logo

The Frozen River

Ariel Lawhon

The Frozen River

Ariel Lawhon

  • 61-page comprehensive Study Guide
  • Chapter-by-chapter summaries and multiple sections of expert analysis
  • The ultimate resource for assignments, engaging lessons, and lively book discussions

The Frozen River Background

Historical Context: Martha Ballard, Frontier Midwife

Martha Moore Ballard (1735-1812) was a New England midwife, known best by historians for her diary recording daily life in 18th-century Maine. She was informally trained but never recorded a single maternal mortality in the 816 births she recorded during her 27 years of diary-keeping. This extraordinary success rate during a time when childbirth was consistently deadly is part of what attracted Ariel Lawhon to Ballard’s story. Waiting for an appointment with her doctor while pregnant herself, Lawhon read an article about Ballard and thought to herself: “My own doctor—the one I was anxiously waiting to see—couldn’t boast a record like that” (418).

Despite her remarkable skill, Ballard remained an obscure figure until 1990, when historian Laurel Thatcher Ulrich published her groundbreaking biography A Midwife’s Tale: The Life of Martha Ballard Based on her Diary 1785-1812. The book won the Pulitzer Prize and catapulted Martha into a position of historical importance. In A Midwife’s Tale, Ulrich argues that Ballard’s diary provides key evidence for the economic value generated by female laborers, including midwives, in colonial America. This analysis challenged traditional understandings of colonial gender roles and ushered in a new wave of historians seeking to understand pre-industrial women’s labor history.

blurred text

Unlock this
Study Guide!

Join SuperSummary to gain instant access to all 61 pages of this Study Guide and thousands of other learning resources.
Get Started
blurred text