Here is her quote from 1910 regarding the women of the PEC:
"The majority of us are farmers' wives here in Easton and our husbands are perfect - we are so well-housed, so soft-bedded, and so loving cared for that our tendency is to forget that Easton isn't the whole world, that there are other women not as we are. Yet industrial [economic] conditions are open to some slight criticism even in this paradise of Easton. First of all, we want to get rid of this fallacy that marriage is a state of being supported. Since our men are mainly the gatherers of money - we mistakenly assume that they are the creators of wealth. They are not. The man gives his daily labor toward earning board and clothes, but what he receives cannot be eaten or worn. It is nothing till he puts it into his wife's hands and her intelligence, energy, and ability transforms the raw material. Until this is done no man can receive anything worth having. He begins and she completes the making of their joint wealth. The man turns his labor into money, the woman turns the money into usable material. Their dependence is mutual. She supports him exactly as he supports her."
(Information and quote from "Strength Without Compromise", Teri Gay 2009)
Lucy Phillips was the daughter of James Meredith Phillips 1822 – 1891 and Mary Mendenhall Pusey 1824 – 1900, born in Chester County, Pennsylvania.
In 1879 Lucy Phillips married George Sylvester Allen from Easton, NY. They remained living in Easton and had two children:
George Norwood Allen 1884 – 1954
Anna B Allen Pratt 1885 – 1988
Here is her quote from 1910 regarding the women of the PEC:
"The majority of us are farmers' wives here in Easton and our husbands are perfect - we are so well-housed, so soft-bedded, and so loving cared for that our tendency is to forget that Easton isn't the whole world, that there are other women not as we are. Yet industrial [economic] conditions are open to some slight criticism even in this paradise of Easton. First of all, we want to get rid of this fallacy that marriage is a state of being supported. Since our men are mainly the gatherers of money - we mistakenly assume that they are the creators of wealth. They are not. The man gives his daily labor toward earning board and clothes, but what he receives cannot be eaten or worn. It is nothing till he puts it into his wife's hands and her intelligence, energy, and ability transforms the raw material. Until this is done no man can receive anything worth having. He begins and she completes the making of their joint wealth. The man turns his labor into money, the woman turns the money into usable material. Their dependence is mutual. She supports him exactly as he supports her."
(Information and quote from "Strength Without Compromise", Teri Gay 2009)
Lucy Phillips was the daughter of James Meredith Phillips 1822 – 1891 and Mary Mendenhall Pusey 1824 – 1900, born in Chester County, Pennsylvania.
In 1879 Lucy Phillips married George Sylvester Allen from Easton, NY. They remained living in Easton and had two children:
George Norwood Allen 1884 – 1954
Anna B Allen Pratt 1885 – 1988
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