In Defense of Coverture – Guest Post by Jesse 
Powell
Coverture was the legal system of marriage in 
England from 
1188 to 1870; from the Tractatus of Glanvill to the Married Women’s Property Act 
of 1870.  The Tractatus of Glanvill was the first effort to systemize and make 
more formal English Common Law, it was the beginning of the common law system in 
England.  The 
Married Women’s Property Act of 1870 was the beginning of the modern day 
feminist revolution; so basically the era of coverture goes from the beginning 
of common law to the beginning of modern feminism in 
England.  Early 
America as an 
English colony originally also adopted coverture regarding the laws of marriage 
up until American Married Women’s Property Acts started to be enacted state by 
state from 1839 to 1865.  The Norman Conquest of England in 1066 is what set the 
stage for the later emergence of common law in 
England and 
coverture as part of common law.
It should be pointed out however that coverture which was 
part of common law or secular law was not the only legal authority affecting the 
lives of married women; equity courts, ecclesiastical law (from the church), and 
customary law were alternative sources of legal authority that women could 
appeal to.  These alternative jurisdictions were not bound by the coverture 
principle that wives were “covered” by their husbands; wives often acted on 
their own as plaintiffs and defendants in the proceedings of these alternative 
jurisdictions, these alternative jurisdictions giving women including married 
women certain individual rights and opportunities for redress and litigation 
outside of the system of coverture.
The idea behind coverture was that the wife and the husband 
were one legal entity; in practice this meant that the husband was always the 
one either suing or being sued and that the husband was the only one who could 
enter into contracts, that the wife could only enter into a contract including 
employment contracts with her husband’s consent, and that the husband was 
legally in control of all marital property and income including property brought 
into the marriage by the wife and including income earned by the 
wife.
An interesting aspect of coverture that is often overlooked 
is that the wife could act on behalf of her husband unilaterally with the 
husband’s presumed consent to purchase household goods or “necessaries” 
according to the husband’s economic status.  This meant that the wife 
unilaterally acting on her own initiative was automatically assumed under the 
law to be acting as an agent of her husband when purchasing ordinary household 
goods.  In other words the husband was automatically legally liable to pay for 
any debts his wife incurred “acting on his behalf” in the purchase of 
“necessaries” such as clothing, food, lodgings, and medicines for domestic use.  
A husband could take steps to try to control his wife’s spending by contacting 
specific traders and retailers telling them to no longer accept credit from his 
wife or by general announcements such as paying the town crier to announce to 
everyone that retailers should no longer accept credit from his wife or taking 
out advertisements in the newspaper telling retailers to no longer accept credit 
from his wife.
As the paper “Favored or oppressed? Married women, property, and ‘coverture’ in England, 1660-1800”
states:
states:
“A married woman could not contract debts in her own name. 
Instead, the common-law device of the law of agency provided her with the right 
to purchase necessaries in her husband’s name, according to his rank and wealth. 
A husband’s consent to his wife’s pledging his credit was assumed from the 
couple’s cohabitation. As The laws respecting women stated in 1772, ‘the 
husband shall answer all contracts of hers for necessaries, for his assent shall 
be presumed to all necessary contracts, upon the account of cohabiting ’.  This 
implied authority meant that retailers and traders could deal confidently with a 
wife without checking whether she had her husband’s permission to act as his 
agent.  A wife therefore had the right to make purchases using her husband’s 
credit while they cohabited, even if she was known to be adulterous. The right 
still applied if her husband turned her out or if she was forced to leave her 
husband to escape his violence. Wives were not entitled to use it, however, if 
they ran away from their husbands for any reason, or if the couple entered into 
a mutually agreed separation and the husband paid a fixed 
maintenance.”
This power of unilateral spending by the wife could sometimes 
have serious negative consequences for the husband.  As related in the “Favored 
or oppressed?” paper about coverture:
“Furthermore, 10 per cent of the secondary complaints in 
the records of marital difficulties were made by husbands accusing their wives 
of extravagance and financial mismanagement.  In response to his wife’s suit for 
restitution of conjugal rights in 1708, Thomas Wood, a sea-faring man of 
Whitburn, explained that he had separated from her because she had lived 
extravagantly, contracting debts during his time at sea that reduced him to 
poverty.
The complaint of financial mismanagement sometimes 
referred to business as well as household concerns, when men claimed that their 
business had been damaged by their wives’ actions. In 1723 one farmer declared 
that his stock was not worth £100, as his wife estimated, but no more than £40 
because of her mismanagement.  Similarly social criticism and advice to 
tradesmen commonly blamed wives for their husbands’ bankruptcy. Daniel Defoe, in 
The complete English tradesman noted, ‘ I know ’tis a common cry that is rais’d 
against the woman, when her husband miscarries, namely, that ’tis the wife has 
ruin’d him’, though he went on to observe that this was not generally true.  
