Working for the Revolution: Connecticut’s Patriot Women
Schedule
Wed, 19 Mar, 2025 at 06:00 pm
UTC-04:00Location
114 Whitney Ave, New Haven, CT, United States, Connecticut 06510 | New Haven, CT
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During the American Revolution, when a merchant was holding back a supply of sugar that should have gone to the Connecticut Line of the Continental Army, 20 women formed what was termed "an infantry," and stormed the merchant’s warehouse. They got the sugar with no interference from the law. Historian and publisher Dr. Katherine Hermes will present this and other fascinating histories of women in the Revolution during, “Working for the Revolution: Connecticut’s Patriot Women” at the New Haven Museum (NHM), on Wednesday, March 19, 2025, at 6 p.m. Register for the free NH250 event here: www.simpletix.com/e/working-for-the-revolution-connecticuts-pa-tickets-205114
"Working for the Revolution: Patriot Women's Lives During the War" will explore how women contributed to the American Revolutionary effort politically, economically, intellectually, and even militarily. Using original sources including newspapers, court records, letters, and pension records, Hermes will show how Indigenous, Anglo-European, and African-descended women all helped to further the Patriot cause.
In illustrating her topic, Hermes will cite the example of Hannah Bunce Watson, who took over the Connecticut Courant (now the Hartford Courant) in 1777, becoming one of the first women publishers in the country. Shortly after she took command of the newspaper, a paper mill Watson co-owned burned to the ground. Watson suspected that Tory sympathizers or prisoners of war on parole set it on fire in protest of the Courant’s promotion of liberty in the colonies.
Other women’s lives that will be discussed include Judith Lines, a free Black woman, who accompanied her husband to the battlefield and served as a laundress. Legend has it that General Washington was so impressed with her work he invited her to come to Mt. Vernon, but she declined. Lines’s application for a widow's pension in 1836 details her life, which was long and full.
Hermes will also shed light on the life of Faith Trumbull Huntington, the daughter of Connecticut's governor, wife of an officer, Jedidiah Huntington, and sister to the renowned artist, John Trumbull, who captured the Revolution and the Declaration of Independence on canvas. Huntington’s letters indicate she believed strongly in the rights that revolutionaries were fighting for and championed the cause. To her regret, Huntington accompanied her husband to Bunker Hill, and witnessed the battle in which her father, brothers, and husband fought.
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Where is it happening?
114 Whitney Ave, New Haven, CT, United States, Connecticut 06510Event Location & Nearby Stays: