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Modern Persecution, Or Married Woman's Liabilities, as Demonstrated by the Action of the Illinois Legislature
Elizabeth Parsons Ware Packard
出版
Authoress
, 1879
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=E_eGzgEACAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋
"In 1864, Elizabeth was married to a minister who thought his wife was 'slightly insane.' Illinois law, at the time, required evidence of insanity - in all cases - before a person could be committed to a mental institution. In all cases, that is, except when a man wanted to send his wife to an insane asylum. Unbelievably, the same law existed in many other states. Elizabeth spent three years in the Illinois State Hospital for the Insane based solely on her husband's assertion. When she was set free, her husband thought she was still insane. Taking matters into his own hands, he locked his wife in the nursery and nailed all the windows shut. This time, however, he had gone too far. Illinois law did not allow a husband to 'put away' his wife in her own home. Elizabeth managed to slip a note outside the nursery window. Her friend found the note and appealed to a judge for help. A jury would decide her sanity. It took just seven minutes for the jury to agree. Elizabeth Packard was a free, sane woman. Although Elizabeth didn't have the right to vote, she had been personally penalized by an unjust law. She spent the rest of her life trying to convince lawmakers to change the laws on mental confinement and women's property rights. By the time she died, she had been successful in four states. Elizabeth never reconciled with her husband, although she lived with him for the rest of her life"--Insert provided by book seller