Mutinous women how French convicts became founding mothers of the Gulf Coast

"On December 12, 1719, a ship named La Mutine, or the Mutinous Woman, sailed from the French port of Le Havre, bound for the vast North American territory then referred to as "the Mississippi." La Mutine was loaded with goods that the fledgling French colony urgently required for its...

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1. Verfasser: DeJean, Joan E. 1948- (VerfasserIn)
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Veröffentlicht: New York, NY Basic Books, Hachette Book Group 2022
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505 8 |a Preliminaries: A Second Coast, a Second Ship -- Part I: France. False Arrests and trumped-Up Charges -- John Law's Louisiana Gold Rush -- "Merchandise" for Louisiana -- The Roundup -- Chains and Shackles -- Part II: The Second Coast. "The Islands" of Louisiana -- The Desert Islands of Alabama and Mississippi -- Biloxi's Deadly Sands -- Putting Down Roots in Mobile -- Building a Capital in New Orleans -- Women on the Verge in Natchitoches, Illinois, and Arkansas -- Louisiana's Garden on the German Coast -- Natchez, John Law's Folly -- Pointe Coupée in the Shadow of Natchez -- The End of the Women's Era -- Coda 
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Datensatz im Suchindex

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author DeJean, Joan E. 1948-
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contents Preliminaries: A Second Coast, a Second Ship -- Part I: France. False Arrests and trumped-Up Charges -- John Law's Louisiana Gold Rush -- "Merchandise" for Louisiana -- The Roundup -- Chains and Shackles -- Part II: The Second Coast. "The Islands" of Louisiana -- The Desert Islands of Alabama and Mississippi -- Biloxi's Deadly Sands -- Putting Down Roots in Mobile -- Building a Capital in New Orleans -- Women on the Verge in Natchitoches, Illinois, and Arkansas -- Louisiana's Garden on the German Coast -- Natchez, John Law's Folly -- Pointe Coupée in the Shadow of Natchez -- The End of the Women's Era -- Coda
ctrlnum (OCoLC)1344267351
(DE-599)BVBBV048383131
edition First edition
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era_facet Geschichte 1700-1800
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spelling DeJean, Joan E. 1948- Verfasser (DE-588)10878438X aut
Mutinous women how French convicts became founding mothers of the Gulf Coast Joan DeJean
How French convicts became founding mothers of the Gulf Coast
First edition
New York, NY Basic Books, Hachette Book Group 2022
ix, 437 Seiten Illustrationen, Karten 25 cm
txt rdacontent
n rdamedia
nc rdacarrier
Preliminaries: A Second Coast, a Second Ship -- Part I: France. False Arrests and trumped-Up Charges -- John Law's Louisiana Gold Rush -- "Merchandise" for Louisiana -- The Roundup -- Chains and Shackles -- Part II: The Second Coast. "The Islands" of Louisiana -- The Desert Islands of Alabama and Mississippi -- Biloxi's Deadly Sands -- Putting Down Roots in Mobile -- Building a Capital in New Orleans -- Women on the Verge in Natchitoches, Illinois, and Arkansas -- Louisiana's Garden on the German Coast -- Natchez, John Law's Folly -- Pointe Coupée in the Shadow of Natchez -- The End of the Women's Era -- Coda
"On December 12, 1719, a ship named La Mutine, or the Mutinous Woman, sailed from the French port of Le Havre, bound for the vast North American territory then referred to as "the Mississippi." La Mutine was loaded with goods that the fledgling French colony urgently required for its survival, basic foodstuffs such as flour and lard. But its principal commodity was a new kind of French export: women. The women who arrived in the New World from that frigate would go on to found Gulf dynasties, but their beginnings were less auspicious. Falsely accused of sex crimes-some for reporting rape, others because their families were obscenely poor and it was financially expedient to imprison them-these women were prisoners, shackled in the ship's hold. Of the 98 women who were shipped to the colony, only 44 survived. Despite the bleakness of these women's origins, they achieved unlikely triumph across the Atlantic. They managed to carve out a place for themselves in the colonies that would have been impossible in France, making advantageous marriages and accumulating property. Many were instrumental in the building of New Orleans, founded only a year before their arrival, and in settling Louisiana, Alabama, and Mississippi. Today, hundreds of thousands of Americans can trace their lineage La Mutine. Drawing on an impressive range of sources to restore the voices of these women to the historical record, Title TK introduces us to the Gulf's Founding Mothers-the "mutinous women" of La Mutine"--
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Convict ships / France / History / 18th century
Mutine (Frigate) / History
États du Golfe (États-Unis) / Histoire / Jusqu'à 1803
Français / États du Golfe (États-Unis) / Biographies
Prisonnières / France / Histoire / 18e siècle
Criminelles / France / Histoire / 18e siècle
Navires pénitenciers / France / Histoire / 18e siècle
HISTORY / Americas (North, Central, South, West Indies)
Convict ships
Female offenders
French
French colonies
Frontier and pioneer life
Women prisoners
America
France
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To 1803
Biography
Biographies
History
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spellingShingle DeJean, Joan E. 1948-
Mutinous women how French convicts became founding mothers of the Gulf Coast
Preliminaries: A Second Coast, a Second Ship -- Part I: France. False Arrests and trumped-Up Charges -- John Law's Louisiana Gold Rush -- "Merchandise" for Louisiana -- The Roundup -- Chains and Shackles -- Part II: The Second Coast. "The Islands" of Louisiana -- The Desert Islands of Alabama and Mississippi -- Biloxi's Deadly Sands -- Putting Down Roots in Mobile -- Building a Capital in New Orleans -- Women on the Verge in Natchitoches, Illinois, and Arkansas -- Louisiana's Garden on the German Coast -- Natchez, John Law's Folly -- Pointe Coupée in the Shadow of Natchez -- The End of the Women's Era -- Coda
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subject_GND (DE-588)4052385-8
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title Mutinous women how French convicts became founding mothers of the Gulf Coast
title_alt How French convicts became founding mothers of the Gulf Coast
title_auth Mutinous women how French convicts became founding mothers of the Gulf Coast
title_exact_search Mutinous women how French convicts became founding mothers of the Gulf Coast
title_full Mutinous women how French convicts became founding mothers of the Gulf Coast Joan DeJean
title_fullStr Mutinous women how French convicts became founding mothers of the Gulf Coast Joan DeJean
title_full_unstemmed Mutinous women how French convicts became founding mothers of the Gulf Coast Joan DeJean
title_short Mutinous women
title_sort mutinous women how french convicts became founding mothers of the gulf coast
title_sub how French convicts became founding mothers of the Gulf Coast
topic Schiff (DE-588)4052385-8 gnd
Soziale Situation (DE-588)4077575-6 gnd
Weibliche Gefangene (DE-588)4230270-5 gnd
Kolonie (DE-588)4031790-0 gnd
topic_facet Schiff
Soziale Situation
Weibliche Gefangene
Kolonie
Frankreich
Amerika
work_keys_str_mv AT dejeanjoane mutinouswomenhowfrenchconvictsbecamefoundingmothersofthegulfcoast
AT dejeanjoane howfrenchconvictsbecamefoundingmothersofthegulfcoast