<petition><petition_analysis_number>20185307</petition_analysis_number><petition_url>https://dlas.uncg.edu/petitions/petition/20185307</petition_url><state>Alabama</state><county>Dallas</county><location_type>County</location_type><file_day>26</file_day><file_month>2</file_month><file_year>1853</file_year><filing_court>Chancery</filing_court><end_day>0</end_day><end_month>11</end_month><end_year>1853</end_year><ending_court>Chancery</ending_court><result>dismissed</result><enslaved_count>0</enslaved_count><fpoc_count>0</fpoc_count><total_people_count>3</total_people_count><repository>Dallas County Courthouse, Selma, Alabama</repository><abstract>At age fifteen, Jane Adams believed William Chapman's "repeated professions &amp; promises of fidelity and affection," and thinking he possessed all the prerequisites for matrimonial happiness--honesty, sobriety, industry, and chastity--she accepted his proposal of marriage.  They were wed in 1834.  Jane's father, John Adams, gave her a separate estate of cash and three slaves worth two thousand dollars.  Shortly after their marriage, however, William became "Cold in his affections &amp; pitiful in his passions," leaving her for extended periods "in Search of other &amp; Strange Women."  He committed adultery on numerous occasions.  She, however, remained with him "notwithstanding her husbands great want of affection &amp; fidelity &amp; his occasional harsh &amp; brutal treatment."   She bore him six children, two of whom died, but when he brought a woman suspected of murder to live with them, she fled to her father's house.  William Chapman, Jane charges, continues to live "with other &amp; base &amp; vicious Women."  "She has done all that Woman Can or ought to do," she asserts, "to reclaim her wayward husband."  She seeks a divorce.</abstract><subjects><subject>Adultery</subject><subject>Divorce</subject><subject>Domestic violence</subject><subject>Abandonment </subject><subject>Sex workers/Promiscuity </subject></subjects></petition>