by Rhiannon Jenkins
“Behind every great man is not a woman,
she is beside him, she is with him, not behind him.” - Tariq Ramadan
The recent Broadway musical Hamilton tells the story of Alexander Hamilton, the most printed
man on American currency. As well as also appearing on stamps, Alexander
Hamilton not only founded The New York
Post, he also created the centralized banking system in America, was the
first Secretary of the Treasury and is one of the Founding Fathers of the
United States. He fought during the Revolution, made an enemy of every other
Founding Father and was killed by “the damn fool”, Aaron Burr. Despite being a
largely undocumented historical figure in modern culture, there are hundreds of
records and readily available information about Alexander Hamilton. Why are we
able to know so much about him?
“Behind every great man is not a woman,
she is beside him, she is with him, not behind him.” - Tariq Ramadan
from Hamilton: The Musical |
Elizabeth Schuyler.
Mother of eight, wife of Hamilton and widow for more than
fifty years, Eliza Hamilton founded the first private orphanage in New York,
helped contribute funds to the building of the Washington Monument and
organised Hamilton’ thousands of writings. During her marriage to Hamilton she
endured long periods of time away from her husband, the death of her first son
in a duel and Hamilton taking a mistress and publicly and explicitly admitting
to it. The commitment presented by Eliza to her husband and her complete
determination to preserve his work and ensure his legacy remained intact enables
Hamilton to be remembered and known nationally, even globally, for his
contribution to the founding of the United States, whilst she herself remains
unthanked and unremarked upon in the history books.
Another stage production which has helped in bringing to
light the actions of a commonly passed- over woman, is Photograph 51 recently opened again with Nicole Kidman playing the X-ray
crystallographer, Rosalind Franklin. Despite the extent of her role in the
discovery of the structure of DNA being debated, it is not arguable that she
did play a vital part in it and yet it is the three men, James Watson, Maurice
Wilkins and her student, Raymond Gosling, who were awarded the Nobel Prize for
the identification of DNA’s structure whilst Franklin was not credited for it
during her lifetime.
The Madame Curie
Complex: The Hidden History of Women in Science (written by Julie Des
Jardins) explores other woman unmentioned in textbooks.
However, science isn’t the only field where they are passed over.
However, science isn’t the only field where they are passed over.
Anyone who has studied the First World War or the Roaring
20’s in America will have heard of Woodrow Wilson. His second wife, Edith
Bolling, a widow when she met Wilson, is less known. As First Lady she acted as
hostess in the White House, following the example set by the First Ladies
before her. It is her acting during her husband’s second term of Presidency
though that makes her a notable First Lady. Following Wilson’s stroke she took
over much of his work, studying all matters of state and deciding what was to
happen with them. Effectively, she ran the executive branch of the government
whilst her husband was bedridden, unable to run the country he had been elected
to run.
Countless other women every day are acting unknown and
making history without ever being talked about and these three women are merely
examples, known to us because someone has taken the time to write their story,
and not just their husband’s or student’s. They are not completely forgotten
and yet they are not remember either.
Edith and Woodrow Wilson |
It is our duty to ensure the hundreds, thousands, of others
are remembered too and do not remain hidden behind a Mr.
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