The Story of Eight Remarkable
When you think of the American Revaluation and the people who impacted it most, you think of Gorge Washington, Paul Revere, Thomas Jefferson or John Adams. Most people over look the significance of the other players, that we really don't hear or talk about. When you think of women who have played roles in the American Revelation you think of Betsy Ross the women who made our country's flag. People don' t look at the other amazing women like the 8 women of this book Glory, Passion and Principle: The Story of Eight Remarkable Women at the Core of the American Revolution. In the past people have disregarded the roles that women have played in our country's birth. This book introduces the reader to eight women of the American revaluation. Melissa Bohrer, the author introduced us to Sybil Ludington, Phillis Wheatly, Abigail Adams, Mercy Warren, Lydia Darragh, Molly Pitcher, Deborah Sampson and Nancy Ward. Sybil Ludington was the female Paul Revere. She rode over 40-miles, twice that of Paul Revere to warn the militia that British troops were burning Danbury, Connecticut at the age of 16. To hear her story is unbelievable. Gen. Howe himself put a bounty on her fathers head, COL. Ludington. In April, 1777, the British army made a surp
Phillis Wheatly was remarkable story of the slave trade during this time and how there conditions were unlivable and cruel. Deborah was a poor farm girl form New York who wanted to fight for her country, so she dressed up as a man and enlisted in the Continental Army's Fourth Massachusetts Regiment under the name Robert Shurtleff and fought the British. Mercy Warren wrote many inspiring and influential plays of the time for the Patriot cause. She was sold to a prominent Boston Family at the age of 7. Sybil Ludington, who had just turned 16, was very familiar with the area, and volunteered to sound the alert. Phillis even wrote to George Washington himself. Ludington that the British were coming so Col. She left for her now-famous ride at approximately 9 PM into the rainy night, traveling 40 miles from her home in what is now the Town of Kent, south to Mahopac, and north to Stormville, before returning home near dawn the next day. She always shared her views political issues with her husband. She manned canons on the battlefield to fight the British at the battle of Monmouth. Phillis Wheatly was a young slave girl who wrote poems to express how she felt about slavery and the American Revaluation. The massager soon became exhausted and he was not familiar with the area, and could not be find all of the militia volunteers. She wrote about Anti-British that raised the sprits of the American soldiers. As she was taken off to the medic she only told them about her head wound, so they could not find out that she was really a women.
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