The Women Who Petitioned the Revolution uncovers the overlooked women whose labor, sacrifice, and testimony helped sustain the American Revolution-and then had to be proven in court. Drawing from pension files, declarations, affidavits, and wartime records, this historical narrative follows camp followers, widows, soldiers' wives, and women who stepped into the war's most dangerous spaces.
From Margaret Corbin and Deborah Sampson to Sarah Osborn Benjamin and other women whose names survived in the paperwork of memory, this book reveals how the Revolution looked from below: in kitchens, tents, hospital lines, and pension courts. These women cooked, washed, nursed, carried provisions, endured occupation, and, in some cases, fought directly. Yet recognition came slowly, if at all, and often only after old age, poverty, and suspicion forced their stories onto the record.
Blending meticulous research with vivid storytelling, The Women Who Petitioned the Revolution restores the women of the Revolutionary era to the center of the nation's founding story.