest and its cumulative effect on a nation and its citizens; and locates a woman's voice alongside those of the male founders of the country. She also writes about the schisms of the Great Awakening, and the muted stirring of personal ambition as well. Despite the traditional attitude toward women of the time, she clearly valued knowledge and intellect; and she could be considered an early feminist.[2]

Works edit

Her principal work, Poems on Divers Subjects, which does appear to pay homage to Bradstreet's verse, contains poems, prose, and letters.[22] Perhaps because she exactingly examined topics that were considered outside both the experience and the ability of 18th-century women, a doubting public pressed her to authenticate her ability and to demonstrate her authorship to a public skeptical that a woman could write poetry by publicly paraphrasing a psalm into verse.[2] She was accused of "borrowing her Poetry from Isaac Watts and others." In a later poem of hers, she included a line that reads "Ye Creatures all, in vast Amazement Stand" evinces some trace of personal nuance aimed at those who had attempted to depreciate her competence as a poet.[14][22]

Many of her works appeared on broadsides[23] an early type of publication that resembled the modern-day flyer. In addition, she commemorated historical events in her poetry; in 1745, she set to meter a piece describing the capture of Cape Breton from the French by the British.[22]

In Delight in Reading, she instructed her daughter, Ruby, "You must go on by Reading and Study to improve the Powers which God has given you."[14]

She composed two acrostic poems of advice for her young children. The below poem is the one composed for her son, Wadsworth.[24][nb 1]

No single volume of her work is extant. There is no recorded response to Brewster's Poems documenting the volume's reception, but it appeared in two editions, one printed in New London, Connecticut (1757), and another printed in Boston (1758).[25] Both editions of her works were printed by publishers Benjamin Edes and John Gill of Boston, Massachusetts.[1] Such reprinting suggests an audience well beyond Brewster's immediate circle of family and friends.

Descendants edit

Descendants of Oliver Brewster and Martha Wadsworth include:

