You’ve just been dropping into the 18th century. You are a) privileged, b) clever, and c) female. That letter C) is going to cause you trouble. And you can expect some grief from the end parenthesis as well. You’re expected to be mindless, pretty (if possible), and above all, childbearing. After that–well, there is no after that. That’s your role. Abandon hope, ye who expected more out of life.
The rational creatures in your world are all male. Just ask one if you don’t believe it. If you think you’re also rational, you’ll have a hard time convincing anyone of it, and you’ll cause all sorts of social embarrassment by trying.
Any form of ambition will also cause embarrassment.
You will, of course, have been educated, but only to be a wife and mother, to manage a prosperous household, and to be decorative–fashionable, demure, graceful, and several other adjectives. You will have learned reading, embroidery, music, dancing, drawing, a little history and geography, maybe a bit of French. Just enough to make yourself agreeable to men and above all, marriageable.
Those are the limits of your expectations, so let’s shift to the past tense. I don’t want to trap you back there for too long. Or myself. I’m about to hyperventilate.
Did I make any of that up because I’m a childless cat lady? Sadly for the people who lived through that era–and sadly for our era, which inherited a surprising number of assumptions from theirs–no. By way of example, the statesman Lord Chesterfield wrote to his son in 1748 that women “are only children of a larger growth; they have an entertaining tattle, and sometimes wit; but for solid, reasoning good sense, I never knew in my life one who had it, or who reasoned and acted consequentially for four-and-twenty-hours together.”
With a bit more generosity, Dr. John Gregory wrote in A Father’s Legacy to his Daughters (1774), “If you happen to have any learning, keep it a profound secret, especially from men, who look with a jealous and malignant eye on a woman of cultivated understanding.”
This is the world the Bluestockings came from and whose conventions they both broke and stayed within.
The conventions they broke
The Bluestockings were never a formal organization. They were a social and intellectual circle made up for the most part of affluent English ladies, and they’re best known today for having hosted gatherings where men and women spoke on equal terms about literature, art, history, philosophy, science, foreign affairs, and pretty much anything except politics. And as Margaret Talbot puts it in the first article I linked to, England made room for them with, “a kind of condescending, self-congratulatory gallantry.”
They hosted some of the age’s top talent, including Samuel Johnson, Edmund Burke, David Garrick, Horace Walpole, and other men of letters, aristocrats with a literary bent, diplomats, painters, politicians. In short, people who mattered.
But they were more than simply hostesses. These were highly educated women at a time when the doors of any serious school were closed to girls and women. Some were self-educated. Some were educated at home by unconventional parents. But having attained an education against all the odds, they were shut out of most of the public spaces, such as coffee houses, where men discussed the issues of the day. The only way they were going to be part of those discussions was to bring the discussions into their homes. Hence the hostessing.
The men they invited had something to gain as well. Gatherings that discussed serious subjects were in sharp contrast to the usual social evenings of their class, which involved drinking, cards (of course for money, silly), and, as Talbot puts it, getting up to “sexual shenanigans.” That helps explain why the Bluestockings offered lemonade and tea instead of booze.
But the Bluestockings did more than just host salons. Many of them went on to write novels, criticism, history, classical scholarship, and endless letters. Letters were the social media of the day. Others worked as translators. One of them, Elizabeth Montagu, published an essay that was influential in establishing Shakespeare as a central figure in England’s national identity. The essay first appeared anonymously and after it became a smash hit (in the small circles where these things could be smash hits) it was republished under her name.
Publishing was more than just a way to participate in the national conversation. It was one of the few fields where a woman could keep the money she earned. She couldn’t go into business or own property in her own name, but she could publish.
The conventions they kept
But far from throwing all conventions out the window, they lived the conventional lives of ladies of their class, running their households and caring for aging parents, as women were expected to. Elizabeth Carter, whose translation of Epictetus held its place as the standard translation for the next century, is described by Gibson as “always careful to present herself as the perfect woman: meek and modest, diffident and self-effacing, completely unthreatening to male authority.”
She could make a pudding as well as she could translate ancient Greek.
And then there was class. As ladies of their class were meant to be, they were snobs. One, Hannah More, had helped a working class woman publish her first book of poems, and when the book was successful enough to bring in some money she pressured the author to put her money in a trust administered by More and another upper-class Bluestocking, because how could “such a Woman” be trusted with her “poor Children’s money?”
(As you can see from the quotes, they didn’t break the conventions around capitalization either. They capitalized anything they damn well pleased.)
Another tale involves conventions around both class and women’s bodies. And religion. When the widow Hester Thrale married her daughter’s music teacher, her Bluestocking former friends were toxic about it. He was of the wrong class, he was foreign born, and he was Catholic. She was giving in to passion, and they were above passion. As one wrote, “Overbearing Passions are not natural in a ‘Matron’s bones.”
Part of the problem with passion was that their intellectual claims rested on their respectability. One whiff of scandal and the whole structure might collapse. The rest of the problem was that in their world women were thought of as physical and men as intellectual, and in order to emphasize women’s rationality, they saw themselves as standing outside their bodies. That made them refined and respectable. That was the basis for equal treatment. Lose that and they were back to being just babymakers.
Their name
The name Bluestockings came not from what the w\omen wore but from a single man at one of those salons–or so the story goes. A botanist, Benjamin Stillingfleet, was invited and didn’t bother to change from the blue worsted stockings he wore in the field to the white silk stockings upper class men wore to formal occasions. Or else he was invited and declined because he didn’t have the appropriate clothes and his hostess told him to come “in his blue stockings.”
