1692 – 1783 Colonies and Revolution The American Revolution

Key Ideas

1. Women participated in all aspects of the American Revolution, from the early protests through managing the aftermath of the war.

2. The experiences of women during the American Revolution varied widely based on race, class, age, and geographic region.

3. The contributions of women shaped the experience and outcome of the American Revolution.

Introduction

Woodcut detail from Molly Gutridge, A new touch on the times: Well adapted to the distressing situation of every sea-port town (Danvers, MA: Ezekiel Russell, 1779). New-York Historical Society Library.

Women and the American Revolution, 1750–1783

Though women in the English colonies were legally barred from nearly all forms of public and political life, they found numerous ways to engage in the political discourse that heated up in the years before the American Revolution. They used their considerable social and economic influence as the managers of their households to support the Patriot and Loyalist causes. Their efforts were not always welcome, but they were effective.

The outbreak of the war in 1775 cleaved a fissure right through the heart of colonial society. Over the course of the war, women of every age, race, and social class suddenly found themselves living in a war zone, and their families were torn apart. They endured years of hardship, and many lost everything as the American and British armies battled across the continent. They were called upon to support the war effort on both sides of the conflict, both at home and on the front. Without the efforts of women on both sides of the revolutionary divide, the war would have progressed very differently.

But the upheaval of the Revolutionary Era also provided an opportunity for women to challenge the status quo. Black women contested the practice of slavery, Indigenous women maneuvered to improve the position of their communities in the face of the ongoing threat of colonization, and white women campaigned for better educational and political opportunities.

The effects of the Revolution did not end with the Treaty of Paris. Its impact would reverberate for years to come, shaping a new ideal of American womanhood.

This video is from “Women Have Always Worked,” a free massive open online course produced in collaboration with Columbia University.

Section Essential Questions

1. How did women participate in the American Revolution? What contributions did women make to the Revolutionary effort?

2. How were women’s activities in this era circumscribed by social and legal limitations?

3. What effect did a woman’s race, class, or social differences have on her experience of the American Revolution?

4. How do women’s experiences complicate our understanding of the impacts of the American Revolution?

Resources

Colonial women used spinning wheels like this one to create homespun thread that could be woven into fabric. In the lead-up to the American Revolution, spinning became an overtly political act, because it allowed women to avoid paying tax on imported British textiles and supported the general political protest against English policies.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
causes of the American Revolution, colonial society, British colonies in North America
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Three items that show how women engaged in protest in the lead-up to the American Revolution.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
causes of the American Revolution, colonial society, British colonies in North America
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Mercy Otis Warren wrote and published the tragic play The Adulateur in 1772 to call out the alleged crimes of the British government during the Boston Massacre.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
causes of the American Revolution, colonial society, British colonies in North America, revolutionary ideals
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In 1774, fifty women in Edenton, North Carolina, signed and published a statement declaring their intention to boycott all British goods. It was the first women’s public collective political action in American history.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
causes of the American Revolution, colonial society, British colonies in North America
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These political cartoons illustrate how the general public received colonial women’s political action, and how the figures of women became potent political symbols.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
causes of the American Revolution, colonial society, British colonies in North America
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In this document, a well-to-do Loyalist lady recounts the events of the first battles of the American Revolution.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
colonial society, war front
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A second printing of The Declaration of Independence by a prominent woman postmaster who signed her name to the document.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
colonial society, American Revolution
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A New York woman’s firsthand account of being caught in the crossfire during a British attack on New York.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
colonial society, war front
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Two letters of Lucy Knox illustrate the trials and tribulations of women whose husbands left to fight in the war.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
colonial society, home front
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Soldiers’ accounts of encounters with a Haudenosaunee woman who lost everything during General John Sullivan’s raids against Native communities in New York.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
Indigenous cultures of the Americas, war front
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This poem by Phillis Wheatley demonstrates how enslaved and free Black people saw the American Revolution as an opportunity to end the systematic oppression of Black people in the colonies.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
revolutionary ideals, slavery, free Black colonials, self-emancipation
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In this poem, a middle-class Massachusetts woman reflects on the hardships of life on the home front.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
home front, colonial society
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This broadside, written in 1780, argues that every American woman must actively support the war effort to ensure victory.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
home front, colonial society
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This ledger records the biographical information about every enslaved or free Black person who evacuated New York with the British at the end of the war.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
slavery, self-emancipation, revolutionary ideals
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Excerpts from the diary of a Loyalist targeted by Patriots during the American Revolution.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
colonial society, Loyalist, home front, American Revolution
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A runaway advertisement that captures the fallout of Lord Dunmore’s Proclamation.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
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A letter calling for women to contribute to the war effort to support their husbands.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
slavery, self-emancipation, American Revolution
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Life Stories

The story of a camp follower who became a war hero and earned the first soldier’s pension ever awarded to a woman.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
war front
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The story of a Loyalist spy in New York who did everything she could to undermine the American war efforts.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
war front
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The story of a woman enslaved by George Washington who self-emancipated during the war.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
slavery, self-emancipation, manumission
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The story of an enslaved woman whose bid for freedom failed during the American Revolution.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
slavery, self-emancipation, manumission
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The story of the woman who was instrumental in Benedict Arnold’s plot to betray the Continental Army.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
home front, war front
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The story of the Cherokee leader who tried to keep her people safe during the American Revolution.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
Indigenous cultures of the Americas, Westward Expansion, U.S. imperialism and expansionism, Indian Removal
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The story of the enslaved woman whose court case set the legal precedent to abolish slavery in Massachusetts.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
revolutionary ideals, slavery, manumission, free Black people
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The story of a Revolutionary era woman who became an American legend.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
home front
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The story of a general’s wife who dealt with the repercussions of the revolution for decades after its official end.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
home front
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The story of a woman who became a symbol for the Patriot cause.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
Home front, American Revolution
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The story of an Oneida woman who provided vital services to the Continental Army.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
Indigenous cultures of the Americas, Oneida history, American Revolution
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The story of a Mohawk leader during the American Revolution.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
Indigenous cultures of the Americas, Mohawk history, American Revolution
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A free Black woman who worked for George Washington during the American Revolution.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
Free Black colonials, home front, war front, American Revolution
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The story of a woman who fought for her property rights.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS:
Home front, Patriot, Loyalist, American Revolution
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For more information and resources about the American Revolution, see our curriculum guide The Battle of Brooklyn.