Mary Wollstonecraft was an English writer, philosopher, women’s rights activist, educator, and journalist. She was born in London, United Kingdom on April 27, 1759. She later died in London, United Kingdom on September 10, 1797. She was born to a very abusive family and had left home at 17 in 1778, dedicating her life to writing. The Wollstonecraft family included the father, John Edward Wollstonecraft, the mother, Elizabeth Wollstonecraft, and their children, Edward Wollstonecraft, Mary Wollstonecraft, Eliza Wollstonecraft, Everina Wollstonecraft, Henry Wollstonecraft, James Wollstonecraft, and Charles Wollstonecraft. Mr. Wollstonecraft was a very abusive man, especially to his wife. This impacted Mary greatly. This is proven by how she is against the bondage of marriage in …show more content…
This is so because her need to shield her mother from him made her stronger in her belief against the bondage of marriage. It also made her realize that men are not supposed to be the dominate sex, but that male and female are equal. She shows this belief in her many published writings. Mary Wollstonecraft had two main “helpers” in her adulthood. These were her younger sister, Eliza Wollstonecraft, and her best friend, Fanny Blood. In 1784 the three of them established a school in Newington Green, London. A year later, Fanny died, and so Wollstonecraft took a position as governess for the Kingsborough family in Ireland. Fanny Blood had such an impact in Mary Wollstonecraft’s life that she even named her first child after her deceased best friend. Mary Wollstonecraft faced many challenges in her life. The first main challenge was the abuse from her father. The outcome of this event was that she ran away from home to live with her best friend and her family. Another challenge was the death of her mother, two years after she had first run away. The outcome of this is that she ran away again, but this time she began her