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OverviewIn 1828 Bridget Miranda Evoy escaped famine-stricken Ireland with her children for a better life in America. But the relief she desperately sought was elusive. Within two years, she was a widow and was left raising her five children after the untimely death of her husband. Finding herself in dire straits in “The Gateway to the West”, Bridget's Gambit tells the story of how this remarkable young widow managed to make her way to California and became an entrepreneur during the Gold Rush. In this engrossing family saga, Craig S. Harwood recounts the adventures and accomplishments of this singularly determined woman and her daughters, from a harrowing overland crossing in the winter of 1849 to innovative efforts to build an empire in defiance of the social and gender constraints of the Victorian Era. When Bridget and her family arrived in the California Territory, they saw opportunities where others did not, charting a path rooted in a prescient view of the rapidly evolving western economy. By pursuing commercial ventures that served emerging communities in Northern California, the family was able to ascend the social ladder and exert influence, doing business with many early shapers of California statehood. Bridget's Gambit captures the stark reality of the patriarchal world of business in the Old West—and the extraordinary lengths to which Bridget and her daughters went in creating a diverse web of financial enterprises that brought some of the most prominent American businessmen into her orbit. Harwood's spirited biography of an audacious, persistent woman brings to the forefront the largely unheralded contributions of women in the forming of California statehood—and restores a lost chapter to the history of the American West. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Craig S. HarwoodPublisher: University of Oklahoma Press Imprint: University of Oklahoma Press ISBN: 9780806196558ISBN 10: 0806196556 Pages: 212 Publication Date: 28 February 2026 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviews“This story of family enterprise in California challenges the western myth of individualism. Land deals, toll bridges, lodging houses, dry goods stores, and a ranch created by a woman and her extended clan succeeded because of family labor and co-investment, not because of one lone individual. Women and men alike within this family fueled these enterprises with their sweat, their capital, and their vision.”—Dee Garceau, author of The Important Things of Life: Women, Work, and Family in Sweetwater County, Wyoming, 1880–1929 Author InformationCraig S. Harwood is the great-great-grandson of Zachariah Montgomery, John J. Montgomery’s father. A native Californian, he is an engineering geologist with twenty years’ experience as a technical writer. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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