Saturday, November 23, 2019

Sarah Josepha Hale



Sarah Josepha Hale

Sarah Jospeha Buell was born in New Hampshire in 1788, the daughter of a Revolutionary War veteran.  Her parents believed that both sexes should be educated, and her mother schooled her at home throughout her childhood.  At age 25, she married a lawyer named David Hale.  David died nine years later, leaving her a young widow with five children.  Sarah wore black the rest of her life in mourning for him.

While she had support from family and friends, Sarah turned to writing as a source of income, mostly poetry with some novels.  Her writing reflected her deep Christian faith, her disdain for the institution of slavery, and her desire for the education of women.  She ended up publishing 50 volumes of poetry and numerous novels over the course of her life, including the famous childrens’ poem Mary Had A Little Lamb. 

Sarah was asked to become the editor for a magazine called Godey’s Lady’s Book.  She agreed, and remained in the position for forty years, preferring the title ‘Editress.’  The magazine under her watch became the most popular magazine in the Unites States, numbering over 150,000 subscribers.  Topics in the magazine covered everything from child-rearing to women’s education to matters of fashion, style and taste.  She was also unique as an editor in her day in insisting on only American writers – many publications in her day relied heavily on British authors.  She has been described in modern days as a combination of Oprah and Martha Stewart.

Sarah believed strongly that it was women who shaped the morals of society, and she advocated for women to embrace this role.  Her advocacy for the advanced, high-quality education of women was essential to preparing women for “the most important vocation on earth…that of the Christian mother in the nursery.”  Her idea of the place of women in society was that her largest influence came through her work in the home.  She advocated for women to enter the workforce in certain professions such as education, medicine, and missionary work, but was opposed to the idea of women’s suffrage – believing that if women got involved in politics it would dilute her influence where it mattered most, with her children.  She is quoted as saying, “What has made this nation great?  Not its heroes, but its households.”

Sarah was also very active in philanthropy.  She was the driver for the current monument that stands at the Bunker Hill battlefield and was active in ensuring the preservation of George Washington’s Mount Vernon home.  She also helped to fund Vassar College, an all-women’s college, in 1861.

Sarah was also an early advocate for Thanksgiving as a national holiday.  President Washington had written during his tenure a non-binding Thanksgiving proclamation which was celebrated individually in some states on different days, or not at all.  Many in that day even considered Washington’s letter to be unconstitutional, violating the separation of church and state.  From her position as Editress, Sarah wrote Presidents Zachary Taylor, Millard Fillmore, Franklin Pierce, James Buchanan, and Abraham Lincoln advocating the establishment of a national Thanksgiving holiday. 

She succeeded in getting President Lincoln to declare a national day of Thanksgiving on the fourth Thursday of 1863, as a brief respite from the horrors of the Civil War, but the holiday did not become a permanent holiday until President Franklin Roosevelt signed it into law about 60 years later.



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