Pitcher, Molly

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[[Image:MollyPitcher.jpeg|thumb|250px|“'''Molly Pitcher'''” depicted in an 1859 engraving]]
 
[[Image:MollyPitcher.jpeg|thumb|250px|“'''Molly Pitcher'''” depicted in an 1859 engraving]]
 
"'''Molly Pitcher'''" was a nickname given to a woman who may have fought briefly in the [[American Revolutionary War]]. The name itself may have originated as a nickname given to women who carried water to men on the battlefield during the war. Molly Pitcher's fame began two years after the signing of the [[Declaration of Independence (United States)|Declaration of Independence]] by the American Colonies. The fight for independence was beginning to take a favorable turn toward the Colonials and due to the success at the Battle of Monmouth only in the northern colonies.  
 
"'''Molly Pitcher'''" was a nickname given to a woman who may have fought briefly in the [[American Revolutionary War]]. The name itself may have originated as a nickname given to women who carried water to men on the battlefield during the war. Molly Pitcher's fame began two years after the signing of the [[Declaration of Independence (United States)|Declaration of Independence]] by the American Colonies. The fight for independence was beginning to take a favorable turn toward the Colonials and due to the success at the Battle of Monmouth only in the northern colonies.  
  
==Real-life Molly Pitchers==
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==The real-life "Molly Pitcher"==
 
===Mary Hayes McCauley===
 
===Mary Hayes McCauley===
 
Molly Pitcher is generally identified as the Irish immigrant woman '''Mary Hayes McCauley''' (or Mary Ludwig Hays, who supposedly married John Casper Hays before she married William Hayes).<ref name="eb">[http://search.eb.com/eb/article-9060208 "Pitcher, Molly."] ''Encyclopædia Britannica''. Retrieved July 27, 2007.</ref> Biographical information about her, including her actual name and year of birth (1753 is suggested as an approximate birth year<ref name="eb"/>) is sparse, and her original surname is unknown. According to one version of the story, she was born to a [[Germany|German]] family in [[New Jersey]]. Ludwig's father was John George Ludwig, a dairy farmer with a farm near Trenton, New Jersey.
 
Molly Pitcher is generally identified as the Irish immigrant woman '''Mary Hayes McCauley''' (or Mary Ludwig Hays, who supposedly married John Casper Hays before she married William Hayes).<ref name="eb">[http://search.eb.com/eb/article-9060208 "Pitcher, Molly."] ''Encyclopædia Britannica''. Retrieved July 27, 2007.</ref> Biographical information about her, including her actual name and year of birth (1753 is suggested as an approximate birth year<ref name="eb"/>) is sparse, and her original surname is unknown. According to one version of the story, she was born to a [[Germany|German]] family in [[New Jersey]]. Ludwig's father was John George Ludwig, a dairy farmer with a farm near Trenton, New Jersey.
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She lived with her parents and worked on the farm until she was fifteen years old, at which time Molly's father found her a job with a doctor's family. Taking the job required her moving to Carlisle, Pennsylvania, which was nearly one hundred miles away. Mary went to work in the home of Dr. William Irvine. She worked as a laundry woman, cook and caretaker to the doctor's children.
 
She lived with her parents and worked on the farm until she was fifteen years old, at which time Molly's father found her a job with a doctor's family. Taking the job required her moving to Carlisle, Pennsylvania, which was nearly one hundred miles away. Mary went to work in the home of Dr. William Irvine. She worked as a laundry woman, cook and caretaker to the doctor's children.
  
Solid records first appear in 1778; she attended her husband William Hayes, an artilleryman who had enlisted in a Pennsylvanian artillery unit in 1777, to the [[Battle of Monmouth]] in New Jersey on June 28, 1778.<ref name="eb"/> When William fell wounded, possibly from heat stroke, Mary took her husband's post at his [[cannon]].  
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Solid records first appear in 1778; she attended her husband William Hayes, an artilleryman who had enlisted in a Pennsylvanian artillery unit in 1777, to the [[Battle of Monmouth]] in New Jersey on June 28, 1778.<ref name="eb"/> Originally aiding the Colonists in the battle by carrying water, when her husband fell wounded&mdash;possibly from heat stroke&mdash;Mary took up post at his [[cannon]].  
  
 
According to the legend, after the battle, General [[George Washington]] issued her a warrant as a noncommissioned officer, and she was thereafter known by the nickname "Sergeant Molly."  
 