This was not just a literary device. A number of husbands accused their wives of 
bankrupting them.  In 1730 Henry Hendry, a wherryman, responded to his wife’s 
accusation of physical abuse with a petition that her ill-management and 
contracting of debts had impoverished him so that he was carried to Newcastle 
gaol.”
The “Favored or oppressed?” paper goes on to detail some of 
the ways women were privileged or protected under coverture:
“The so-called favouritisms that wives enjoyed also 
stemmed from their lack of legal identity. The privileges and rights described 
by the legal guides can be grouped into three general categories.  Firstly, 
coverture imposed obligations upon husbands. A wife was entitled to be 
maintained and to make purchases of necessaries as her husband’s agent.  
Secondly, wives were afforded some protection against the unbridled power of 
their husbands.  They could obtain ‘surety for the peace’ – a bond which obliged 
a husband to keep the peace towards his wife – against violent husbands, could 
retain property in marriage through ‘separate estate ’ – a means by which 
property could be protected for the sole use of the wife during matrimony – and 
could protect certain rights through equity courts.  Finally, married women 
enjoyed the evasion or mitigation of punishment in certain types of offences. 
For example, a wife could not be punished for committing theft in the company of 
her husband, because the law supposed that she acted under his coercion.  Wives’ 
inability to make financial transactions in their own name also prevented them 
from being sued and therefore imprisoned for debt.”
The important thing about coverture that needs to be 
remembered is that coverture was a system of male guardianship of women, 
specifically of husbands towards their wives.  Male guardianship of women is a 
very important principle of traditional culture; to be a guardian means not only 
to control but also to “guard” and serve the interests of the other.  In 
particular it needs to be kept in mind that the guardian has to control the 
person they are guarding and serving in order to guard and serve the person they 
are the guardian of.  Male control is necessary for the man to be able to serve 
the interests of the woman he has been assigned to “watch over” and support; in 
particular male control is necessary for the man to be able to protect himself 
from the woman he is responsible for taking care of.  People don’t understand 
that being responsible for the well being of another is a very vulnerable 
position to be in as the effort you expend for the well being of the other can 
easily be misused or turned into a mechanism of abuse against you.  This is why 
the upholding of male authority has always been a fundamental part of every 
system of male guardianship of women that has been established in the 
past.
The end of coverture was the beginning of family breakdown 
and the beginning of men withdrawing their investment in women.  Coverture was 
the last stable social system the English speaking world had; ever since the 
dismantling of coverture the family has done nothing but get worse and worse and 
worse.  Family breakdown was slow in the decades immediately following the end 
of coverture with family breakdown accelerating as the time since the end of 
coverture lengthened; a very sharp acceleration of family breakdown starting 
after 1960 when the pernicious ideology of “gender equality” first started to 
gain in popularity.  Also thankfully at least in the 
United States a 
backlash against the family breakdown wrought by feminism has slowed down the 
rate of deterioration in the family significantly since 1995.  Historically 
speaking though the end of coverture was the beginning of the great 
self-destruction of family life and gender relations that took place from 1870 
to 1995 before a significant backlash against this family destruction took hold 
starting in 1995 and continuing until today.
In order for family life to be returned to full strength and 
full functioning like it was before feminism started its work of undoing the 
social contract between men and women; that social contract being that I the man 
will take care of you the woman as long as you the woman obey me; coverture or 
something functionally similar to coverture has to be reinstituted.  Men must be 
seen as the guardians of women and placed into a guardianship role in relation 
to women once again.
For more on coverture and the history of the breakdown of 
marriage in the United States including statistics and graphs to illustrate the 
massive withdrawal of male investment in women that has taken place since the 
end of coverture I recommend the following article at my website:
I am Jesse Powell.  My website is Secular Patriarchy 
and my cause is the Traditional Family Activists or TFAs.  On October 30, 2013 I split with the 
TWRAs (Traditional Women’s Rights Activists) to start my own group, the TFAs.  I 
felt it was important to have my own group, to be able to play a leadership role 
as a man.  I still support the cause and purpose of the TWRAs but am no longer 
organizationally connected to the TWRAs or represent the TWRAs.
 
Thanks, Jesse, it was very interesting!
ReplyDeleteBTW, this "surety for the peace" bond sounds a bit like the modern restraining order. I read somewhere that in medieval times a woman in the case of abuse could obtain a "separation from bed and table" order when she was not obliged to live together with her husband but he still had to provide for her.
I'd also like to point out that in a traditional family the husband is (or was) required by law to financially support his wife and children. There is no traditional family without the husband being financially liable for his wife. The husband refusing to provide is similar to the wife taking a lover. Both negate marriage contract, imo. The husband should not require his wife to help earn the living, until it's absolutely necessary for the survival.
ReplyDeleteHaave you ever considered about aadding a little bit more than just your
ReplyDeletearticles? I mean, what you say is valuable and all. Buut just imagine if you added some great photos or videos to give your posts more, "pop"!
Your content is excellent but with picfs and clips, this
blog could definitely be one of the greatest iin its field.
Very good blog!