How
romantic the idea of finding the perfect mate by chance, and the myth of the
blissful union between the lovely blue-eyed mail-order bride and her handsome
pioneer/cowboy/all Western virile he-man prevails to this day. However, it’s
just… another myth. It might have happened sometimes, but that was probably as
rare as finding the proverbial needle in a vast scratchy haystack.
In the 1800s, women arrived in
abundance in the Far West, fleeing domestic service, poor farms, millwork, and factory
toil. Men could take their pick, and they sought the youngest and freshest, women
who would replace wives who had died in childbed or from exhaustion, strong
women who would raise their children, attend to harvests, do garden work, laundry,
scrounge for firewood, cook, tend to a man’s sexual needs and produce even more
children — preferably males who would eventually help out on the ranch/farm.
There was no better way to find a
suitable mate than through a marriage broker, and once a potential fiancée was
found, she had to be wooed with letters. Since many men were either illiterates
or were immigrants with a scanty knowledge of English, public scribes were hired
churn out the proper sentiments on Remington Standard typewriters, and churn they
did. They concocted fairy tales of successful homesteading and the wealth to be
had in the Far West, promised husbandly devotion, fertile land, and a cozy
home.
What did mail order brides find
when they stepped off the trains that had brought them west? Shanty stations in
the middle of nowhere, and their future mates — coarse men honed by the
elements, a hard life, failure, and the roughest alcohol. The luckiest women had
a clapboard house waiting for them, but most discovered a one-room shack with
windowpanes of greased paper, or only a hole in the ground with a roof made of
twigs and branches. And all around was a vast lonely wasteland of bleached-out
colors.
From now on life would consist of
raising numerous children, endless washing, cooking, fighting vermin, bugs,
weather, illness, and hopelessness. And far from being partners, western men
thought their role was to dominate women, and domestic violence was widespread.
Yet, most abused wives stuck it out, believing their married status and a promised
place in God’s heaven were worth beatings, black eyes, split lips, and broken
bones. Others stayed because there was nowhere else to go; distances were so
great. Even if a runaway wife did manage to reach a neighbor’s farm she rarely
found safety or sympathy: a wife’s duty was to stick by her man, despite the
violence.
One runaway bride was found by her new
husband. She was starving, half-mad with thirst, and wandering around in the
middle of nowhere. When he brought her home, he chained her to the doorpost to
prevent further disobedience… and that wasn’t a rare occurrence either.
A
Room in Blake's Folly
If only the walls could speak…
In one hundred and fifty years, Blake's Folly, a silver boomtown notorious for
its brothels, scarlet ladies, silver barons, speakeasies, and divorce ranches,
has become a semi-ghost town. Although the old Mizpah Saloon is still in
business, its upper floor is sheathed in dust. But in a room at a long
corridor's end, an adventurer, a beautiful dance girl, and a rejected wife were
once caught in a love triangle, and their secret has touched three generations.
Six stories in A Room in Blake’s Folly tell the tale.
Purchase Links: https://books2read.com/BlakesFollyRomance
Author Link:
https://linktr.ee/j.arleneculiner
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wt3VkYUTVNk
4 comments:
OMG - What women had to go through throughout history, and some (so-called) men have had the gall to call us the weaker sex? If anyone's hysterical, it's them. They're the ones who lose it over jealousy, machismo, or whatever, killing women (and others). How any of those women hung on in the West (aka as 'the good old days') is beyond me. Frankly, I'd rather be dead. We are NOT going back.
BTW: Awesome post, J. Let's tell it like it is. There is no 'golden' past, just women (and POC) who put up with too much crap to make this country work. This country owes us big time.
You are right, Tina. Everything you said is true, but there is always another side to the story. I did mention that runaway wives rarely found help, but that was also because other women refused to help them. A wife who didn't accept her situation was considered a sinner, someone to be despised, and other women were merciless in their condemnation.
The 'Marthas' of the time, huh? The 'misery loves (demands) company' sorority, right? Thank goodness there were women who didn't buy that crap and helped other women thrive. Any belief system/culture that demands you give up your joy, your freedom/dreams, and your critical thinking skills in order to reap your reward after death (or make men feel more important) is not for me.
Not my style either, Tina. I think we'd get along just fine.
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