Deeds of Daring done by Girls

Deeds of Daring done by Girls
Published in the late 19th century as a corrective to the era's limiting expectations of young women, this collection gathers true stories of girls and women who answered calls for bravery when circumstance demanded it. From young girls who saved lives during fires to teenage heroines who fought in wars alongside their brothers, these accounts span continents and decades, proving that courage wears no particular uniform. Moore writes with earnest conviction, addressing her readers as 'dear girls' and insisting that 'stout hearts beat beneath muslin frocks' as surely as under 'stuff jackets.' Each story celebrates a specific act of daring, building an argument not through essays but through evidence. The book matters now because it captures something many still hunger for: proof that heroism has never been the exclusive property of one gender. It endures not as dusty historical curiosity but as a testament to the invisible archives of female bravery that too often go unsung.
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James K. White, Leeswim, Barbara Hale, Sarah +2 more







