(Redirected from Fanny Wright)
'Frances Wright' (
September 6 1795 -
December 131852) also widely known as 'Fanny Wright', was a Scotland-born lecturer, writer,
feminist,
abolitionist, and
utopian, who became a U. S. citizen in 1825.
Wright was born to a wealthy family in
Dundee,
Scotland, the daughter of James Wright, designer of Dundee trade tokens. When she was orphaned at the age of three, she was left with a substantial inheritance. By the age of 18, she had written her first book. She emigrated to
United States in
1818, and with her sister toured from 1818 to 1820. She became enamored with the young nation and became a
naturalized citizen in 1825. Wright advocated
abolition, universal equality in
education, and
feminism. She also attacked
organized religion, greed, and
capitalism. Along with
Robert Owen, Wright demanded that the government offer free
boarding schools.
Wright was the co-founder of ''Free Inquirer'' newspaper and authored ''Views of Society and Manners in America'' (1821), ''A Few Days in Athens'' (1822), and ''Course of Popular Lectures'' (1836). Wright became the first woman to lecture publicly before a mixed audience when she delivered an Independence Day speech at
New Harmony in 1828.
In 1825, Wright founded the
Nashoba Commune intending to educate
slaves to prepare them for freedom. Wright hoped to build a self-sustaining multi-racial community comprised of slaves, free blacks, and whites. Nashoba was partially based on Owen's
New Harmony settlement, where Wright spent a significant amount of time. Nashoba lasted until Wright became ill with
malaria and moved back to Europe to recover. The interim management of Nashoba was appalled by Wright's benevolent approach to the slaves living in Nashoba; rumors spread of inter-racial marriage and the Commune fell into financial difficulty, which eventually led to its demise. In 1830, Wright freed the Commune's 30 slaves and accompanied them to the newly-liberated nation of
Haiti, where they could live their lives as free men and women.
The modern-day city of
Germantown,
Tennessee, a suburb of
Memphis, is located on the land on which Wright situated her community.
Wright's opposition to slavery and that of
Robert Dale Owen (Robert Owen's son) contrasted to most other
Democrats of the era, though their artisan
radicalism distanced them from the leading
abolitionists of the time. (Lott, 129)
Wright married a French physician,
Guillayme D'Arusmont, with whom she had one child. They later
divorced.
As an activist in the American
Popular Health Movement between
1830 and
1840, Wright advocated women being involved in health and medicine. After the midterm political campaign of
1838, Wright suffered from a variety of health problems. She died in 1852 in
Cincinnati, Ohio, from complications resulting from a fall on an icy staircase.
Further reading
★
Fanny Wright: Rebel in America, Celia Morris, , , , 1984, ISBN 0-252-06249-3
★
Love and Theft: Blackface Minstrelsy and the American Working Class, Eric Lott, , , Oxford University Press, 1993, SBN 0-19-509641-X
★
In Common Cause: the "Conservative" Frances Trollope and the "radical" Frances Wright, Susan S Kissel, , , Bowling Green, 1983, ISBN 0-87972-617-2
★
Fanny Wright, William Randall Waterman, , , , 1924, OCLC 3625578
★ Historical Fiction:
★
★
Fanny: A Fiction, Edmund White, , , Hamilton, 2003, ISBN 0-06-000484-3
External links
★
Frances Wright, Woman's Advocate
★
Biography with excerpt from Lectures
★
WorldCat Identities page for 'Wright, Frances 1795-1852'