The Research Like a Pro Genealogy Podcast

RLP 385: Women and the Law of Property in Early America

10 snips
Nov 24, 2025
Diana and Nicole dive into an intriguing 1867 divorce case that highlights the complexities of dower rights. They explore Marylynn Salmon's book on women's property law in early America, revealing how women's rights evolved post-Revolution. Key topics include the legal status of married women, varying regional laws, and the significance of understanding property records for genealogy. Listeners gain insights on statutes like the feme sole trader act and the impact of colonial laws on women's autonomy and property ownership.
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ANECDOTE

Unexpected Tax Record Revival

  • Diana describes finding tax records that proved a man she thought died was alive decades later.
  • She used those records and DNA to reconnect scattered family branches after a courthouse fire erased other traces.
ADVICE

Read The Book By Chapter And Place

  • Read Marylynn Salmon's book by chapter and focus on the geography relevant to your research.
  • Highlight and annotate dense sections so you can apply specific legal context to ancestral records.
INSIGHT

Law vs. Practice Matters

  • Understand both formal law and how courts applied it in practice to interpret records correctly.
  • Salmon emphasizes that practice often diverged from theory and shaped women's lived legal realities.
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