She Kept A Diary

I just finished reading The Frozen River by Ariel Lawhon, historical fiction chronicling a winter in the life of Martha Ballard, the midwife of A Midwife’s Tale by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich.
I’ve had the latter on my shelf for years, though I haven’t read it. But The Frozen River pulled me in from the beginning. What struck me most about the novel was not how quickly I turned the pages, but how vividly the character of Martha was portrayed.
I didn’t realize until the author’s note at the end that Martha Ballard was the same 18th-century midwife that appeared in A Midwife’s Tale, and that all the diary entries in the novel are the ones penned by the real, historical Ballard. A woman we only know because she kept a diary.
As Ulrich writes, “Outside her own diary Martha has no history. No independent record of her work survives. It is her husband’s name, not hers, that appears in censuses, tax lists, and merchant accounts for her town…. Martha did not leave a farm, but a life, recorded patiently and consistently for 27 years.”
Here’s how the fictional Martha put it: “I cannot say why it is so important I make this daily record. Perhaps because I have been doing so for years on end? Or maybe—if I am being honest—it is because these markings of ink and paper will one day be the only proof that I have existed in this world. That I lived and breathed. That I loved a man and the many children he gave me. It is not that I want to be remembered, per se. I have done nothing remarkable. Not by the standards of history, at least. But I am here. And these words are the mark I will leave behind.”
As a diarist/journal-keeper for decades, I know just what she means. She kept a diary. And that made all the difference.
(A ledger from Williamsburg, Virginia, the same era as Ballard, but with numbers not words on the page.)








