It’s one of Abigail Adams’s most famous lines. Early in 1776 — not even 12 months after the battles of Lexington and Concord — she wrote to her husband, John, who was with the Continental Congress.
The legendary Freedom Trail in Boston is all about the ladies during March, which is Women's History Month. The Freedom Trail Foundation is promoting its annual Revolutionary Women Tours, which are ...
The service organization, which is open to women who are descended from someone involved in aiding the American Revolution, ...
Fort Sumter and Fort Moultrie Historical Park highlighted three heroic Upstate women of the American Revolution. The historic ...
Connecticut has a deep history with the Revolutionary War. Plenty of tales detail battles and bloodshed between colonial men and their British enemies, but what about the women? WSHU’s Molly ...
The Josiah Brunson Chapter of the National Society Daughters of the American Revolution (NSDAR), presented the Women in ...
Fort Sumter and Fort Moultrie Historical Park highlighted three heroic Upstate women of the American Revolution. The historic site focused on three women from the same family, Elizabeth ...
Visitors to the public library’s teen loft last week got an impromptu lesson in the women of the American Revolutionary War, ...
The National Society Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) and the Military Women’s Memorial (MWM) announce that the longstanding commitment by the DAR to support MWM’s mission to honor and ...
Present, past and future, are things celebrated by the Fort Necessity Chapter of the National Society of the Daughters of the ...
The Museum of the American Revolution just received the desk of suffragist Elizabeth Cady Stanton. While they're gearing up ...
"Discover the indomitable women who took part in the American Revolution, and the generations of women that followed, inaugurating their own struggles for freedom and equality," a press release said.