Some Pennsylvania Women During the War of the Revolution
Abstract
Some Pennsylvania Women During the War of the Revolution , first published in 1898 by the Harrisburg Publishing Company, presents biographical sketches of almost seventy women who supported the American Revolution and the soldiers at Valley Forge, noting their lives, family history, character, and the particulars of their roles in the revolutionary effort, including providing food, clothing, shelter, and support for the patriots. As the author writes in his prefatory note, this book aims to bring to light “the patriotism, sufferings, and self-denials” of the women of the American Revolution in Pennsylvania, whom he calls “the Matrons of the Declaration.” The book examines the lives of women at the end of the eighteenth century and shows the value of their contributions to the war. “The saviors of our country at Valley Forge, in their raggedness and misery, would have starved,” Egle writes, “had it not been for that devoted band of true-hearted loving women whose homes were on or lying near the frontiers of our grand old Commonwealth.” This book provides a fitting tribute to these women and their roles in the state’s, and nation’s, history.
Keywords
Women; Gender; American revolution; Engle; Biography; Valley Forge; Patriotism; Pennsylvania; War; Participation; Us; United states; UsaDOI
10.5325/b.18987833ISBN
9780271103150, 9780271103150, 9780271065403Publisher
Penn State University PressPublisher website
http://www.psupress.org/Publication date and place
University Park, PA, 2014Imprint
MetalmarkClassification
Revolutions, uprisings, rebellions
Specific wars and campaigns
Early modern warfare (including gunpowder warfare)
United States of America, USA
c 1765 to 1783 (American Revolutionary period)
History of the Americas
General and world history


Download