The Martha Ballard Diaries project presents the extensive daily journals of Martha Ballard (1735–1812), a midwife and healer in late 18th-century Maine. These handwritten diaries, spanning 27 years, offer a rare and detailed window into the life of a working woman on the American frontier. The project, hosted by the Oregon Historical Society and supported by scholars, provides digital access to transcriptions and contextual materials that illuminate Ballard’s professional duties, household management, community interactions, and family life.
Ballard’s diaries are foundational to women’s history and social history, revealing the rhythms of early American rural life, medical practices, and women’s networks. They document births, deaths, illnesses, weather, local politics, and social gatherings, providing rich insight into the social fabric of her time. This primary source is crucial for historians interested in gender roles, health care, and everyday life in colonial and early republic America.



