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=== Tryphena Hubbard's legal battle === In Anthony Wonderly's ''Oneida Utopia'', he covers the 1848β1851 Hubbard affair as a moment where a legal conflict almost ended the group, which was only a mere "Association" at the time. Twenty-one-year-old Tryphena Hubbard learned Noyes' ideas about marriage and sex through his manuscript ''Bible Argument'' in 1848. She joined the community and became the group's first local convert. Tryphena Hubbard soon married Henry Seymour, a young man in the community.{{sfn |Wonderley |2017 |pp=72β74, 137}} Early in 1849, Tryphena's father, Noahdiah Hubbard, learned of the Association's open marriages and demanded his daughter's return. Tryphena refused, and for two years, Noahdiah "made a sulking nuisance of himself at the Mansion House."{{sfn |Wonderley |2017 |pp=72β74, 137}} An 1850 criticism of Tryphena mentioned her "insubordination to the church" and "excess egotism amounting to insanity."{{sfn |Wonderley |2017 |pp=72β74, 137}} There was marriage before the community attempted perfectionism, and Tryphena's husband's supervision over her was increased along with the "disciplinary norms of the day, physical punishment."{{sfn |Wonderley |2017 |pp=72β74, 137}} In September 1851, Tryphena began displaying signs of mental illness, "crying at night, speaking incoherently, and wandering around." Seymour went to the Hubbard family to report their daughter's insanity, and both parents were appalled by Seymour's physical violence.{{sfn |Wonderley |2017 |pp=72β74, 137}} On September 27, 1851, Noahdiah Hubbard lodged assault and battery charges on behalf of his daughter.{{sfn |Noyes |Foster |2001 |p=[{{google books |b2SnVuHWIJkC |page=PR55 |plainurl=yes}} lv]}} Seymour was indicted, and other community members were served arrest warrants as accessories.{{sfn |Wonderley |2017 |pp=72β74, 137}} The case was settled on November 26, 1851. The community agreed to Tryphena's expenses while she was in the asylum and after her release $125 a year if she was well and $200 a year if she remained unwell. The Hubbards eventually accepted a $350 settlement in lieu of long-term payments. Tryphena Hubbard eventually returned to Henry Seymour and had a child by him. She died at the age of 49 in 1877.{{sfn |Noyes |Foster |2001 |p=[{{google books |b2SnVuHWIJkC |page=PR55 |plainurl=yes}} lv]}}
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