Deborah Sampson was one of the first woman to fight in a war such as the American revolution. Deborah was born on December 1st 1760 in Massachusetts. Although she descended from the pilgrim stock her entire family was very poor. When Deborah was fairly young her father was sent on a sea voyage and never returned. After the tragic incident with her father Deborah 's mother was forced to place Deborah and all of her siblings into separate households were they could be cared for. There Deborah spent five years being cared for. Then she was old enough to become an indentured servant. She was taken to a farmer named Deacon Benjamin Thomas. When her time was over being an indentured servant, self taught Deborah made her living by teaching school until …show more content…
On one of the last battles, the battle of Yorktown, Deborah received many injuries from rope and trenches she was forced to dig. The injuries that she received almost blew her cover as a man, but that did not stop her from completing the new tasks that were to come her way. In June 1783 Deborah and two other servants led about 30 men on a march to unknown ground. During the march the group encountored many British troops. During the small battle Deborah noticed that a sward had pierced her side it was not long after until she had been shot in the lower thy of her left leg. Once the battle had ended Deborah was sent yet again to the hospital witch she was almost discovered for a second time. she managed to hide the wound on her leg from the doctor and pulled out the bullet in her leg and cleaned it as best as she could. Soon after she was cleared to join the army yet again and instead of being sent to fight was ordered to help take care of an injured man. Deborah was very pleased by this because it would give her leg more time to heal. In February 1783 Deborah was able to fight once more. her and her troop were sent to to resolve a protest of angry soldiers. Wile there Deborah caught one of the towns diseases and found her self yet again in a hospital this time she was discovered and the doctor was forced to tell her commander. After the letter was received Deborah was given an honorable discharge and left for home. Deborah married and had three children. She died on April 29th 1827 at age 66. Although she was just a woman Deborah Sampson did amazing things to help the American
Laundry was not an easy job back in the Civil War era and once she got so frustrated with one of the laundresses that she slapped her. On February 25, Von olnhausen finally had enough wounded soldiers to keep her busy. She even cared for a confederate soldier; something she never wanted to do. When
William Howell was able to escape but Andrew Morrison received two arrow wounds, causing the arrowheads to remain near his heart for the rest of his life. As a
Mary Walker was an advocate for women 's rights and the first woman awarded the Medal of Honor. At the outbreak of the Civil War Mary Walker volunteered in Washington to join the Union effort, and she worked as a nurse in a temporary hospital set up in the capital. In 1862 she was sent to Virginia to provide medical care to wounded soldiers. In 1863 she was briefly appointed as a surgeon in an Ohio Regiment. The stories that surround this time of her life are undocumented, but in 1864, she was a prisoner of war exchanged for a Confederate soldier.
During that captivity, a British officer struck him with a sword for refusing to polish the officer’s boots, leaving Andrew with a scar on his face and one hand and a hatred for the British; he would carry all three for the rest of his life. Both Andrew and Robert contracted smallpox. Elizabeth negotiated for their freedom, but Robert would die of the disease on April 27, 1781. After Andrew recovered, Elizabeth
The American CIvil War was a bloody war between men of the same country. The Southern States were fighting hard to keep their rights to slavery. This eventually led seven states to break away and become the Confederate States. This number eventually grew to eleven, and they were lead by their president, Jefferson Davis. While the remaining states,or the Union, were lead by then president Abraham Lincoln.
Susan B. Anthony was born into a Quaker family, with the hope that everyone would one day be treated equal. She denied a chance to speak at a temperance convention because she was a woman(Susan B. Anthony). From this point on, she knew that she needed to make a change. Susan B. Anthony, because of her intense work involving women 's’ rights, highly influenced all of the societies and beliefs that were yet to come. She employed a huge role in our history because of the fact that she advocated for women’s rights, for the integration of women in the workforce, and for the abolition of slavery.
Harriet Tubman was an African American heroine who was instrumental in leading many slaves to freedom. Harriet Tubman was born in Dorchester County, Maryland in 1820. She was automatically born into slavery. Her name was originally Araminta Harriet Ross, but everyone called her Minty when she was young and Harriet when she got older.
She came down to the south and made rescues for ten years and spend a lot of her life also finding safe houses so slaves could escape (Document
When Sophia witnessed Nathan Hale’s hanging all she could think about was her brother William and how he could end up the same way, but not once did she think about herself, and that she would end up being hanged or shot, she just wanted her family to be safe and was determined to do whatever it took for that to happen. Sophia shares this quality with Deborah Samson. After her husband died, Deborah Sampson enlisted, dressed as a man with a uniform she stitched herself. “In the spring of 1782, half a year after General Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown, Deborah Sampson — wearing a uniform she had stitched herself — enlisted in the Fourth Massachusetts Regiment of the Continental Army using the name of a distant relative, Robert Shurtleff.”
Written in the 1970s, Jennifer Traig reveals in her humorous memoir how she changed and overcame the mental and social challenges that life threw at her from childhood into adulthood. Life certainly threw her tough challenges in the forms of OCD (obsessive compulsion disorder), scrupulosity, and anorexia. . To say the least, she looked for the devil in every detail believing if she didn’t do something perfect someone would get hurt. Traig begins her book by recounting a memory where scrupulosity took over. Being a form of OCD, scrupulosity makes its “victims” have an obsession with religion, in Jenny’s case her obsession was Judaism.
Because of the remark that she got about holding her quill pen, she feared that she was going to be recognized so deborah didn 't show up the next day. To lessen her chance of being caught she decided to dress in al male clothing and travel easter massachusetts to Worcester. There on May 20 she decide to enlist in the continental army under the name of Robert Shurtliff and she served seventeen months in the army. Deborah was chosen for the Light Infantry Company of the 4 of Massachusetts, which consisted of fifty to sixty men, they marched with her unit to West Point, New York where they patrolled no man’s lands between British controlled Manhattan and the area of Westchester where it was held by the Patriots. Deborah demonstrated courage, skill, and strength.
She alerted Woodhull by what laundry she hung on her clothes line: a black petticoat for his arrival and several handkerchiefs to specify which of the coves Brewster was hidden in. Taking part in such an activity had severe consequences, and Anna Strong was well aware of this fact. That’s what makes her so courageous. She was born on April 14, 1740 in Long Island, New York. Ironically, she grew up in a family of Tories.
Sacajawea was a strong and courageous woman who made a difference in American History. Her knowledge of the land and people around her became incredibly useful to the foreign explorers. Sacajawea was a young, Indian woman who helped lead the Corps of Discovery across the Louisiana territory. Her Help enabled the United States to expand its territory.
She spent about 10 years guiding slaves to flee to Canada. During this act more than 38 slaves were ordinarily disenthrall from hard labor. During this rescue mission “she made most of her trips in and around December when the nights were long and fewer people were out.” (doc B), she was extremely cautious about her acts. Although, all four acts were all as important, the least important one was care-giving.
Elizabeth Wurtzel defends her stance on feminism in her article, “1% Wives Are Helping Kill Feminism and Make the War on Women Possible”. Wurtzel argues that the only kind of equality is economic equality and that until all women realise that then they will always be unequal. She states her opinion that women who chose to stay at home and become housewives deserve to be thought of as dumb. “ These women are the reason their husbands think all women are dumb, and I don't blame them”. Wurtzel basically argues that if a woman is not contributing to any of the household income then they are giving themselves a reason to be treated unfair.