According to the legend, after the battle, General [[George Washington]] issued her a warrant as a noncommissioned officer, and she was thereafter known by the nickname "Sergeant Molly."  
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[[Category:History and biography]]
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[[Category:Biography]]
 
[[Category:Biography]]
  
 
{{credits|Molly_Pitcher|84229030|Molly_Pitcher|146822662|Margaret_Corbin|85146398}}
 
{{credits|Molly_Pitcher|84229030|Molly_Pitcher|146822662|Margaret_Corbin|85146398}}

Latest revision as of 00:07, 4 April 2008

Molly Pitcher” depicted in an 1859 engraving

"Molly Pitcher" was a nickname given to a woman who may have fought briefly in the American Revolutionary War. The name itself may have originated as a nickname given to women who carried water to men on the battlefield during the war. Molly Pitcher's fame began two years after the signing of the Declaration of Independence by the American Colonies. The fight for independence was beginning to take a favorable turn toward the Colonials and due to the success at the Battle of Monmouth only in the northern colonies.

The real-life "Molly Pitcher"

Mary Hayes McCauley

Molly Pitcher is generally identified as the Irish immigrant woman Mary Hayes McCauley (or Mary Ludwig Hays, who supposedly married John Casper Hays before she married William Hayes).[1] Biographical information about her, including her actual name and year of birth (1753 is suggested as an approximate birth year[1]) is sparse, and her original surname is unknown. According to one version of the story, she was born to a German family in New Jersey. Ludwig's father was John George Ludwig, a dairy farmer with a farm near Trenton, New Jersey.

She lived with her parents and worked on the farm until she was fifteen years old, at which time Molly's father found her a job with a doctor's family. Taking the job required her moving to Carlisle, Pennsylvania, which was nearly one hundred miles away. Mary went to work in the home of Dr. William Irvine. She worked as a laundry woman, cook and caretaker to the doctor's children.

Solid records first appear in 1778; she attended her husband William Hayes, an artilleryman who had enlisted in a Pennsylvanian artillery unit in 1777, to the Battle of Monmouth in New Jersey on June 28, 1778.[1] Originally aiding the Colonists in the battle by carrying water, when her husband fell wounded—possibly from heat stroke—Mary took up post at his cannon.

According to the legend, after the battle, General George Washington issued her a warrant as a noncommissioned officer, and she was thereafter known by the nickname "Sergeant Molly."

After the Revolution, Molly and her husband returned to Carlisle, Pennsylvania. She was left a widow in 1789, and remarried George McCauley. On February 21, 1822, the state of Pennsylvania awarded her an annual pension of $40 for her heroism. She died on January 22, 1832, in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.[1]

Some of these details may have been borrowed from the actions of the other leading candidate for the "real" Molly Pitcher, a woman named Margaret Corbin.

Margaret Corbin

Corbin was a woman who fought in the American Revolutionary War. On November 16, 1776, she and her husband, John Corbin, both from Philadelphia, along with some six hundred American soldiers, defended Fort Washington in northern Manhattan against four thousand attacking Hessian troops under British command. John and Margaret crewed one of two cannons the defenders possessed. After her husband was killed, Corbin took over until she was badly wounded herself.

A tablet commemorating her heroism was erected in 1909 in Fort Tryon Park, near the scene of the battle, and the entrance to the park is named Margaret Corbin Circle in her honor. A large art-deco mural depicting the battle scene decorates the lobby of nearby 720 Fort Washington Avenue. She lies buried in West Point Cemetery.

Tributes

In 1928, "Molly Pitcher" was honored with a U.S. postage stamp. "Molly" was further honored in World War II with the naming of the Liberty ship SS Molly Pitcher, launched on December 12, 1942, and subsequently torpedoed and lost west of Lisbon, Portugal on January 30, 1943.

There is a hotel in Red Bank, New Jersey, not far from the site of the Battle of Monmouth, called the Molly Pitcher Inn. She is also honored with her own rest stop on the New Jersey Turnpike. The stretch of U.S. Route 11 between Shippensburg, Pennsylvania and Chambersburg, Pennsylvania is known as the “Molly Pitcher Highway.”

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "Pitcher, Molly." Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved July 27, 2007.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Bohrer, Melissa Lukeman. Glory, Passion, and Principle: The Story of Eight Remarkable Women at the Core of the American Revolution. New York: Atria Books, 2003. ISBN 0743453301
  • Raphael, Ray. Founding Myths: Stories That Hide Our Patriotic Past. New York: New Press, 2004. ISBN 1565849213
Raphael regards "Molly Pitcher" as a myth which serves to obscure the actual (though less dramatic) contributions of women to the war effort.

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