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Schmidt, 9
  2. ^ a b c d e Bert, 71
  3. ^ a b Wadsworth, 213
  4. ^ a b Curland, Richard (Feb 9, 2010). "Historically Speaking: Colonial-era female poet born in Lebanon, Conn". The Norwich Bulletin. Archived from the original on January 30, 2013. Retrieved 2010-05-21.
  5. ^ Various, 1771
  6. ^ Peck, 27
  7. ^ He was born at Beccles, Suffolk, England, in 1580. Robert Peck graduated from Magdalene College, Cambridge, with an A.B. degree in 1599, and received his A. M., in 1603. He was a talented and influential clergyman and Puritan who had fled his Hingham, Norfolk, England, church after the crackdown by Archbishop Laud. Rev. Peck was eventually forced to flee and emigrated to the then colony of Massachusetts, where he co-founded the town of Hingham, Massachusetts. He was joined in settling the town with other members of his parish from Hingham, England. He resided in Hingham, Massachusetts for several years, until King Charles I had been executed and Oliver Cromwell had taken the reins of government. He then elected to return to Hingham, Norfolk, and resumed as rector of St Andrews Church. He died in Hingham but left descendants in America, including his brother Joseph Peck, who settled in Rehoboth, Massachusetts, and whose descendants continued to live in the area through the twentieth century. Today's Pecks Corner in Rehoboth is named for this early family.
  8. ^ Anne Mason was the daughter of John Mason who went to New England in 1632 and was a Deputy Governor of Connecticut, and the principal founder of Norwich, Connecticut, and his wife Anne Peck, the daughter of the Rev. Robert Peck.
  9. ^ a b c d e Jones, 86
  10. ^ a b Jones, 54
  11. ^ Oliver was a great grandson of Love Brewster, a passenger with his father, mother and brother, Wrestling, aboard the Mayflower and a founder of the town of Bridgewater, Massachusetts; and a great-great grandson of Elder William Brewster, the Pilgrim colonist leader and spiritual elder of the Plymouth Colony, and passenger aboard the Mayflower and one of the signers of the Mayflower Compact.
  12. ^ a b c Jones, 142
  13. ^ Wadsworth Brewster at Find A Grave
  14. ^ a b c Scheick, 14
  15. ^ Newcomb, 71
  16. ^ She was a great great granddaughter of Major William Bradford and a great great great granddaughter of William Bradford, Governor of the Plymouth Colony and the second signer and primary architect of the Mayflower Compact in Provincetown Harbor.
  17. ^ Jerusha Newcomb Brewster at Find A Grave
  18. ^ Jerusha Newcomb, Silas Newcomb, Hezekiah Newcomb m. Jerusha Bradford, Lieut. Thomas Bradford, Maj. William Bradford, Gov. William Bradford of the Mayflower.
  19. ^ Jones, 141
  20. ^ a b Kellogg, 313
  21. ^ Bliss, p. 58
  22. ^ a b c Blanchard, 31
  23. ^ The first published copies of the United States Declaration of Independence, printed on the night of July 4, 1776, by John Dunlap of Philadelphia, were on broadsides
  24. ^ Brewster, Martha W. (1757). A Mother's Guiding Poems for her Children, 1757 (PDF).
  25. ^ Blanchard, 32
  26. ^ a b Jones, 625
  27. ^ a b Jones, 626
  28. ^ Jones, 1064
  29. ^ Jones, 627
  30. ^ Jones, 1065
  31. ^ Greg Dean Camp, Milton Dwight Camp, Leonard Harvey Camp, William Davenport Camp, Lucia Withrow Brewster, Sydney Lyman Brewster, Jasper, Wadsworth, Oliver, William, William, Love, William of the Mayflower.
  32. ^ a b Jones, 1046
  33. ^ a b Champlin, 56
  34. ^ a b Champlin, 66
  35. ^ Rev. Fr. Joseph M. Champlin at Find A Grave
  36. ^ Jones, 274
  37. ^ a b Jones, 620
  38. ^ a b Jones, 621
  39. ^ William Peabody Malburn at Find A Grave
  40. ^ Jones, 1037
  41. ^ Jones, 1038
  42. ^ Jones, 1039
  43. ^ . Chicago Architects Oral History Project. The Art Institute of Chicago. 2007. Archived from the original on 2011-05-22. Retrieved 2010-03-09.

Notes 2 edit

  1. ^ An Acrostic for my only Son
    "While Amorous, Gay, and Sanguine swells thy Veins,
    "An Off’ring of first Fruits, Jehovah Claims.
    "Due Odours of a sweet Perfume Present,
    "Steep’d in the Blood of the new Covenant;
    "What vulgar Notes Applaud, must be Suspected;
    "Obedience to the Standard ne’er Neglected;
    "Retire within the Mind, and shut the Door,
    "To all disord’red Passions, Rude and Sow’r,
    "Here summons, and exert each Manly Pow’r.
    "By Adequate, and Studious Observation,
    "Rise to the Poles, then dive to Navigation.
    "Early enrich thy Heart with moral Virtues,
    "Whereby to rectify inverted Nature:
    "Survey the Globe of Man, then turn thine Eyes
    "To search through Nature’s obscure Mysteries;
    "Envy may Hiss in Vain, at virt’ous Minds,
    "Regent in her own Breast, she sits Enshrin’d

