The Woman They Could Not Silence by Kate Moore
Injustice, Courage, and an Indomitable Spirit.
Imagine a husband committing you to an insane asylum just to get rid of you. That was a common occurrence in the 1800s and since a woman was her husband’s property she had no voice, no recourse. The doctors signed off on a husband’s request because he was a man after all, so he was considered superior, all-knowing, and all powerful, and the women were tossed in an institution against their will with no way to defend themselves. That’s what happened to Elizabeth Packard in 1860.
She was too outspoken for her husband who was a PASTOR. She had her own views, her own opinions, and when she started influencing parishioners in a Bible class, she went too far. It endangered her husband's authority and his sponsorship from an outspoken donor to the church who opposed abolition. She was treading way too far over her womanly boundaries and had to be stopped. So he arranged to have her kidnapped and committed to an insane asylum without the benefit of a trial.
But Elizabeth was a fighter, a godly woman who turned her imprisonment into a chance to make a difference and to hopefully see her six children again.
This time they picked the wrong woman to control and manipulate!
This was an AMAZING jaw-dropping story of injustice, courage, and an indomitable spirit!
Annette
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