Or else–as one article claims–the respectable stockings were black, not white. It doesn’t matter and I can’t be bothered chasing that down. My money’s on white. Believe whatever version you like. Believe them all if you can manage. Either way, the story has nothing to do with what the women wore. The women accepted and used the term.
Later, when their time had passed, Bluestocking became an insult–something to call a woman with intellectual ambitions and unbecoming opinions. And the radicals who might would’ve been sympathetic to their inherent feminism overlooked them as elitist and conservative.
Still, history didn’t erase them. The Bluestockings had an effect on Jane Austen, Mary Wollstonecraft, and much later Virgina Woolf, and through them, on us.
Nothing is lost. I swear it to you.

Hi, Ellen. Hope you are well and enjoying life. A immensely skilfully written article. I really enjoyed my further education(never heard of the Blue Stockings until now) Although there have been some changes since those times, there is still a long road to travel for women to achieve true equality. A struggle I support by thought and deed. If I may, I would like to repost your article ( on my next blog, giving you the credit you deserve)
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I’d be delighted to have you reblog it. Thanks. And yes, we do have a long road left to travel.
I first heard of the Bluestockings from my mother, who was very aware of women’s issues. She never told me much about them, and for whatever reason I didn’t ask, but I picked up a sense that it wasn’t entirely a positive history. So I was interested to learn about what’s clearly a mixed inheritance.
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fascinating article. I had heard the term but didn’t know the meaning. Poor Elizabeth, passion in her matronly bones.
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I hope her matronly bones had a good time. I’m pretty sure they did.
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When I was 13 I launched a campaign against my High School’s dress code. I (eventually successfully) petitioned for girls to be permitted to wear trousers. I know: scandalous. Anyway, the Headmaster, exasperated with my arguing one particular day, referred to me as a Bluestocking. That was my introduction to the term. I had to go look it up in the library. This was the 1980s, not the 1780s.
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Oh, you bold kid.
Isn’t it wonderful how someone’s insult can put a person in touch with her history?
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I welcome all learning opportunities – and I taught that Headmaster a lesson too because the uniform policy did get changed.
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Ha! Good for you!
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I was relieved to see your first paragraph was not alluding to J.D. Vance’s ideal state for all women. Not surprising the 18th century sounds quite similar.
Margaret Atwood has said she wrote the sequel to The Handmaid’s Tale just within the last few years because she had not expected events to take the turn they have. She had assumed the original book said enough.
As a teacher I dealt with a principal much like Pict’s headmaster. He would have preferred 1780.
For awhile I got a catalogue of books that had something about “Bluestocking” in the title. “A literary woman.” I haven’t gotten one lately so I don’t know if they are still in business. or they dropped me from their list when I didn’t order any more.
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This is probably something different from the catalogue you used to get, but it’s one of the places Lord Google referred me to: https://bluestockings.com/about-us/about-us. For whatever that’s worth. A case, I think, of embracing a word that used to be an insult.
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I had wondered where the name came from & what it originally meant when I encountered the Bluestocking Bookstore in NYC. How appropo.
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Now that you mention it, I have heard of the bookstore. And forgotten it, as I do with so much of my life.
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Fascinating history. Thanks for the info.
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My pleasure.
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Bluestocking was still used as a degrogatory term in my mother’s day. She said she didn’t stay on at school to do A levels and go to university because she didnt want to become a “bluestocking”. I think it was the 1950s version of the “childless-cat-lady” thing. She has had a whole succession of cats (and 4 children).
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I think you’ve nailed it with the cat lady analogy! And as a later generation did with “bluestockings,” people are agressively embracing the cat lady identity. I love it.
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I think there are a lot of us!
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If the posts I see on Facebook are any indication, as many as the grains of sand on the beach.
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Fascinating stuff! I hope if I’d lived in that time period, I would have been a Bluestocking!
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From the sound of it, those of us who weren’t from their, ahem,, social circle would’ve been tolerated and patronized if we were good enough but I get the impression we’d never have been central. But I admit, that’s from some pretty shallow reading–and given the alternatives, we’d probably have been happy to be there at all.
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It is interesting that a class distinction pervades most of feminism’s history. The upper classes had the time and means to organize, while many in the lower classes were already in the workforce trying to survive.
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True. And a lot of women poured whatever energy they had left after the struggle into more class-based efforts, which would’ve been more immediate. Seems like no struggle for freedom is so pure that it doesn’t miss something glaring obvious–at least glaringly obvious to everyone else.
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I was proud to be called a blue-stocking and the college I attended was famous in the university for being full of blue-stockings!
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Amazing how the word’s hung on, with all its mixes associations. And even more amazing, when you back away enough not to take it for granted, how threatening independent women are to, ahem, some people.
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Interesting ladies, I did not know them. Only the usual suspects of 18th century’s Reich, like v.ARNIM, the SCHELLING babes, SCHLÖZER, KAUFFMANN, those. And of course, wounderful Rahel VARNHAGEN.
I have no idea about woman’s legal status on these beautiful green islands, but I am pretty sure that a woman could do business, and legally buy and own “stuff” on the Continent. The later wife of LESSING e.g. stepped in /succeeded her first husband as Fernkaufmann, long distance merchant. Took her two years or so, and a lot of travel from Hamburg to the South of Italy, to get things sorted.
BTW there are rich, powerful & influential women in The Church, usually abatissae. The leading ladies of 17th century Fontevraud for example had a say in things.
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In England in this period, widows had considerably more self-determination than either wives or unmarried women. The problem was that widowhood wasn’t always an easy state to achieve. In earlier periods, wealthy widows could be forced into marriage and their fortunes taken over by their new husbands.
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And I fancied myself a subversive intellectual teenager wearing navy blue tights instead of black for school, accidentally on purpose…
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And I’m sure you were, with or without the tights.
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