Abby Hills Price 

    Abby Price (1814 - 1873) was one of the few people whose words were recorded in the Proceedings of the 1850 National Woman's Rights Convention.  She was born July 18,1814 in Franklin, CT., and died May 4, 1873 of apoplexy at Red Bank, NJ.  She married Edmund Price (born on March 1, 1808), described as an unsuccessful hatter who made poor investments. 

Children:
      1. Arthur W. Price was born January 23, 1840 in Willimantic, CT. He became an engineer in   the   U.S. Navy.
      2. Helen C. Price was born May 18, 1841 in Willimantic, CT.
      3. Emily W. Price was born in Hopedale.
      4. Henry Edmund Price was born April 2, 1850 in Hopedale and died May 2, 1852.

   Mr. Price was by trade a hatter.  He was a very honest, industrious, hard-working man in whatever business engaged, often consuming 15-18 hours of the 24.  Had he been as successful in preserving the fruits of his toil as in earning them, he must have become wealthy.  But, with no vicious or spend-thrift habits, through misjudgment or ill-luck in the investment of his funds, he frequently lost in large sums what he had acquired by laborious diligence.  He and his wife came to Hopedale in 1842, and were among our early members of the community.  Mrs. Price was an intelligent woman, with a literary and poetic genius.  She occupied an influential official position in the community for several years.  In 1853, she and her husband removed to Englewood, NJ, thence to New York City, and last to near Red Bank, Monmouth Co., NJ.  There she died suddenly of apoplexy, May 4, 1878.  An interesting memorial obituary testifying to her life-work and worth, soon after appeared in the New York Tribune.
Biographical and Genealogical Register of Milford, page 979.

    Just below the the entry for Edmund and Abby Price in the Genealogical Register is the following:

Price, Charles Henry, a bro. of Edmund, b. in Brooklyn, Ct., June 15, 1819; became a member of the Community at Hopedale in Aug. 1843, and for some yrs. was a faithful and efficent manager of our Transportation Branch. In 1844 he m. Betsey Cleveland, b. in Bozrah, Ct., Aut 27, 1823, and removed her hither.

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   "Nearly all that we know about the
Hopedale Community (1841-1856) is written through the eyes of Adin Ballou, its founder, planner, theologian, President, and historian.  Ballou referred to Price- as "a sort of poet-laureate to the Community."   I found more than sixty poems, several articles, and the story related in the following pages.  I also found evidence that there are many other stories waiting to be discovered and told.

    "Abby's writings give us an intriguing picture of a highly intelligent, educated woman, absolutely committed to Practical Christian Socialism.  The writings that we have contain a strong but warm and loving religious flavor.  Her writing is replete with Biblical allusion and metaphor which she applies to the reform movements with enormous skill.  They show us a woman whose thoughts were developing over the years, and whose personal commitment to reform began to focus on womans' rights by the early 1950s.  And they show us a woman with the courage to speak before a national convention, criticizing the large society in which she found herself; a woman whose courage failed when it came to wearing the newfangled Bloomer costume in public and a woman who finally turned a critical eye on the community which she loved, advocating for changes in women's sphere with that community.  I would suggest that it may have been this criticism of Hopedale itself that led to a lack of support during a time of interpersonal crisis, leaving her vulnerable and ultimately leading to her decision to leave.

   "Abby Price along with her fellows at Hopedale was strongly anti-war [Mexican War], giving many of her anti-slavery writings a rich, sweet-sour mixture of hope that slavery would end without war, that God and love would somehow put an end to the evil of slavery.

   "There was a particular chain of events that led to the departure of Abby and her family from Hopedale.  Adin Ballou refers to these events a 'A Free Love Episode' [in his History of Hopedale].  He mentions no names. But upon hearing a rumor, Sam'l W. Wheeler of Providence wrote to Abby Price as follows:  'It is reported that you, with two or three others, (Henry Fish is named as one,) are about being or are excluded from Hopedale Community.  I hear nothing as a reason but that you have adopted what is call by some the 'Free Love' principle What is it? what does it mean?...You cannot imagine my feelings.  Seldom, if ever, has my spirit been troubled as it is now.  Do write immediately.'  To his credit, Adin Ballou published this letter and Abby's reply in The Practical Christian. [July 2, 1853]"     
Susan G. LaMar,  The Poetry, Politics, and Prophecy of Abby Hills Price.    (unpublished paper for Andover Newton Theological School, 1998). 

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   In a biography of Walt Whitman,  written by Mitchell Santine Gould, it mentions that, " Helen Price was the daughter of one Whitman's dearest confidantes, Abby Hills Price."
 
                 
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