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Timeline of women in warfare in Colonial America

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Timeline of women in warfare from 1750 until 1799 in America

Nancy Ward
Statue of Sybil Ludington
Molly Pitcher depicted in 1859 engraving

1750s

1770s

  • 1770s: During the American Revolution, women served on the battlefield as nurses, water bearers, cooks, launderers and saboteurs.[1]
  • 1770s: Cherokee woman Cuhtahlatah causes her people to rally in battle by attacking the enemy after her husband was killed.[2]
  • 1770s: Elizabeth Hutchinson Jackson, the mother of Andrew Jackson, treats and nurses sick and wounded Continental soldiers in American Revolutionary War on British prison ship, dying of cholera as a result.
  • 1775: On Dec. 11, 1775, Jemima Warner was killed by an enemy bullet during the siege of Quebec. Mrs. Warner had originally accompanied her husband, PVT James Warner of Thompson’s Pennsylvania Rifle Battalion, to Canada because she feared that he would become sick on the campaign trail and she wanted to nurse him. When PVT Warner eventually died in the wilderness en route to Quebec, Mrs. Warner buried him and stayed with the battalion as a cook.[3]
  • 1776 : Anna Maria Lane, disguised as a man, joins the Continental Army with her husband and fights four battles in the American Revolutionary War. She later receives a pension for her courage after she is wounded in the Battle of Germantown. [4]
  • November 16, 1776: Margaret Corbin assists her husband in manning the cannons while fighting the British in battle in the American Revolutionary War. When her husband is killed, she mans the cannons alone. She later became the first woman to earn a military pension.[5]
  • April 26, 1777: Sybil Ludington warns colonists that the British were burning the city of Danbury, Connecticut during the American Revolution.
  • 1777: Mademoiselle Leverriére fights a duel with a man in France.
  • 1778: Molly Pitcher (born Mary Ludwig in 1754) married John Hays in 1769. Her husband fought for the Continental Army at the Battle of Monmouth (New Jersey) on June 28, 1778. During the battle, she brought pitchers of water to her husband and fellow soldiers, thus earning the appellation Molly Pitcher. When her husband succumbed to exhaustion, she picked up his rifle and fought against the British.

1780s

References

  1. ^ Women In Military Service For America Memorial Archived 2013-06-22 at WebCite
  2. ^ Salmonson, p. 65
  3. ^ Women In Military Service For America Memorial Archived 2013-06-22 at WebCite
  4. ^ Tendrich, Lisa Frank, An Encyclopedia of American Women at War: From the Home Front to the Battlefields, Volume 1 ABC-CLIO, 2013, p 350-51
  5. ^ Education & Resources - National Women's History Museum - NWHM