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Book details
  • Genre:FICTION
  • SubGenre:Historical / Colonial America & Revolution
  • Language:English
  • Pages:304
  • eBook ISBN:9798350958034
  • Paperback ISBN:9798350958027

The Emancipation of Hannah Faythe Winslow

A Woman's Journey in Colonial America

by Karen Warfield

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Overview
After the 1637 Mohegan and Pequot War, Hannah finds herself a hostage of unbearable religious dogma in a patriarchal society. She could not fathom the omniscience of God as she witnessed the brutality of man upon fellow man, but she discovers God's grace as He leads her into the uncharted territories of the new world. Follow her journey from a child bride and a woman captive to a woman triumphant in "The Emancipation of Hannah Faythe Winslow."
Description
The Emancipation of Hannah Faythe Winslow: A Woman's Journey in Colonial America by author Karen Warfield is a work of literary fiction with historical facts woven throughout themes of deception and restoration. After the 1637 Mohegan and Pequot War, orphaned Hannah is left with a vile and amoral man who evades the local magistrates under the guise of establishing a plantation in southeastern Connecticut. She and the missionaries are sent to bring Christianity to the local tribes under an English charter that guarantees each family a homestead at the end of seven years. But instead of living a Godly, noble life, Hannah finds herself a hostage of unbearable religious dogma and a patriarchal society. She could not fathom the omniscience of God as she witnessed the brutality of man upon fellow man. But Hannah discovers God's grace as He leads her into the uncharted territories of the new world. She was a child bride, a woman captive, and finally, a woman triumphant.
About the author
Karen Warfield is a U.S. Army veteran and a graduate of Southern Illinois at Carbondale, where she earned her degree in Workforce Education and Development. She was the Associate Editor for "The 9-Mile Square," published on behalf of Connecticut's Norwich Historical Society. This book received the Betty Linsley Award for historical writing for best work on a significant aspect of Connecticut's history published or produced by, for, or on behalf of a Connecticut historical society or organization.