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Under the Almond Trees

About Under the Almond Trees

"As a historian and a California Bay Area native, I really loved this book! " Amazon reviewer "Linda Ulleseit writes with knowledge and passion." Amazon reviewer Under the Almond Trees is the story of three ordinary women in California who lived extraordinary lives. It starts with a falling tree branch that kills Ellen VanValkenburgh's husband in 1862, forcing her to assume leadership of his paper mill, something women weren't allowed to do. Women weren't allowed to vote yet, either. Ellen decided that had to change, and became a suffragette. In 1901, Emily Williams, Ellen's daughter-in-law, became an architect - very much against her family's wishes. No one would hire a woman, but Emily would not be deterred. She and her life partner Lillian set out to build homes themselves. By the 1930's women enjoyed more freedom, including the vote. Even so, Ellen's granddaughter Eva VanValkenburgh chose a traditional life of marriage and children, even closing her photography business at her husband's insistence. When he later refused to pay for their daughter's college education, Eva followed the example of her Aunt Emily and reopened her photography business.

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  • Language:
  • English
  • ISBN:
  • 9781499252200
  • Binding:
  • Paperback
  • Pages:
  • 366
  • Published:
  • May 16, 2014
  • Dimensions:
  • 152x229x19 mm.
  • Weight:
  • 490 g.
Delivery: 1-2 weeks
Expected delivery: December 12, 2024

Description of Under the Almond Trees

"As a historian and a California Bay Area native, I really loved this book! " Amazon reviewer "Linda Ulleseit writes with knowledge and passion." Amazon reviewer Under the Almond Trees is the story of three ordinary women in California who lived extraordinary lives. It starts with a falling tree branch that kills Ellen VanValkenburgh's husband in 1862, forcing her to assume leadership of his paper mill, something women weren't allowed to do. Women weren't allowed to vote yet, either. Ellen decided that had to change, and became a suffragette. In 1901, Emily Williams, Ellen's daughter-in-law, became an architect - very much against her family's wishes. No one would hire a woman, but Emily would not be deterred. She and her life partner Lillian set out to build homes themselves. By the 1930's women enjoyed more freedom, including the vote. Even so, Ellen's granddaughter Eva VanValkenburgh chose a traditional life of marriage and children, even closing her photography business at her husband's insistence. When he later refused to pay for their daughter's college education, Eva followed the example of her Aunt Emily and reopened her photography business.

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