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20 Duke J. Gender L. & Pol'y 85 (2012-2013)
Lonely Colonist Seeks Wife: The Forgotten History of America's First Mail Order Brides

handle is hein.journals/djglp20 and id is 89 raw text is: Lonely Colonist Seeks Wife: The Forgotten History of America's
First Mail Order Brides
MARCIA ZUG*
As Catherine looks out across the water, she wonders what her life will be like when
she reaches Virginia. She knows that conditions will be hard, but life in England was also
hard. At least in the colony, there is the possibility of improvement. The Virginia
Company has assured her and the other women that they will have their choice of
marriage partners. They have promised that the men are wealthy, or at least will be
wealthy with the women's help. Moreover, in Virginia, as a married woman she has the
right to share in her husband's wealth. Catherine knows it is a risk, but she has been
assured she can always return home if she changes her mind. Regardless, Catherine
expects to stay. There is little for her back in England. She will marry a colonist and help
found a nation.
The first American mail order brides were independent, powerful and
respected; they are never described as mail order brides. The term mail order
bride is most often reserved for women perceived as victims.' Colonial mail
order brides, by contrast, have other names: Jamestown brides, King's
daughters, and Casket girls. Nonetheless, the label mail order bride is just
as appropriate. Sources describing colonial mail order brides demonstrate that
these women immigrated to America for many of the same reasons as their
modem counterparts, but the colonial mail order brides received a level of
respect and acceptance that typically eludes contemporary mail order brides.2
Distancing today's mail order brides from these lauded forbearers obscures their
similarities and perpetuates the one-dimensional treatment of modem mail order
brides.3 Re-examining the feminist underpinnings of the first mail order brides
* Associate Professor of Law at The University of South Carolina School of Law. I would like to
thank Mark Graber, Martha Ertman, David Schleicher, Robin Wilson, Jana Singer, and Michael
Greenberger for their helpful suggestions and insights with this piece.
1. See, e.g., Christine Chun, The Mail-Order Bride Industry: The Perpetuation of Transnational
Economic Inequalities and Stereotypes, 17 U. PA. J. INT'L ECON. L. 1155 (1996); Donna Lee, Mail Fantasy:
Global Sexual Exploitation in the Mail Order Bride Industry and Proposed Legal Solutions, 5 ASIAN L.J. 139,
139 (1998); Eddy Meng, Mail-Order Brides: Gilded Prostitution and the Legal Response, 28 U. MICH. J. oF L.
REF. 197, 197 (1994); Vanessa Vergara, Abusive Mail Order Bride Marriage and the Thirteenth Amendment,
94 Nw. U. L. REV. 1547, 1547 (2000).
2. See Daniel Epstein, Romance is Dead: Mail Order Brides as Surrogate Corpses, 17 BUFF. J. GENDER
L. & Soc. POL'Y 61, 66 (2009) (likening mail order marriages to necrophilia).
3. See, e.g., Chun, supra note 1, at 1156 (contrasting the original mail order brides who Chun
describes as a necessity based on specific historical and cultural conditions with the modern mail-

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