References edit

  • Bliss, John Homer. Genealogy of the Bliss family in America, from about the year 1550-1880 Publisher: Boston, Mass., Printed by the author.
  • Burt, Daniel S. The chronology of American literature: America's literary achievements from the colonial era to modern times Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2004. ISBN 0-618-16821-4
  • Champlin, Charles Back There Where the Past Was:A Small-Town Boyhood, Syracuse University Press, 1999
  • Cowell, Patti Women Poets in Pre-Revolutionary America, 1650–1775, Whitson Publications, 1981
  • Jones, Emma C. Brewster. The Brewster Genealogy, 1566–1907: a Record of the Descendants of William Brewster of the "Mayflower," ruling elder of the Pilgrim church which founded Plymouth Colony in 1620. New York: Grafton Press. 1908
  • Kellogg, Lucy Jane (Cutler). History of the town of Bernardston, Franklin county, Massachusetts. 1736-1900: With genealogies Press of E.A. Hall & Co., 1902
  • Newcomb, John Bearse. Genealogical memoir of the Newcomb family: containing records of nearly every person of the name in America from 1635 to 1874. Printed for the author by Knight & Leonard, Chicago, 1874.
  • Peck, Ira Ballou. A genealogical history of the descendants of Joseph Peck: who emigrated with his family to this country in 1638; and records of his father's and grandfather's families in England Printed by A. Mudge & son, 1868.
  • Scheick, William J. Authority and female authorship in colonial America University Press of Kentucky, 1998. ISBN 0-8131-2054-3
  • Schmidt, Gary D. A passionate usefulness: the life and literary labors of Hannah Adams.University of Virginia Press, 2004 ISBN 0-8139-2272-0
  • Silverman, Kenneth Colonial American Poetry, Hafner Publication Company, 1968.
  • Various Authors. Representative men and old families of southeastern Massachusetts: containing historical sketches of prominent and representative citizens and genealogical records of many of the old families, Volume 3 J.H. Beers, 1912
  • Wadsworth, Horace Andrew. Two hundred and fifty years of the Wadsworth family in America: Containing an account of the family reunion, at Duxbury, Mass., September 13, 1882, and a genealogical register. Printed at the Eagle steam job printing rooms, 1883.
  • Watts, E. S. The Poetry of American Women from 1632 to 1945, University of Texas Press, 1977.

Further reading edit

  • by Emma C. Brewster Jones, New York: Grafton Press. 1908
  • Gates, Henry Louis. The Trials of Phillis Wheatley: America's First Black Poet and Her Encounters With the Founding Fathers Basic Civitas Books, 2003
  • Mason, L. B. The life and times of Major John Mason of Connecticut, 1600–1672 (Putnam, 1935).
  • Mason, John. (1736) (reprinted by J. Sabin & sons, 1869)

