Carol Berkin's Revolutionary Mothers

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A historian Carols Berkin, in her book Revolutionary Mothers: Women in the struggle for Independence highlighted the role of women who actively participated in American Revolution. She enlightens the work of several women, who served as companions, caregivers, and as a soldier. The author specifically discussed the role of three famous women such as Abigail Adam, Betsy Ross, and Moly pitcher during the American Revolution. Not only these women, in fact, every woman worked in the war enthusiastically with great patriotism and loyalty regardless of being rich and poor, American and British, and Indian and African American. Those women worked in the war side by side with the males of their families. However, in serving their people, the war affected those women and their families terribly. The author persuades the reader that the efforts of those women were so important that without them the Revolution war would not have been imaginable …show more content…
She incorporates her argument with numerous example of the brave performance of the women during the war. One of the examples she mentioned in the book is about a housewife Lydia Darragh. She dared to leave his country and went out of British-occupied Philadelphia to communicate with the intelligence of Washington and prepared them to fight with the British force, which is moving towards them. She praises the qualities of women such as brave, courage, firmness, and intelligence. Many women took the control of their home as well as playing the role of their husbands. They took care of the kids, ran farm and business of their husbands, and arranged food for the family while their men were fighting in the war. By working efficiently in the war, women showed that society could not be stabilized without their major contribution towards