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The Letters of a Victorian Madwoman (Women's Diaries and Letters of the South)

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About this book

Andrew Sheffield was a woman with a mans name. Throughout her life this symbolic disjunction characterized her story. In 1890 forty years of age and unmarried she was considered by neighbors and family to be eccentric and possibly insane. Living alone in rural northern Alabama she had conducted an affair with her doctor who was supplying her with the opiate chloral hydrate to which she was addicted. When she was arrested for attempting to burn down the house of a neighbor who was feuding with the doctor her prominent family had her forcibly committed to Bryce Hospital in Tuscaloosa in order to avoid a sensational trial. Shortly after her commitment her father shot and killed the doctor for "tainting the family name." Sheffields letters commence where this family drama ends. The letters nearly one hundred in all span her thirty years of confinement. The early letters document this extremely intelligent womans vigorous efforts through pleas to various governors to win her release and transfer to the womens penitentiary. Later letters focus more on the details of life in a Victorian insane asylum in the deep South. Her letters help us better understand the full range of behavior among women in the Victorian South and the limits of Southern womanhood near the end of the nineteenth century. They are also unique in providing valuable information on life inside a mental hospital at the turn of the century from a patients perspective. These illuminating letters together with the editors extensive commentary are excellent sources for the study of Southern medical social and womens history in the turn-of-the-century South.