What expectations does someone have for themselves, others, the world around them? Deciding the answers to these questions can only be retort by the person themselves. But what if that person does not have the power to do this. Imagine living in a time in which the equality between men and women were so distraught that society reform entailed witchcraft and a war to declare change. During the Colonial area and early Republic the social and economic classes were extremely distinct in which they were portrayed, everyone had there role in an essence. Women preserved household disposition, this entailed festivities like preparing and buying food, taking care of children, and chores in general. Women also uplifted faith and righteous growth; they were key spiritual guiders in the home. However, above all women socially were subordinate to men. From the time she was a little girl her assets and identity belonged to her father in which was transferred to her husband when she will get married. Economically women served as a benefit to the family, they “women were put under an immense pressure to return to their traditional role as mothers and housewives, completely dedicated to their children and dependent on their husbands” (Lamb,16). This was so the men could work while the women did “Women’s Work” which included weaving, spinning, and churning and other household upkeeps. If they miraculously lived in the city they engaged in homogenous activities, however had the alternative choice in employing themselves among the community, serving as nurses and seamstresses. Women also attended children and mothers during childbirth Prior to the Eighteenth Century. Socially, men stood in a very different limelight, women did not have much social power, however the purpose of a man, to them, was to have immense social power. “They were taught to pity the neurotic, unfeminine, unhappy women who wanted a Professional career, higher education and political rights”(Lamb,29) In the Colonial area the society was intensely patriarchal and they often loved power in public and private life. Men also had the opportunity to hold an education; this helped with obtaining a great job. In a family’s community, men contributed to most of the labor, which was appreciated by all