Harriet Farley

Harriet Jane Farley (February 18, 1812, Claremont, New Hampshire November 12, 1907, New York City, New York) was an American writer and abolitionist, editor of the Lowell Offering from 1842-1845, and editor of the New England Offering from 18471850.

Life

Harriet Farley was the sixth of ten children born to Reverend Stephen and Lucy Farley. She grew up in Atkinson, New Hampshire and attended Atkinson Academy, a school for both boys and girls, of which her father was the principal. The Farleys were extremely poor, so at the age of fourteen, Harriet began doing piecework to earn money for her family. She was also a schoolteacher for several years, although she found that teaching was not to her liking.

In 1837, at the age of twenty-five, Harriet left New Hampshire to work in the textile mills of Lowell, Massachusetts. There were high literacy rates among the young female workers of the Lowell mills, and many, like Harriet Farley, had been schoolteachers before entering factory work.[1] It was common for these women to form writing groups, and out of one of these grew a magazine called The Lowell Offering in 1840.

Farley wrote articles and editorials for The Lowell Offering under a myriad of pseudonyms and eventually became editor in 1842; in 1843, Harriot Curtis, a fellow mill worker, became her co-editor.[2]

Since the magazine was written by and for the mill girls, it was received with both criticism and interest by the general public. Some, including labor organizer Orestes Brownson, felt that the publication did not place enough emphasis on labor reform and the deplorable working conditions of the mills. Farley defended herself in a letter of response to his condemnation, insisting that the Offering was solely a literary magazine and had never been intended to be a political commentary.[3]

Despite these criticisms, the material published in The Lowell Offering had widespread distribution. In 1844, an anthology of pieces from the magazine was published in Great Britain, even attracting the attention of Charles Dickens.[4] As mill work was still a fairly new practice at this time, the Offering found a large audience abroad, especially in Europe, because it provided insight into the daily lives of mill workers.[5]

Though she was determined to keep reform out of her publication, Farley was involved in one of the most prominent political movements of the time. In 1843, she joined the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society and soon became an influential abolitionist leader in Lowell. As part of the society, Farley helped raise money and awareness for the cause of abolitionism.[6]

The Lowell Offering ceased publication in December, 1845 when protests about working conditions increased, and the magazine began to seem too conservative for its audience. Harriet's own popularity had declined, as well, largely due to her defenses of factory management and her repeated claims that factory life was not unjust.[7] From 1847 to 1850, the magazine was revived, with Farley as editor and publisher, as the New England Offering. This short-lived publication focused more on labor reform than The Lowell Offering had.

After moving to New York City, Farley went on to write for the women's magazine Godey's Lady's Book, edited by her friend Sarah J. Hale. Farley's journalistic work was collected in two volumes in the late 1840s, and she also published a children's novel called Happy Nights at Hazel Nook in 1852. Additionally, she published Shells from the Strand of the Sea of Genius, a book of homilies, and edited her father's book on theology.[8]

In 1854, Harriet married John Intaglio Dunlevy, a New York engraver and inventor. For two decades she stopped writing, presumably to focus on raising a family, though possibly because her husband disapproved of her work.[9] After John's death, she published a Christmas book, Fancy's Frolics, in 1880.

Harriet Farley died in New York City in 1907, at the age of 95.[10]

Work

After working as a mill weaver in Lowell, Farley started contributing to the Lowell Offering. The Lowell Offering was a monthly magazine that was thirty-two pages long. It ran to five volumes, published from 1840 to 1845 with over fifty women contributors. The goal of the offering was to give a better name to “factory girls”.[11] It strived to be a place where mill women could grow and cultivate their education through their own writing. . Through publishing articles and personal essays, this magazine strived to emphasize self-improvement as a key factor in becoming a lady. Contributing to the “Lowell Offering” was one of the ways that women could continue their education while working in the mills.[12] The Lowell Offering wanted to show that even after a long work day in a factory, women could be intellectuals.[13] This image went against what European social reforms and union supporters thought of the mills. As the publication grew, it became something in which the contributors took great pride. The Offering was read by many famous authors such as, Charles Dickens, Anthony Trollope, and George Sand.[14] They were all amazed by the hard work and quality that went into the publication.

Over time, many of the contributors' opinions went against what the mill owners desired, and because of the controversy the “Lowell Offering” had to cease publication in December 1845. Farley then started another magazine called the New England Offering. She became one of the only editors for the New England Offering. In April 1848 she became its publisher, proprietor, and traveling agent. Farley believed that the “New England Offering” could have the same popularity as the “Lowell Offering”. Unfortunately the “New England Offering” did not repeat the success of its predecessor. The “New England Offering” lasted for only two more issues.[15]

The New England Offering consisted poems, songs, and personal letters. It also included different pieces about the duties of a mill girl and short stories.[16] The New England Offering, like the Lowell Offering, was a place for women to explore their intellectual side and work on their writing. Farley aimed to show that even though many people had a negative view on mill’s and mill girls, they were high standing moral citizens and extremely intellectual.

Works

Notes

  1. Rogers, Katharine (1991). The Meridian Anthology of Early American Women Writers. New York: Penguin Book. p. 423.
  2. Boyd, Anne E. (2009). Wielding the Pen: Writings on Authorship by American Women of the Nineteenth Century. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 64.
  3. "Harriet Jane Farley".
  4. Boyd, Anne E. (2009). Wielding the Pen: Writings on Authorship by American Women of the Nineteenth Century. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 64.
  5. "Harriet Farley".
  6. "Harriet Jane Farley".
  7. "Harriet Farley".
  8. "Harriet Farley".
  9. Rogers, Katharine (1991). The Meridian Anthology of Early American Women Writers. New York: Penguin Books. p. 424.
  10. "Harriet Jane Farley".
  11. Ranta, Judith. "New England Offering." New England Offering. January 1, 1850. Accessed November 10, 2014. http://library.uml.edu/clh/NewOff.html.
  12. Dublin, Thomas. Women at Work: The Transformation of Work and Community in Lowell, Massachusetts, 1826-1860. New York: Columbia University Press, 1979.
  13. Eisenmann, Linda. "L." In Historical Dictionary of Women's Education in the United States, 232-255. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1998.
  14. Eisenmann, Linda. "L." In Historical Dictionary of Women's Education in the United States, 232-255. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1998.
  15. Eisenmann, Linda. "L." In Historical Dictionary of Women's Education in the United States, 232-255. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1998.
  16. Farley, Harriet, ed. “New England Offering. Vol. 1-3. Westport: Greenwood Reprint Corporation, 1970.

References

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