External links edit

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Martha Brewster redirects here For the fictional character see Arsenic and Old Lace play Martha Wadsworth Brewster April 1 1710 c 1757 was an 18th century American poet and writer She is one of only four colonial women who published volumes of their verse before the American Revolution and was the first American born woman to publish under her own name 1 2 Martha Wadsworth BrewsterBorn 1710 04 01 April 1 1710Lebanon New London County ConnecticutDiedc 1757 1757 00 00 aged 46 47 possibly Lebanon ConnecticutOccupation s Poet and writerNotable workPoems on Diverse SubjectsSpouseOliver BrewsterChildrenRuby born January 5 1733 34Wadsworth born April 14 1737Parent s Joseph Wadsworth Jr Abigail WaiteRelativesRobert NoyceDiane Brewster Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Marriage 1 3 Children 1 4 Death 1 5 Career 2 Works 3 Descendants 4 Notes 5 Notes 2 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBiography editEarly life edit She was born on April 1 1710 3 in Lebanon New London County Connecticut 2 4 a daughter of Joseph Wadsworth Jr and the granddaughter of Joseph Wadsworth Sr and Abigail Waite 3 Her mother was Lydia Brown whose parents were Captain John Brown of Swansea Massachusetts 5 and Anna Mason 6 7 8 Marriage edit She married at an undetermined place on Wednesday March 22 1732 Oliver Brewster 9 who was born at Duxbury Massachusetts on July 16 1708 the son of William Brewster and Hopestill Wadsworth 9 10 Oliver died possibly in Bernardston Massachusetts sometime after October 19 1776 as this is the date when he deeded land in Lebanon Connecticut to his son Wadsworth 11 Children edit They were the parents of two children Their son Wadsworth Brewster 9 12 13 born April 14 1737 at Lebanon New London County Connecticut and died at Columbia Tolland County Connecticut on March 30 1812 He married on May 24 1759 at the Second Congregational Church at Lebanon Connecticut by the Rev Dr Eleazar Wheelock 14 Jerusha Newcomb 12 15 born January 6 1740 41 at Lebanon Connecticut the daughter of Silas Newcomb and Submit Pinneo 16 She died on February 9 1813 at Chatham New York 9 10 12 17 18 Their daughter was Ruby Brewster 9 19 20 born January 5 1733 34 at Lebanon New London County Connecticut and died at an unknown date in Bernardston Massachusetts She married on December 22 1749 at Longmeadow Massachusetts Henry Bliss He was born on August 21 1726 at Lebanon Connecticut and died on February 8 1761 He was the son of Thomas Bliss and Mary Macranney 21 Death edit Martha Wadsworth Brewster died sometime after 1757 possibly at Lebanon Connecticut Her husband Oliver had relocated to Bernardston Massachusetts prior to October 28 1765 20 and she is not mentioned in any of the records in that town The location of her grave is unknown Nothing is known of her early life or education and her life remains an enigma Career edit She was one of a handful of American women poets who produced imaginative verse in the two centuries that mark the beginning of an American poetic literary tradition Previous colonial American women poets Anne Bradstreet and Jane Colman Turell focused primarily on religion and family life Brewster s 21 poems vary widely in theme and form the more than 1100 lines include letters farewells to friends who are moving epithalamiums eulogies scriptural paraphrases a love poem a quaternion a dream in prose and meditations 4 While she does write about more conventional religious and family themes her work is also the first to tackle radical subject matter 2 for a woman of the eighteenth century and reflects a shift from those themes to focus on the evils of war military invasion and conquest and its cumulative effect on a nation and its citizens and locates a woman s voice alongside those of the male founders of the country She also writes about the schisms of the Great Awakening and the muted stirring of personal ambition as well Despite the traditional attitude toward women of the time she clearly valued knowledge and intellect and she could be considered an early feminist 2 Works editHer principal work Poems on Divers Subjects which does appear to pay homage to Bradstreet s verse contains poems prose and letters 22 Perhaps because she exactingly examined topics that were considered outside both the experience and the ability of 18th century women a doubting public pressed her to authenticate her ability and to demonstrate her authorship to a public skeptical that a woman could write poetry by publicly paraphrasing a psalm into verse 2 She was accused of borrowing her Poetry from Isaac Watts and others In a later poem of hers she included a line that reads Ye Creatures all