Reenactor portrays a Women Deborah Sampson American Soldier
Date
2013-04-20
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In 1782, as the Revolutionary War raged on, the patriotic Deborah Sampson disguised herself as a man named Robert Shurtleff and joined the Fourth Massachusetts Regiment.
At West Point, New York, she was assigned to Captain George Webb�s Company of Light Infantry. She was given the dangerous task of scouting neutral territory to assess British buildup of men and materiel in Manhattan, which General George Washington contemplated attacking.
In June of 1782, Sampson and two sergeants led about 30 infantrymen on an expedition that ended with a confrontation�often one-on-one�with Tories. She led a raid on a Tory home that resulted in the capture of 15 men.
She was also one of the first women to receive a pension for her military service and the first woman to go on a national lecture tour of the United States.
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Keywords
Women Soldiers, Women Soldiers in the Continental Army, Role Women in the American Revolution, Jockey Hollow, Morristown National Historical Park, Historic Morristown, National Historical Park, The American Revolution, American History, US History, George Washington, Continental Army, Winter Encampment, History, Morristown, The Ford Mansion, Morris County, The American Revolution in New Jersey, The Skylands, Lakeland, New Jersey, NJ, Jersey, The Garden State
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