Spinning bee explained

Spinning bees were 18th-century public events where women in the American Colonies produced homespun cloth to help the colonists reduce their dependence on British goods. They emerged in the decade prior to the American Revolution as a way for women to protest British policies and taxation.

Historical background

Great Britain enforced the 1765 Stamp Act on its American colonies, which taxed official documents throughout the colony.[1] The British Crown viewed these measures as a legitimate way to raise revenue. In contrast, many colonists viewed these acts as tyrannical, arguing that taxation without consent violated their rights as Englishmen. One common way that colonists protested this act of Parliament was through non-importation agreements and boycotts. Though the Stamp Act 1765 was repealed in 1766, the following year Parliament passed the Townshend Acts, imposing a new tax on goods such as glass and paper. Non-importation movements and boycotts resumed in protest of these additional taxes.[2] Spinning bees were among these acts of defiance of the Townshend Acts by encouraging local production of cloth instead of purchasing imported English textiles that bore the new tax.

Political significance

The homespun cloth and garments that these spinning bees produced became a political symbol as well as a material boycott. Wearing homespun showed other colonists that the wearer was protesting the British by refusing to buy British clothes. In addition to average colonists, prominent colonial leaders and politicians also donned homespun clothing as a show of rebellion against the British Crown. One year prior to the outbreak of the Revolution, the entirety of Harvard's graduating class wore homespun garments.[3]

Spinning bees also held a personal importance for women as well, involving women in the resistance to Great Britain where previously they had been excluded from public displays of resistance against the Crown.

Process of spinning bees

The spinning bees sponsored by Rebel groups such as the Daughters of Liberty represented one way that colonial women could get involved in the protest of imperial policies. The colonies relied on Great Britain for textiles, meaning that a successful boycott would require alternate sources for many goods that colonists imported.[4] The task of enacting the boycott fell to women, providing them an opportunity to enter the public side of the protest alongside men against the British Crown. Women began to compete publicly against one another to see who could make the most homemade cloth, known as homespun. These contest became known as spinning bees.

The Sons of Liberty often co-hosted these events with the Daughters of Liberty as a way to publicly support the Patriot cause against the British. Like other local festivities of the time, spinning bees included songs, picnics, and friendly competitions. Newspaper accounts, for example those from Rhode Island, also demonstrate that spinning bees attempted to use the spirit of competition to bridge the gap between married and unmarried women as well as lower- and upper-class women.[5] The spinning bees would often be community events, taking place in the center of town or in the town minister's home, depending upon the class status of the women involved. It was more likely for poorer women to spin as part of a bigger festivity than upper-class women, who spun at their minister's house.[6]

Legacy

Spinning bees were a predecessor to women's paid work outside the home. Since the spinning bees required women to spin and weave out in public, they presented an opportunity for women to participate in the colonial economy in a public setting.[7] The ability for women to spin as well as weave in public paved the way for women's eventual role in the United States factory system.[8] Factory work became one of the few occupations open to women in the 19th century.

In other countries

Before the advent of electric lighting in Europe, rural and urban women in Germany would gather to do their spinning and other handicrafts in a single house or room in order to preserve firewood, candles, and lantern oil, thus collectively saving supplies for heating and lighting. This was variably referred to depending on the dialect as a German: Spinnstube, German: Lichtstube (light room), or German: Rockenstube (distaff room), among other terms. While the spinning rooms were nominally segregated by gender, it was common for young men to visit the spinning rooms to accompany young women home in the evenings. As such, it was one of the few places that a relationship could be started away from the watchful eyes of church authorities and family members. From the 16th century onwards, this practice later drew outrage from Catholics and Protestants alike due to accusations of sexual debauchery. In response, a German: Lichtherrn ('light man') could be assigned to a spinning room to hold the members responsible to spiritual authorities. Ernest Borneman mentions the following obscene terms from spinning room jargon:

Notes and References

  1. Berkin. Carol. 2006. It Was I Who Did It: Women's Role in the Founding of the Nation. Phi Kappa Phi Forum. 86. 15.
  2. Book: Salmon, Marylynn. No Small Courage: A History of Women in The United States. Oxford University Press. 2000. Oxford. 135.
  3. Book: Salmon, Marylynn. No Small Courage: A History of Women in The United States. Oxford University. 2000. Oxford. 136.
  4. Berkin. Carol. 2006. It Was I Who Did It: Women's Role in the Founding of the Nation. Phi Kappa Phi Forum. 86. 16.
  5. Book: Macdonald, Anne. No Idle Hands: The Social History of American Knitting. Ballatine Books. 1988. New York. 80–81.
  6. Book: Applewhite, Harriet B.. Women and Politics in the Age of Democratic Revolution. University of Michigan Press. 1993. Ann Arbor. 197.
  7. Book: Peskin, Lawrence. Manufacturing Revolution: The Intellectual Origins of Early American Industry. Johns Hopkins University Press. 2003. Baltimore. 10–11.
  8. Ulrich. Laurel Thatcher. 1998. Wheels, Looms, and the Gendered Divisions of Labor in Eighteenth Century New England. The William and Mary Quarterly. 55. 1. 9. 10.2307/2674321. 2674321.
  9. Web site: Spinnstube. 4 April 2020.