THE AMERICAN WOMAN'S HOME.
INTRODUCTION.
THE authors of this volume, while they sympathize with every
honest effort to relieve the disabilities and sufferings of their sex,
are confident that the chief cause of these evils is the fact that the
honor and duties of the family state are not duly appreciated, that
women are not trained for these duties as men are trained for their
trades and professions, and that, as the consequence, family labor is
poorly done, poorly paid, and regarded as menial and disgraceful.
To be the nurse of young children, a cook, or a house-maid, is
regarded as the lowest and last resort of poverty, and one which no
woman of culture and position can assume without loss of caste and
respectability.
It is the aim of this volume to elevate both the honor and the
remuneration of all the employments that sustain the many difficult
and sacred duties of the family state, and thus to render each
department of woman's true profession as much desired and respected as
are the most honored professions of men.
When the other sex are to be instructed in law, medicine, or
divinity, they are favored with numerous institutions richly endowed,
with teachers of the highest talents and acquirements, with extensive
libraries, and abundant and costly apparatus. With such advantages
they devote
nearly ten of the best years of life to preparing themselves for their
profession; and to secure the public from unqualified members of these
professions, none can enter them until examined by a competent body,
who certify to their due preparation for their duties.
Woman's profession embraces the care and nursing of the body in
the critical periods of infancy and sickness, the training of the
human mind in the most impressible period of childhood, the
instruction and control of servants, and most of the government and
economies of the family state. These duties of woman are as sacred and
important as any ordained to man; and yet no such advantages for
preparation have been accorded to her, nor is there any qualified body
to certify the public that a woman is duly prepared to give proper
instruction in her profession.
This unfortunate want, and also the questions frequently asked
concerning the domestic qualifications of both the authors of this
work, who have formerly written upon such topics, make it needful to
give some account of the advantages they have enjoyed in preparation
for the important office assumed as teachers of woman's domestic
duties.
The sister whose name is subscribed is the eldest of nine children
by her own mother, and of four by her step-mother; and having a
natural love for children, she found it a pleasure as well as a duty
to aid in the care of infancy and childhood. At sixteen, she was
deprived of a mother, who was remarkable not only for intelligence and
culture, but for a natural taste and skill in domestic handicraft. Her
place was awhile filled by an aunt remarkable for her habits of
neatness and order, and especially for her economy. She was, in the
course of time, replaced by a step-mother, who had been accustomed to
a superior style of housekeeping, and was an expert in all departments
of domestic administration.
Under these successive housekeepers, the writer learned not only
to perform in the most approved manner all the
manual employments of domestic life, but to honor and enjoy these
duties.
At twenty-three, she commenced the institution which ever since
has flourished as "The Hartford Female Seminary," where, at the age of
twelve, the sister now united with her in the authorship of this work
became her pupil, and, after a few years, her associate. The removal
of the family to the West, and failure of health, ended a connection
with the Hartford Seminary, and originated a similar one in
Cincinnati, of which the younger authoress of this work was associate
principal till her marriage.
At this time, the work on
Domestic Economy, of which this volume may be called an
enlarged edition, although a great portion of it is entirely new,
embodying the latest results of science, was prepared by the writer as
a part of the Massachusetts School
Library, and has since been extensively introduced as a
text-book into public schools and higher female seminaries. It was
followed by its sequel, The Domestic
Receipt-Book, widely circulated by the Harpers in every State
of the Union.
These two works have been entirely remodeled, former topics
rewritten, and many new ones introduced, so as to include all that is
properly embraced in a complete Encyclopedia of Domestic Economy.
In addition to the opportunities mentioned, the elder sister, for
many years, has been studying the causes and the remedies for the
decay of constitution and loss of health so increasingly prevalent
among American women, aiming to promote the establishment of
endowed institutions, in which
women shall be properly trained for their profession, as both
housekeepers and health-keepers. What advantages have thus been
received and the results thus obtained will appear in succeeding
pages.
During the upward progress of the age, and the advance of a more
enlightened Christianity, the writers of this volume have gained more
elevated views of the true mission
of woman--of the dignity and importance of her distinctive duties, and
of the true happiness which will be the reward of a right appreciation
of this mission, and a proper performance of these duties.
There is at the present time an increasing agitation of the public
mind, evolving many theories and some crude speculations as to woman's
rights and duties. That there is a great social and moral power in her
keeping, which is now seeking expression by organization, is manifest,
and that resulting plans and efforts will involve some mistakes, some
collisions, and some failures, all must expect.
But to intelligent, reflecting, and benevolent women--whose faith
rests on the character and teachings of Jesus Christ--there are great
principles revealed by Him, which in the end will secure the grand
result which He taught and suffered to achieve. It is hoped that in
the following pages these principles will be so exhibited and
illustrated as to aid in securing those rights and advantages which
Christ's religion aims to provide for all, and especially for the most
weak and defenseless of His children.
CATHARINE E. BEECHER.