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
Life Stories
For more information and resources about the American Revolution, see our curriculum guide The Battle of Brooklyn.




