in vast Amazement Stand evinces some trace of personal nuance aimed at those who had attempted to depreciate her competence as a poet 14 22 Many of her works appeared on broadsides 23 an early type of publication that resembled the modern day flyer In addition she commemorated historical events in her poetry in 1745 she set to meter a piece describing the capture of Cape Breton from the French by the British 22 In Delight in Reading she instructed her daughter Ruby You must go on by Reading and Study to improve the Powers which God has given you 14 She composed two acrostic poems of advice for her young children The below poem is the one composed for her son Wadsworth 24 nb 1 No single volume of her work is extant There is no recorded response to Brewster s Poems documenting the volume s reception but it appeared in two editions one printed in New London Connecticut 1757 and another printed in Boston 1758 25 Both editions of her works were printed by publishers Benjamin Edes and John Gill of Boston Massachusetts 1 Such reprinting suggests an audience well beyond Brewster s immediate circle of family and friends Descendants editDescendants of Oliver Brewster and Martha Wadsworth include David Brewster 26 27 is an American journalist Diane Brewster 28 29 30 was an American television actress most famous for her roles in Maverick as Miss Canfield in Leave It to Beaver and as Helen Kimble in The Fugitive 1963 TV series Greg Camp 31 is an American Grammy Award nominated songwriter guitarist and vocalist Charles Champlin 32 33 34 is an American film critic and writer Joseph M Champlin 32 33 34 35 was a Roman Catholic priest author and lecturer George Trumbull Ladd 36 37 38 was an American philosopher and psychologist William Peabody Malburn 39 was a lawyer and banker and later served as United States Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in charge of fiscal affairs 1914 1917 Robert Noyce 26 27 nicknamed the Mayor of Silicon Valley was the inventor of the integrated circuit or microchip Henry Farnham Perkins 37 38 was an American zoologist and eugenicist Matthew Laflin Rockwell 40 41 42 43 1915 1988 was an American architect who was responsible for the site selection plan and design of O Hare International Airport Notes edit a b Schmidt 9 a b c d e Bert 71 a b Wadsworth 213 a b Curland Richard Feb 9 2010 Historically Speaking Colonial era female poet born in Lebanon Conn The Norwich Bulletin Archived from the original on January 30 2013 Retrieved 2010 05 21 Various 1771 Peck 27 He was born at Beccles Suffolk England in 1580 Robert Peck graduated from Magdalene College Cambridge with an A B degree in 1599 and received his A M in 1603 He was a talented and influential clergyman and Puritan who had fled his Hingham Norfolk England church after the crackdown by Archbishop Laud Rev Peck was eventually forced to flee and emigrated to the then colony of Massachusetts where he co founded the town of Hingham Massachusetts He was joined in settling the town with other members of his parish from Hingham England He resided in Hingham Massachusetts for several years until King Charles I had been executed and Oliver Cromwell had taken the reins of government He then elected to return to Hingham Norfolk and resumed as rector of St Andrews Church He died in Hingham but left descendants in America including his brother Joseph Peck who settled in Rehoboth Massachusetts and whose descendants continued to live in the area through the twentieth century Today s Pecks Corner in Rehoboth is named for this early family Anne Mason was the daughter of John Mason who went to New England in 1632 and was a Deputy Governor of Connecticut and the principal founder of Norwich Connecticut and his wife Anne Peck the daughter of the Rev Robert Peck a b c d e Jones 86 a b Jones 54 Oliver was a great grandson of Love Brewster a passenger with his father mother and brother Wrestling aboard the Mayflower and a founder of the town of Bridgewater Massachusetts and a great great grandson of Elder William Brewster the Pilgrim colonist leader and spiritual elder of the Plymouth Colony and passenger aboard the Mayflower and one of the signers of the Mayflower Compact a b c Jones 142 Wadsworth Brewster at Find A Grave a b c Scheick 14 Newcomb 71 She was a great great granddaughter of Major William Bradford and a great great great granddaughter of William Bradford Governor of the Plymouth Colony and the second signer and primary architect of the Mayflower Compact in Provincetown Harbor Jerusha Newcomb Brewster at Find A Grave Jerusha Newcomb Silas Newcomb Hezekiah Newcomb m Jerusha Bradford Lieut Thomas Bradford Maj William Bradford Gov William Bradford of the Mayflower Jones 141 a b Kellogg 313 