Frances Wright, a Scotswoman who had emigrated …

Years: 1828 - 1828

Frances Wright, a Scotswoman who had emigrated to the United States in 1818, and with her sister toured from 1818 to 1820, had become enamored with the young nation and become a naturalized citizen in 1825 at the age of thirty.

Wright has authored Views of Society and Manners in America (1821) and A Few Days in Athens (1822).

The publication of the former had been the turning point in Fanny Wright's life, bringing her new acquaintances, leading to her return to the United States, and establishing her as a social reformer.

The book is of great significance to the American people, their social institutions, ideals, and for the liberal revelations of the humanitarian mind of the eighteen-century Enlightenment becoming acquainted with the new democratic world.

The book is translated into several languages and widely read.

Wright advocates abolition, universal equality in education, and feminism.

She also attacks organized religion, greed, and capitalism.

Along with Welsh socialist and social reformer Robert Owen, she demands that the government offer free boarding schools.

In 1828, Wright becomes the first woman to lecture publicly before a mixed audience when she delivers an Independence Day speech at New Harmony, Indiana, where she has spent a significant amount of time.

However, Owen’s brave new world of New Harmony, an experimental self-contained community, fails after two years of dissension among the residents, who, in the words of Owen's son, are "a heterogeneous collection of radicals... honest latitudinarians, and lazy theorists, with a sprinkling of unprincipled sharpers thrown in."

The utopian visionary will shortly disband the utopian community at year’s end.

Josiah Warren, one of the participants in the New Harmony Society, will later assert that the lack of individual sovereignty and private property had doomed the community to failure.

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