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Mary Ludwig
Mary Ludwig was born on October 13, 1754 near Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania. Her parents had come to the colonies from Germany. At the age of 15,
she became a servant to Dr. William Irvine, who later became a
Brigadier General in the Continental Army and led men in the Battle of
Monmouth.
Later she married John Casper Hays, a barber. John Hays enlisted in the
Continental Army in 1775 and Molly often traveled with him to the
battlefields. She was one of the women at Valley Forge the winter of 1778.
She got the nickname "Molly Pitcher" because she would bring pitchers
of cool water from nearby streams or wells to the thirsty soldiers. Her
reputation really became known after the Battle of Monmouth on June 27,
1778. As cold as it had been in Valley Forge, that was as hot as it
was on this June day. She brought pitcher after pitcher of cool spring
water to the exhausted and thirsty men. She took care of wounded men and
carried a wounded Continental soldier to safety.
When she saw her husband fall from heat stroke, she took his place and
helped fire the cannon.
If she hadn't have taken over for her husband, that unit would have had
to retreat which may have given the British an advantage. But her
determination to fight for her country during this battle became legendary
and may have even saved the Continental Army from having lost this
battle.
When General George Washington heard about her heroic acts, he made her
a noncommissioned officer and she became known as "Sergeant Molly." In
1822, the Pennsylvania legislature passed an act that gave her $40 a
year for the rest of her life because of what she did during the
Revolutionary War.
Mary Ludwig Hays McCauley died in Carlisle, Pennsylvania on January 22,
1821. At her graveside there is a flagstaff, a cannon and a monument
honoring her as a hero.
Skuld
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