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Deborah Sampson
Deborah Sampson was born on December 27, 1760 in Winnetuxet, later
called Plympton, Massachusetts to Jonathan and Deborah Sampson. She was
related to Governor William Bradford of the Plimouth Plantation. She was
the oldest of three sisters and three brothers.
Deborah was the favorite grandchild of her maternal Grandmother,
Bathsheba. Bathsheba was a big influence in Deborah's life and Deborah always
begged to hear the story of Joan of Arc. Joan of Arc was a French
woman who wore pants and led the French Army to victory over the British.
When she was young, her father left on a trip around the world looking
for riches. Since her mother was sick, the children were sent off to
different family members.
Deborah was five when she first went to live her mother's cousin, Ruth
Fuller of Middle borough, Massachusetts. Ruth died when Deborah was
eight. She then went to live Mrs. Thatcher, the 80 year old widow of a
First Congregational Church minister. A local minister noticed how hard
Deborah worked and made arrangements for her to serve the household of
Benjamin Thomas.
Deborah took care of Benjamin Thomas, his wife and their eight sons
until she was 18 years old. During her time with the Thomas family, she
worked in their home and fields. During the winter when there wasn't much
work to be done, she was allowed to attend school. When she was not in
school, she would stay up after everyone had gone to bed and study the
school books the Thomas boys brought home. At the Thomas' home, she
learned to cook, spin, weave, how to run farm equipment and how to shoot
a musket. She would go along with the Thomas sons when they went
hunting and learned to shoot just as good as they could.
Deacon Thomas taught his children how to use money wisely. He gave
every child some lambs to raise and sell and he included Deborah. She was
very wise with her lambs, selling them for the highest price she could
get. She kept her money hidden in a handkerchief.
Deborah was ten years old when the Boston Massacre happened in 1770 and
thirteen years old in 1773 at the time of the Boston Tea Party.The
citizens of Boston refused to pay for the tea dumped in the ocean and in
1774 King George III issued the Intolerable Acts. When the people of
Boston started talking about how they would starve under King George's
laws, Deborah planted a garden for herself and the Thomas family.
On December 16, 1775, the official start of the Revolutionary War,
Deborah made a decision to fight in the War. She was sixteen years old when
the Declaration of Independencewas signed in 1776. The men and boys
from all around were joining the militia or the Continental Army led by
General George Washington. By the time Deborah was eighteen, the United
States was losing many battles and France had just decided to join with
the Continental Army.
She left the Thomas' home in 1779 and became a teacher in a
Middleborough public school. She still thought about joining the Continental Army,
but didn't really know how she could do it. Then in the winter of
1780, Mr. Thomas came for a visit and told her about two of his sons being
killed in Virginia when they were fighting with Marquis de Lafayette.
She had grown close to all the Thomas boys and this news made her very
sad, and committed to serving with the Continentals.
She had taken a room from Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Leonard and towards the
end of 1781, Deborah decided she would try to enlist in the
Continental Army. She took some clothes from Samuel, the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard. She tested her disguise by going to visit her mother. When her
mother didn't recognize her, she knew she could sneak into the Continental
Army.
Finally, on May 20, 1782 at the age of twenty-one Deborah Sampson
enlisted in the Fourth Massachusetts Regiment of the Continental Army at
Bellingham, Massachusetts, as Timothy Thayer of Carver, Massachusetts.
Some sources say she used the name Robert Shurtleff, which was the name of
her oldest brother who had died at the age of eight. She almost got
caught when someone said: "Thayer holds the quill with his finger in that
funny position, like Deborah Sampson." No one seemed to notice and
Deborah Sampson, otherwise known as Timothy Thayer, was now a soldier with
the Continental Army for the next three years of her enlistment. Three
days later she was officially part of Captain George Webb's company.
She was soon excommunicated for the Baptist Church, because the people
of Middleborough had heard she was dressing as a man and serving in the
Army.
Her regiment was sent to West Point, New York. During a scouting party
to try to find food for her regiment, Loyalists who caught her stealing
from a cave near Tarrytown shot her in the leg. She refused to see and
doctor and took care of her own wound. The leg never healed right.
She was at West Point for eighteen months and fought in several
battles. She was injured two more times. Once near Tarrytown, her head was cut
with a sword. Then near Eastchester she was shot again in the leg.
Both times she refused to be treated by a doctor and her injuries never
healed completely.
It wasn't until she came down with a "malignant fever," which was being
passed around the soldiers, that she was forced to see a doctor at a
hospital in Philadelphia. Dr. Binney examined her and discovered she was
not a man. He didn't tell anyone, but took her to his own home where
she could get better care. Once she was well again, Dr. Binney met with
her commanding officer. Soon she was sent to deliver a letter to
General George Washington.
She knew right away that Dr. Binney had told her commanding officers,
but on October 25, 1783, almost two months after the Peace Treaty of
Paris was signed, she went to deliver the letter to General Washington. He
was very nice and didn't make it harder on her than it was already
was. He handed her papers that honorably discharged her from the Army with
some money so she could get home. He also gave her a note, which gave
her some of his good advice.
In 1784 she married Benjamin Gannett, a farmer, and they had three
children, Earl, Mary and Patience.
On January 20, 1792, the Massachusetts General Court ordered that she
be paid 34 pounds for her service in the United States Army. In the
order, the Court said: she "did actually perform the duty of a soldier.
The said Deborah exhibit an extraordinary instance of female heroism, by
discharging the duties of a faithful, gallant soldier, and at the same
time preserving the virtue and chastity of her sex unsuspected and
unblemished, and was discharged from the service with a fair and honorable
character...." Later, in 1804, Paul Revere sent a letter to Congress
telling them she should receive more money for her duties in the War. She
then received a U.S. pension of four dollars per month. She also
received a land grant for her military services as a Revolutionary Soldier.
In 1802, Sampson started traveling around the New England states
telling about her experiences in the United State Military. She always wore
her military uniform. She received a letter from George Washington
inviting Robert Shurtliffe to visit Washington.
Deborah Sampson Gannett died at the age of sixty-six on April 29, 1827
in Sharon, Massachusetts. After her death, her husband, Benjamin
Gannett asked Congress to increase the pension. On July 7, 1838, (one year
after Mr. Gannett died), Congress passed the "Act for the relief of the
heirs of Deborah Gannett, a soldier of the Revolution." Her children
received $466.66 for the medical expenses she incurred from taking care of
her own wounds so she would not be found out.
In May of 1983, Governor Michael J. Dukakis signed a proclamation which
named Deborah Sampson, alias Robert Shurtleff, soldier of the American
Revolution, the "Official Heroine of the State of Massachusetts."
Skuld
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