The Women Who Misbehaved
Today's mini-episode discusses Cornelia Crosby. The mid-1800s saw a massive cultural shift toward nature, driven by a growing romanticization of the wilderness in America. Influenced by urbanization and new scientific curiosity, people pursued hiking, botany, and a recognition of wilderness as a key part of national identity. During this era, one of the US’s most prominent "outdoorsmen" was actually a woman. Her name was Cornelia Crosby, an iconic American journalist and outdoorswoman who played a central role in establishing Maine's tourism sector. Writing under the pen name "Fly Rod," she achieved national fame for her expertise in fly fishing and her passionate advocacy for the Maine woods. A fiercely independent woman who never wed, she was known for challenging the social norms of her era, once telling a journalist, "I would rather fish any day than go to heaven."
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