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116:. Her mother was a prolific writer and had encouraged her to write as well. During the war Margaretta lost her grandmother, her aunt and her sister. Her mother was devastated by the loss and never fully recovered. Margaretta described their life after the war as "tolerable tranquility". Her mother developed a tendency towards depression and destroyed most of her own writings. Margaretta's tragedy continued with the loss of her mother when she was twelve years old.
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Margaretta Van Wyck
Bleecker and Dr Pierre (also known as Peter) Faugères had two daughters, Eveanna Electra Faugères (1795–1841) and Margaret Mason Faugères (1797–1820). Eveanna married her mother's half-brother John Anthony Bleecker (1791-1873) and had 8 children. Margaret married Edward P. Brady
242:, of whom she was a longtime supporter. The text was written to remind those of the price of revolution and the need for change. Faugeres saw beyond her privileged class and wrote about the democratic ideals of equality and justice. She sought radical change for American society and politics.
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in 1790. Similarly she began publishing her own essays and poems in the same periodical. Her reputation as a poet grew and for a few years she was considered the "premier poet" of the magazine. She had strong political views and concentrated her writings around the
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I cannot help thinking that their sensations, mental and external, are as acute as those of the people whose skin may be of a different colour; such an assertion may be bold, but facts are stubborn things, and had I not
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Her support of the French
Revolution was probably shaped by her friendship with a French physician, Peter Faugères, who shared her political views. They were married, in opposition to her father's wishes, on
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88:'s fashionable society, as a gifted and accomplished woman, although her married life was rendered unhappy by a profligate husband. After his death in 1798, she assisted in a female academy in
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Faugeres opposed the death penalty for murder which made her view more radical than most. She felt it was inconsistent for a country which boasted of its freedom and happiness. She wrote
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Faugères was committed to establishing her mother's reputation as a writer as well as her own. She started publishing her mother's poetry, what was left of it, in
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and was married 5 years before her death. She died on
January 9, 1801, in Brooklyn and is buried next to her father in the Bowery Methodist Church cemetery.
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in 1797. It was a six-page pamphlet arguing against the use of capital punishment. It was a poetic narrative in which she gave
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The
Posthumous Works of Ann Eliza Bleecker in Prose and Verse, to which is added a Collection of Essays, Prose and Poetical
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189:. It was her major literary achievement, a blank-verse tragedy in four acts which echoed her views on human rights.
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Margaretta V. Bleecker was born in New York City to John and Ann Eliza
Bleecker, members of the city's
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to support me, it is probable I should not attempt to oppose the opinions of such an eminent reasoner.
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80:. She was an American playwright, poet and political activist. She became distinguished after the
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in 1798. She taught school at an academy in New
Brunswick, New Jersey, and later in
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aristocracy. Shortly after her birth, the family moved to their country estate in
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Executing race: early
American women's narratives of race, society, and the law
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Not much is known of the remainder of her life. Her husband died of
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This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the
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Brown, Charles
Brockden; Philip Barnard; Stephen Shariro (2009).
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Sometime after her mother's death, she and her father moved to
422:. Vol. 2 (Public domain ed.). Baker and Scribner.
238:, was composed to support a July 4, 1798, speech given by
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Fine
Feelings Exemplified in the Conduct of a Negro Slave
76:(October 11, 1771 – January 9, 1801) was the daughter of
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where she continued her education and began to write.
208:propell'd; and I have heard the last harsh decree,
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338:. Ohio State University Press. pp. 113–130.
487:18th-century American dramatists and playwrights
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303:Women's early American historical narratives
282:The Posthumous Works Of Ann Eliza Bleecker
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502:American women dramatists and playwrights
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365:. Hackett Publishing. pp. 278–279.
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285:. New York: T.and J. Swords. pp.
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419:The Women of the American Revolution
306:. Penguin Classics. pp. 36–37.
507:18th-century American women writers
517:American women non-fiction writers
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477:Abolitionists from New York City
467:Women in the American Revolution
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279:Faugeres, Margaretta V. (1793).
512:Novelists from New York (state)
492:18th-century American novelists
416:Ellet, Elizabeth Fries (1848).
386:Griswold, Rufus Wilmot (1872).
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67:Author and political activist
392:. J. Miller. pp. 35–37.
200:perspective from the grave.
457:18th-century American poets
234:. Her last published work,
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332:Harris, Sharon M. (2005).
300:Harris, Sharon M. (2003).
82:American Revolutionary War
204:Yes, I a murderer was by
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