In the Midst of Alarms:
The Untold Story of Women and the War of 1812
Dianne Graves
This is a
groundbreaking study of women – American, Canadian, British
and aboriginal – who experienced the War of 1812. Dianne
Graves distils her years of research in diaries, records,
memoirs and correspondence into a colourful examination of
the ordeals, tragedies and triumphs of women who endured a
conflict wished for by neither of the belligerents.
She describes the woman’s world of early 19th-century
North America: courtship and marriage, domestic life,
childbirth and employment. Along the way she looks at
fashion and clothing, cooking and gardening. She goes on to
examine the lives of women whose men were in uniform – from
the wives of senior officers to the camp followers – and
she chronicles the experiences of women caught up in the
war, from high society to low life.
We meet dozens of fascinating women, among them Dolley
Madison, the republic’s gracious First Lady, and her
counterparts, Catherine Prevost and Lady Sherbrooke, the
wives of the senior British commanders. There are famous
belles – the daring Betsy Patterson Bonaparte of Baltimore
and the vivacious Julia de Rottenburg of Montreal. We meet
Eliza Romley, who, disguised as a man, joins the United
States Navy and is captured in action, and Elizabeth
Stewart, an American who proves to be an effective British
intelligence agent, and 16-year-old Amelia Ryerse, who
watches in horror as invaders burn her widowed mother’s
farm. There are Tecumapease of the Shawnee people and
Rachel Jackson, whose personal influence shaped major
leaders of the conflict. Finally, there are scores of other
women, some nameless, who come to life again in this
fascinating and informative work of social history.
This is a fascinating examination of the lives of ordinary
and extraordinary women and a detailed, well illustrated
book that provides a unique insight into the war as
experienced by women from all levels of society.
A native of England,
Dianne
Graves studied
languages before embarking on a career that has spanned
international education, travel and public relations. She
is the author of Crown of Life: The World of John
McCrae, the
biography of the man who wrote the famous poem “In Flanders
Fields,” and Redcoats and River
Pirates, a
historical novel for young readers set on the banks of the
St. Lawrence in the 1830s. She is married to military
historian Donald E. Graves and resides with her husband in
a farmhouse in the Mississippi River Valley of Upper
Canada.
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