enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Lydia Darragh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lydia_Darragh

    Lydia Darragh (1729 – December 28, 1789) was an Irishwoman said to have crossed the lines during the British occupation of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania during the American Revolutionary War, delivering information to George Washington and the Continental Army that warned them of a pending British attack. [2]

  3. Anna Maria Lane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna_Maria_Lane

    Anna Maria Lane (c. 1755–1810) was the first documented female soldier from Virginia to fight with the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War.She dressed as a man and accompanied her husband on the battlefield, and was later awarded a pension for her courage in the Battle of Germantown.

  4. Mrs. David Wright's Guard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mrs._David_Wright's_Guard

    Mrs. David Wright's Guard was an all-woman militia raised by the Patriots in Massachusetts during the American Revolutionary War. The Guard were an armed force of 30 to 40 women who guarded the Nashua River crossings to prevent the movement of Loyalist couriers.

  5. Women in the American Revolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_the_American...

    Women in the American Revolution played various roles depending on their social status, race and political views. The American Revolutionary War took place as a result of increasing tensions between Great Britain and the Thirteen Colonies. American colonists responded by forming the Continental Congress and going to war with the British. The ...

  6. Mary Lindley Murray - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Lindley_Murray

    Mary Lindley Murray (1720 – December 25, 1782) is known in the American Revolution as the Quaker woman who in 1776 held up British General William Howe after the British victory against American forces at Kips Bay.

  7. Daughters of Liberty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daughters_of_Liberty

    She is also the author of "Sentiments of an American Woman," an essay that intended to rouse colonial women to join the fight against the British. She was able to use her marriage to Joseph Reed to help her gain more influence and resources. [9] Deborah Sampson later emerged as a symbol for female involvement in the Revolutionary War. Rather ...

  8. Timeline of women in warfare in Colonial America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_women_in...

    1782–1783: Deborah Sampson serves in the American army during the American Revolutionary War while disguised as a man. She is the first known American woman from Massachusetts to join the military, the first to fight in combat, and the first to receive a military pension.

  9. Anne Bailey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anne_Bailey

    Anne Bailey (c. 1742 – November 22, 1825) was a British-born American story teller and frontier scout who served in the fights of the American Revolutionary War and the Northwest Indian War. Her single-person ride in search of an urgently needed powder supply for the endangered Clendenin's Settlement (present-day Charleston , West Virginia ...