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modest two-story cottage with communal spaces such as the kitchen on the first floor, bedrooms on the second floor, and utility and storage spaces in the basement. This cottage would be small but inherently complex to maximize efficiency. In the kitchen layout, appliances, and counters are a short distance away from each other, so one person can easily manage multiple tasks at once. The complex kitchen design also included storage spaces for ingredients commonly used in everyday cooking. For the rest of the home, the
Beecher sisters included furniture descriptions and explained how furniture could be easily built at home or made cost-effectively by a craftsperson. They also offered specific techniques, such as how to transform a wardrobe into a room divider, the multi-purpose design aiding in the cost-effectiveness. In the book, the Beecher sisters specifically opposed the use of fanciful and ornate decor. Instead, they argued for the reallocation of decor funds towards kitchen appliances and the aforementioned improvements to the function of the kitchen.
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liberal education of universities. Beecher and Stowe defined homemaking as understanding and operating kitchen technology, ventilation, heating, plumbing, and other child-rearing tasks. More specifically, the sisters believed educating young children, caring for babies, children, and the sick, and managing the household to be a part of women's homemaking responsibilities. Once women were able to master their role as homemakers through higher education, their dominance over the domestic sphere would be utilized by women to gain political and social influence.
78:. While Roxana tended to the family and maintenance of the home, Lyman was a prominent revivalist and social reformer amidst the nineteenth century. In 1816, Roxana Beecher died of consumption. Consequently, Catharine Beecher assumed and performed many domestic responsibilities, including cutting and sewing her and her sibling's clothes. These responsibilities, alongside Beecher's close relationship with her father, greatly influenced her later role as an educator and her ideas about family life. Her father’s continued support encouraged her work.
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100:, one the first large educational institutions for women in the United States. The 1820s-50s marked the beginning of women's education past age 12 that expanded beyond baseline literacy. Her career in education continued until she died in 1878 when she was working to implement Home Economics courses in public institutions.
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is a highly detailed manual regarding the ideal
American home's construction, design, layout, and decoration. The book includes diagrams and explanations of floor plans, furniture layouts for each room, home appliance choices, and furniture and decor creation. The Beechers' ideal family home was a
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In the present day, the
Beecher sister's kitchen design has been cited as an early example of modern home design. While many elements of their proposed home designs did not influence the structure of 20th-century American homes, their work emphasized the flexibility of home appliances and storage
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prioritizes necessity over excessive furnishing or decor. It also seeks to eliminate the distinction between private and public spaces by creating communal spaces and eliminating the need for servants. These features, the sisters believed, would allow women’s roles of housework and nurturing the
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While sharing the desire to elevate women to equality with men, the
Beecher sisters believed that this goal would not be achieved through suffrage. Instead, they believed that men and women occupied distinct roles in society, and women's primary role – homemaking – needed to be included in the
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contained thirty-six chapters that covered a large variety of subjects, ranging from home design and decoration, domestic work inside and outside of the home, Christian lifestyle, parenting and child-rearing advice, and scientific explanations of systems within the body, home, and world.
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households, especially by how they directly suited the functions and needs of their families. By adopting the functionality and practicality of
Puritan homes, the Beecher sisters aimed to improve the daily lives of families through their nineteenth-century home
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became a foundational text for the field of home economics – contributing to the tenth annual Lake Placid
Conferences in 1909 on Home Economics as well as the American Home Economics Association. At this conference,
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movement, which advocated for communal living during its initial rise in popularity during the 1840s. This movement had a notable resurgence in the 1870s, partly due to the publication of
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Catharine
Beecher was born on September 6, 1800, in East Hampton, New York, and died on May 12, 1878. She was the daughter of the Congregationalist minister, Lyman
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Catharine
Beecher became one of the most prominent figures in women's education during the nineteenth century. She worked as an educational reformer and
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Catherine
Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote their book in the middle of the nineteenth century when many feminist counterparts focused goals on
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units. Today, flexibility and utility are valued greatly within modern home design to accommodate different families over multiple lifetimes.
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The methods of home ventilation and general cleanliness it outlined also contributed to some nineteenth-century public health reforms of the
342:"Catharine beecher and the mechanical body: Physiology, evangelism, and american social reform from the antebellum period to the gilded age"
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presents the sisters' views on domesticity and how these ideals shaped their vision of a proper
American household.
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which aimed to codify women's housekeeping duties and draw attention to the importance of this labor.
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family to thrive. The book remains a foundational text in modern house design.
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Catharine Beecher and Her Contributions to Home Economics. Field Study No. 1
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70:, and of Roxana Beecher. Catharine had two prominent siblings,
243:"Catharine Beecher and the American Woman's Puritan Home"
389:"Catharine Beecher and the Education of American Women"
287:Catharine Beecher: A Study in American Domesticity
307:"Household Divinity: A Life of Catharine Beecher"
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96:educator. In 1823, Catharine established the
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32:is a book published in 1869, co-authored by
319:10.1093/anb/9780198606697.article.0900074
40:. It expands upon Catharine’s 1841 book,
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429:Biester, Charlotte Elizabeth (1950).
305:Sklar, Kathryn Kish (February 2000),
199:Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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433:. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms.
289:. New Haven: Yale University Press.
311:American National Biography Online
197:, the first female student at the
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346:Journal of the History of Biology
387:Burstyn, Joan (September 1974).
188:After its publication in 1869,
42:A Treatise on Domestic Economy,
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340:Parry, Alexander Ian (2021).
23:Portrait of Catharine Beecher
285:Kish Sklar, Kathryn (1973).
313:, Oxford University Press,
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451:American non-fiction books
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259:10.1162/tneq.2009.82.3.452
175:The American Woman’s Home.
133:The American Woman's Home,
86:The American Woman's Home,
393:The New England Quarterly
247:The New England Quarterly
190:The American Woman’s Home
152:The American Woman’s Home
145:The American Woman’s Home
135:Title Illustration, 1869.
118:The American Woman's Home
50:The American Woman's Home
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241:Strazdes, Diana (2009).
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88:book frontispiece, 1869.
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169:coincided with the
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104:Historical context
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