Bliss p 58 a b c Blanchard 31 The first published copies of the United States Declaration of Independence printed on the night of July 4 1776 by John Dunlap of Philadelphia were on broadsides Brewster Martha W 1757 A Mother s Guiding Poems for her Children 1757 PDF Blanchard 32 a b Jones 625 a b Jones 626 Jones 1064 Jones 627 Jones 1065 Greg Dean Camp Milton Dwight Camp Leonard Harvey Camp William Davenport Camp Lucia Withrow Brewster Sydney Lyman Brewster Jasper Wadsworth Oliver William William Love William of the Mayflower a b Jones 1046 a b Champlin 56 a b Champlin 66 Rev Fr Joseph M Champlin at Find A Grave Jones 274 a b Jones 620 a b Jones 621 William Peabody Malburn at Find A Grave Jones 1037 Jones 1038 Jones 1039 Matthew L Rockwell Chicago Architects Oral History Project The Art Institute of Chicago 2007 Archived from the original on 2011 05 22 Retrieved 2010 03 09 Notes 2 edit An Acrostic for my only Son While Amorous Gay and Sanguine swells thy Veins An Off ring of first Fruits Jehovah Claims Due Odours of a sweet Perfume Present Steep d in the Blood of the new Covenant What vulgar Notes Applaud must be Suspected Obedience to the Standard ne er Neglected Retire within the Mind and shut the Door To all disord red Passions Rude and Sow r Here summons and exert each Manly Pow r By Adequate and Studious Observation Rise to the Poles then dive to Navigation Early enrich thy Heart with moral Virtues Whereby to rectify inverted Nature Survey the Globe of Man then turn thine Eyes To search through Nature s obscure Mysteries Envy may Hiss in Vain at virt ous Minds Regent in her own Breast she sits Enshrin dReferences editBliss John Homer Genealogy of the Bliss family in America from about the year 1550 1880 Publisher Boston Mass Printed by the author Burt Daniel S The chronology of American literature America s literary achievements from the colonial era to modern times Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2004 ISBN 0 618 16821 4 Champlin Charles Back There Where the Past Was A Small Town Boyhood Syracuse University Press 1999 Cowell Patti Women Poets in Pre Revolutionary America 1650 1775 Whitson Publications 1981 Jones Emma C Brewster The Brewster Genealogy 1566 1907 a Record of the Descendants of William Brewster of the Mayflower ruling elder of the Pilgrim church which founded Plymouth Colony in 1620 New York Grafton Press 1908 Kellogg Lucy Jane Cutler History of the town of Bernardston Franklin county Massachusetts 1736 1900 With genealogies Press of E A Hall amp Co 1902 Newcomb John Bearse Genealogical memoir of the Newcomb family containing records of nearly every person of the name in America from 1635 to 1874 Printed for the author by Knight amp Leonard Chicago 1874 Peck Ira Ballou A genealogical history of the descendants of Joseph Peck who emigrated with his family to this country in 1638 and records of his father s and grandfather s families in England Printed by A Mudge amp son 1868 Scheick William J Authority and female authorship in colonial America University Press of Kentucky 1998 ISBN 0 8131 2054 3 Schmidt Gary D A passionate usefulness the life and literary labors of Hannah Adams University of Virginia Press 2004 ISBN 0 8139 2272 0 Silverman Kenneth Colonial American Poetry Hafner Publication Company 1968 Various Authors Representative men and old families of southeastern Massachusetts containing historical sketches of prominent and representative citizens and genealogical records of many of the old families Volume 3 J H Beers 1912 Wadsworth Horace Andrew Two hundred and fifty years of the Wadsworth family in America Containing an account of the family reunion at Duxbury Mass September 13 1882 and a genealogical register Printed at the Eagle steam job printing rooms 1883 Watts E S The Poetry of American Women from 1632 to 1945 University of Texas Press 1977 Further reading editThe Brewster Genealogy 1566 1907 a Record of the Descendants of William Brewster of the Mayflower ruling elder of the Pilgrim church which founded Plymouth Colony in 1620 by Emma C Brewster Jones New York Grafton Press 1908 Gates Henry Louis The Trials of Phillis Wheatley America s First Black Poet and Her Encounters With the Founding Fathers Basic Civitas Books 2003 Mason L B The life and times of Major John Mason of Connecticut 1600 1672 Putnam 1935 Mason John A Brief History of the Pequot War 1736 reprinted by J Sabin amp sons 1869 External links editWadsworth Family Association Inc The Elder William Brewster SocietyMartha Wadsworth Brewster at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Martha Wadsworth Brewster amp oldid 1190701853, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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