CHAPTER 3

MEDIA MADONNA

Whether or not it was her intention to do so, and though her professed priority was to find a way to support her children and offer them a good education, Hale’s actions while in her new post suggest a strong desire to give voice to the campaigns she held dear to her heart.

The working woman’s life in the 1830s was one often limited to the home, the seamstress’s shop, the milliner’s, the laundry, or, if fortunate, the schoolhouse. While no woman or person of color had the right to vote, Hale soon discovered that in the pages of her magazine and at the helm of its content, she did have a voice, and that voice and its opinions would not be stifled. In a day when the loudest voices were those of men, especially via their political power and in the church, Hale used her own pulpit to advance her goals—often in the service of others.

Shortly after her arrival in Boston, Hale learned of the forestalled Bunker Hill Monument, intended to commemorate the Revolutionary War battle of the same name. Members of the Bunker Hill Monument Association had secured land and raised enough money to see the cornerstone of the monument laid in 1825. But by 1830, it remained unfinished for lack of funding. Hale, the daughter of an injured Revolutionary War veteran, became devoted to seeing the monument completed. With a new audience, she took to her pages and called for support from her readers. She believed in the aggregate power of small. Noting that if each woman living in New England—some nine hundred thousand of them—were to donate just twenty-five cents, the necessary sum would be raised. The response was not what Hale had hoped for, but she remained undeterred.

“Our doubts are traitors,” she penned for the editorial page of her new endeavor. “And make us lose the good we oft might win, by fearing to attempt.”