Title: Deborah Sampson
1Women of the Revolution
- Deborah Sampson
- Betsy Ross
- Phillis Wheatley
- Nancy Morgan Hart
- Molly Pitcher
- Abigail Adams
2Deborah Sampson
- Life Summary
- Portrait of Deborah Sampson
3Deborah Sampsons Life
- Deborah Sampson was born in Plympton,
Massachusetts. She was born on December 17, 1760.
She died in 1827. She read a copy of Tom Paine's
Common Sense, and decided to make herself some
men's clothing and disguise herself as a man and
fight in the Revolutionary War as a soldier. She
went to Medway, Massachusetts and enlisted in the
army as Robert Shirtliff. - It is not certain how long Deborah served in the
army but she was wounded twice. The first time
she got a sword slash on her head during a
skirmish with Loyalist soldiers near Tarrytown,
New York. A few months later she was shot in the
shoulder with a musket ball. It was not
discovered that she was a woman when she got
medical help. - Her true identity was not revealed until she got
sick with yellow fever in Philadelphia. When she
rejoined her troop her doctor gave her commanding
officer a letter telling them the truth. The
officers were shocked but Deborah had earned
their respect. Instead of the punishment she
expected, she received an honorable discharge
from the army.
4Deborah Sampson
5Betsy Ross
- Life Summary
- Primary Resource
- Portrait of Betsy Ross
6Betsy Ross
- Betsy Ross was born in Philadelphia on January 1,
1752. She was 21 years old when she married John
Ross. Many people say that Betsy Ross made the
first flag of the United States of America from a
sketch that George Washington gave her. In June
1776 a committee of the Continental Congress is
supposed to have given her a rough sketch for a
flag which Washington designed. Although there is
no real documentation that the story is true,
there is no evidence that it is not true. It is
true that Betsy Ross was a seamstress and made
many flags during the Revolutionary War for the
Pennsylvania Navy. The design that Betsy Ross was
the first to sew for the United States was
officially adopted by Congress on June 14, 1777,
The flag had thirteen stripes and thirteen stars.
Her flag-making business did very well and was
carried on even after she died by her daughter.
Betsy Ross died in Philadelphia on January 30,
1836. The United States celebrated the 200th
anniversary of her birthday with a postage stamp
being made in her honor in 1952.
7"The History of the Flag of the United
States" by William CanbyA Paper read before the
Historical Society of Pennsylvania (in 1870),
entitled THE HISTORY OF THE FLAG OF THE UNITED
STATES by William J. CanbyPhiladelphia
The First American Flag and Who Made It.
According to a well sustained tradition in the
family of Elizabeth Claypoole (the Elizabeth
Ross) this lady is the one to whom belongs the
honor of having made with her own hands the first
flag. Three of her daughters are still living who
confirm this statement, not from their own
knowledge, for the flag was made before they were
born, but from the recollection of their mother's
often repeated narration and from hearing it told
by others who were cognizant of the facts during
their childhood and there is also yet living a
niece of Mrs Claypoole's, Mrs Margaret Boggs (now
in her 95th year) who resides with a niece in
Germantown, Philadelphia, and still has full
possession of all her faculties, who remembers
well the incidents of the transaction as she
heard it told, in her intimate intercourse with
the family many times. The writer of this paper
in the year 1857 had a conversation on the
subject with the eldest daughter of Elizabeth
Claypoole, then in active life, but since
deceased, Mrs Clarissa S. Wilson, who succeeded
her mother in the business of flag and color
making and continued it for many years. Mrs
Wilson's statement was put in writing at the
time, as have been also the statements of her
sisters and of Mrs Boggs and the substance of
them is now given. We believe the fact is not
generally known that to Philadelphia belongs the
honor of having first flung the "Star Spangled
Banner" to the breeze, and that to a Philadelphia
lady, long since gathered to her fathers, belongs
the honor of having made the first flag with her
own hands.
