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Penelope Barker : ウィキペディア英語版
Penelope Barker

Penelope Barker (June 17, 1728, EdentonChowan County, North Carolina − 1796) was an activist in the American Revolution who in 1774 organised a boycott of British goods known as the Edenton Tea Party.
Born Penelope Pagett, her parents were Samuel Pagett, a physician and planter, and Elizabeth Blount, who was the daughter of the prominent planter and local politician James Blount, who had been a leader in Culpeper's Rebellion of 1677.
Her father died shortly followed by her sister. Penelope then assumed responsibility for the family plantation and her sisters two children from her marriage to John Hodgson 〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Penelope Pagett Barker – History of American Women )〕 Barker was married at a young age to John Hodgson, her sisters widower, who already had two children from the previous marriage. She bore him two more and was widowed at the age of nineteen and left to care for all four children〔
She was remarried to the wealthy James Craven who was a planter. When he died in 1755 she inherited all of his estate and became the richest woman in North Carolina.
She married again to businessman Thomas Barker. They had three children, all died before their first birthdays. Thomas Barker sailed to England many times as a representative of North Carolina. In 1761, Thomas sailed to England and was unable to return for many years due to the British blockade of American ships 〔
On October 25, 1774, ten months after the famous Boston Tea Party, Barker organized a ''Tea Party'' of her own. Penelope wrote a statement proposing a boycott on British goods and 51 local women signed and published the letter opposing British taxation, sending it to a London newspaper. The gathering which, took place in the home of Elizabeth King, became known as the Edenton Tea Party. It was published in London but received misogynist ridicule there.〔(Penelope Barker (1728–1796) ) National Women's History Museum entry. Accessed September 2014〕
After Thomas Barker returned in 1778, he and Penelope built a home in 1782, which is known today as “The Barker House”. Penelope and her husband both died in 1796 and are buried alongside each other in the Johnston family graveyard at Hayes Plantation, near Edenton.
==References==

* Diane Silcox-Jarrett, ''Penelope Barker, Leader of the Edenton Tea Party'' in Heroines of the American Revolution, America’s Founding Mothers (Chapel Hill, North Carolina: Green Angle Press, 1998).
*''Edenton History FAQs'',” Edenton North Carolina, n.d., http://www.edenton.com/history/miscfact.htm (21 June 2006).
*Collins, Gail. ''America’s Women: Four Hundred Years of Dolls, Drudges, Helpmates, and Heroines'' (New York: HarperCollins, 2003).
*Cotton, Sally S. ''History of the North Carolina Federation of Women’s Clubs, 1901–1925'' (Raleigh, North Carolina, 1925) reprinted on “The Role of Women in NC History,” Campbell University. http://www.campbell.edu/faculty/faulkner/NCHist33210-12.pdf.
*Garrison, Webb. ''Great Stories of the American Revolution: Unusual, Interesting Stories of the Exhilarating Era When a Nation was Born.'' (Rutledge Hill Press, 1993).


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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