
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In 1860, Elizabeth Packard was committed to a mental institution by her husband - for YEARS - for the crime of speaking her mind . This practice was completely legal at the time, and she had no mechanism by which to free herself from confinement - despite the fact that she was completely sane. Her three-year ordeal would turn her into a powerful activist on behalf of rights for both the mentally ill and for married women, who at this time had few legal protections against those that would oppress them.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
By The History Chicks | QCODE4.7
78867,886 ratings
In 1860, Elizabeth Packard was committed to a mental institution by her husband - for YEARS - for the crime of speaking her mind . This practice was completely legal at the time, and she had no mechanism by which to free herself from confinement - despite the fact that she was completely sane. Her three-year ordeal would turn her into a powerful activist on behalf of rights for both the mentally ill and for married women, who at this time had few legal protections against those that would oppress them.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

78,559 Listeners

23,796 Listeners

3,815 Listeners

1,410 Listeners

388 Listeners

13,602 Listeners

365 Listeners

1,083 Listeners

576 Listeners

2,062 Listeners

1,269 Listeners

817 Listeners

1,384 Listeners

511 Listeners

290 Listeners

1,000 Listeners