8Portrait of Betsy Ross
9Phillis Wheatley
- Life Summary
- More of Phillis Wheatleys life-primary document
- Poems of Phillis Wheatley
10Phillis Wheatley-Life Summary
- Phillis Wheatley was born in 1753. She was a
young child when she was taken from her family in
Africa with about 80 other captured people on a
slave ship. The slave ship came to Boston,
Massachusetts in 1761 and a man named John
Wheatley bought Phillis. - When Phillis was fourteen she started to write
poems. She became famous for her poetry. People
from other colonies came to meet the poet. In
1773, Phillis had a chance to go to England. She
was not even 20 years old. She was able to get
her poems published. It was the first book ever
published by a black person from North America. - When Phillis came back to America, Boston was
caught up in the Revolutionary War. Phillis wrote
a poem about George Washington and sent it to
him. General Washington wrote back to her and
thought she was very talented. But Phillis did
not have an easy life. She was sick a lot and
died when she was only 31 years old.
11Phillis Wheatley
12Poems of Phillis Wheatley
On Virtue  O Thou bright jewel in my aim I
striveTo comprehend thee. Thine own words
declareWisdom is higher than a fool can reach.I
cease to wonder, and no more attemptThine height
t' explore, or fathom thy profound.But, O my
soul, sink not into despair,Virtue is near thee,
and with gentle handWould now embrace thee,
hovers o'er thine head.Fain would the
heav'n-born soul with her converse,Then seek,
then court her for her promis'd bliss.Auspicious
queen, thine heav'nly pinions spread,And lead
celestial Chastity alongLo! now her sacred
retinue descends,Array'd in glory from the orbs
above.Attend me, Virtue, thro' my youthful
years!O leave me not to the false joys of
time!But guide my steps to endless life and
bliss.Greatness, or Goodness, say what I shall
call thee,To give me an higher appellation
still,Teach me a better strain, a nobler lay,O
thou, enthron'd with Cherubs in the realms of
day. Phillis Wheatley
- One Being Brought From Africa To America  'TWAS
mercy brought me from my Pagan land,Taught my
benighted soul to understandThat there's a God,
that there's a Saviour tooOnce I redemption
neither sought now knew,Some view our sable race
with scornful eye,'Their colour is a diabolic
die.'Remember, Christians, Negroes, black as
Cain,May be refin'd, and join th' angelic train.
Phillis Wheatley
13Nancy Morgan Hart
- Summary of Life
- More on the Life of Nancy Morgan Hart
14Nancy Morgan Hart
- Nancy Morgan Hart was born in 1765 and died in
1840. She was not an educated person but she
loved the idea that everyone should be free. She
had a big heart for her friends. They say she
didn't have very good manners but she knew how to
handle a gun. She was a sharpshooter. - She made history by shooting a gun at some
Loyalist soldiers who broke into her house. First
she and her daughter Sukey tricked them by making
a turkey for them. Then when the soldiers started
drinking, Nancy grabbed one of their guns and
fired. She shot one of the soldiers dead. Her
daughter then handed her another musket and she
fired and killed another British soldier. They
then agreed to surrender but Mrs. Morgan Hart
kept them until her husband returned. He was
about to shoot them all but his wife told them
that they had surrendered and she said that
shooting was too good for them. - So the dead men were dragged outside and the
others were taken outside and hung from a tree.
This story turned out to be true many years later
when a railroad company was planning to build
where the Hart cabin was. When the railroad tore
down the cabin they found six skeletons!
15Molly Pitcher
- Life of Molly Pitcher
- Movie of Molly Pitcher
16Abigail Adams
- Summary of Life
- Primary Document, letter to John Adams
17Abigail Adams
- Abigail Adams was born in Massachusetts in 1744.
She married John Adams the Colonial Leader and
signer of the Declaration of Independence. He was
also the second President of the United States of
America. She had ideas she would tell her
husband. They were both leaders in a fight for
independence. She wanted America to break away
from Great Britain so they could make their own
laws. She thought that the women should have more
power. "And in the new laws which you will make,
I wish you will remember the ladies. Be more
favorable and generous to them than your
ancestors. Do not put so much power in the hands
of husbands." - People know a lot about Abigail Adams because of
the letters she wrote to her husband while he was
away. In 1774 he was in Philadelphia at the First
Continental Congress. Then he was away when the
Declaration of Independence was being signed.
Abigail had a lot to do at home when he was away.
She taught her daughters and ran the farm. She
did not always think it was fair that women had
to stay home. She made people think about women's
rights.