About me

BONNIE HURD SMITH has been writing and speaking about Judith Sargent Murray (JSM) for twenty-five years. It was during her tenure as board president of the Sargent House Museum in Gloucester, Mass. (JSM's home) that JSM's letter books were discovered and published on microfilm. Since then, Bonnie has initiated a multi-year initiative to transcribe and publish (in print and online) all twenty volumes of JSM's letter books. BONNIE IS THE AUTHOR OF four books on JSM and her letter books, including "The Letters I Left Behind: Letter Book 10," "Letters of Loss and Love: Letter Book 3," "Mingling Souls Upon Paper," "From Gloucester to Philadelphia in 1790," and a biographical e-book titled "I am Jealous for the Honor of My Sex." Letter Book 11 is on its way! IN ADDITION Bonnie's articles, book chapters, contributions to historic sites, exhibitions, and on-topic books (like David McCullough's "John Adams") have earned her RECOGNITION FROM OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS as the definitive scholar on JSM. Bonnie's TALKS and Unitarian Universalist SERMONS on JSM have been called passionate, insightful, and inspiring.

Friday, May 17, 2024

1775: "In the midst of warlike preparations"

 

11 Nov 1775
Judith Sargent Stevens to Judith Saunders Sargent

 

Letter 23    To my Mother    Gloucester    November 11 1775 

My heart was greatly set upon seeing you this day — but it must not be, the roads are so heavy, the weather so precarious, and my health so indifferent. 

My situation is truly unpleasant — in the midst of warlike preparations — Soldiers flocking in from the adjacent Towns — frequent alarms, drums beating, bells ringing, and not a single female associate, to whom I can resort for consolation — To the mind attached to show, military parade may be pleasing, although, even amid its most potent fascination — if the gentler vision pervade the soul — martial appearances in time of war, must be attended with melancholy presagement, and surely, Peace is the kindly soil, from which the social virtues must derive their fairest growth. 

 
In these days of apprehension, I am happy that my Mother and Sister, with their Fitz William, have obtained a sequestered spot. Thither, in imagination I shall often follow them, for my sincere affections are ever Theirs.

 

Notes:

• JSM's mother is Judith Saunders Sargent of Gloucester (1731-93); she married JSM's father, Winthrop Sargent, in 1750 in Gloucester
• JSM's sister is Esther Sargent Ellery (1755-1811); she was married to John Stevens Ellery (1748-97)
• Fitz William is JSM's youngest brother, Fitz William Sargent (1768-1822)
• the "sequestered spot" they obtained was in the Chebacco Parish of Ipswich, Mass., away from the coast and British war ships

• In total, JSM had seven siblings; only three survived to adulthood. JSM was the first born. Of the three surviving siblings, their birth order was: Winthrop Jr. (1753-1820), Esther, and Fitz William. Winthrop Sargent Jr.'s papers are housed at the Mass. Historical Society.

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