What Was the Role of the Pioneer Women
People often wonder what was the role of the pioneer women west of the Rockies
You might enjoy reading Gilded Girls: Women Entertainers
of
the Old West, by JoAnn Chartier and Chris Enss
People often wonder what was the role of the pioneer women in
American history west of the Rockies. Women were not strictly homesteaders
or camp followers. From Catherine Hayes, the "Irish prima donna," and
Maude Adams, "the most popular actress in America," to the legendary
Sarah Bernhardt, Gilded Girls profiles fourteen of the liveliest, wildest,
and most talented female entertainers ever to light up the boards of the western
frontier. You'll meet "the Jersey Lily," who was wildly admired
by men as various Oscar Wilde, Mark Twain, Diamond Jim Brady, and Judge Roy
Bean; Mrs. Leslie Carter, a scandal-plagued society women who became a famous
actress as an act of revenge against her patrician ex-husband; a French-Creole
beauty known as the "Frenzy of Frisco" who took up the Zionist and
feminist causes in between her daring acting roles; and "Klondike Kate," a
flame-haired entertainer who took Alaska's gold rush country by storm but
suffered a very public heartbreak.
Some of the fascinating women are renowned even to this day, others are remembered
only in the pages of history, but all personified the daring, colorful, and independent
spirit of the Old West.












