The main point I find after reading the article “Women and the American Revolution” is that women during Revolutionary War times had the same issues as women today with many more piled on top. Many women today are stay at home mothers like the women were then but they have more freedoms now. If a woman wants to serve their county by joining the military it is accepted now but it was not then. Women then were not even expected to give their opinion on many matters. The few women known to have served in the military during the Revolutionary War were said to be disguised as men when they did so.…
When people talk about the revolutionary war, they think of a bunch of men fighting. Not many people know that women actually did take part in the war and had a great influence in it. In “Revolutionary Mothers” by Carol Berkin, she writes about all of the different ways that women were affected by the war and how they influenced the war. Berkin explains with detail about the enormous workloads that women had before the war and the way it doubled during the war. The wives and sisters had to step up and take on the role of their men who left to fight in the war. Women were not only emotionally disturbed but physically as well due to the raids and…
World War 1 was a pivotal event that affected Canada in many ways. Not only for the men that fought for their country, but also for the thousands of women that contributed behind the soldiers of the front lines. It was a heavy change for them; going from dependant housewife to being employed at some of the largest industries and factories. World War 1 was centered on Europe and began in the summer of 1914 (Wikipedia). That summer changed the lives of many families in Europe, and all over the world. Men were forced to leave their homes and families behind and fight for their countries. In result of the men’s absence, women had the opportunity to take the available jobs. It was a major step in the history of women,…
World War II was by far the most destructive wars in the U.S. history. It impacted the United States socially, economically, and killed more people in any other war. World war II caused women to join the working force which was a huge step in women's rights and showed how huge the government's role was in this war was. The United States is one of the main reasons that the Allies won the war. At the end of World War I all of the blame was put onto Germany. Germany was given many restrictions and because of this Hitler started to rise. During World war II there was two major alliances: The Axis powers and The Allies. The Axis powers were: Germany, Japan, and . The Allies were: Great Britain, the United States, France(?) and the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union ended up joining…
Later after America got more involved in the war, women started taking a bigger part. They took different roles in the army, combatant and noncombatant, in which they served the rest of the troops. Not only did they get involved in the army, women also took a role in the industry. They helped produce many weapons, uniforms, boots, and parachutes. In communities women got involved in volunteer organizations and critical jobs. Without the women in communities, there would not have been a nuclear ‘era’ and advance weapons would not have been made. The United States and it allies’ victory was made possible through the many roles that women took. Without women serving, getting involved in production, and organizing volunteer organizations and taking roles in critical jobs, the outcome of the war would have been…
olonial woman played their part in war by cooking, washing, and nursing the wounded soldiers. They also assisted the soldiers during battles by supplying water and ammunition. Some woman directly fought as soldier during war Initially, African American was not included in the army. Later, they were enlisted as Continental Congress realized they need more manpower. Slaves were also enlisted.…
When men went to war, the only people left were women and children. Women were in charge of keeping the family and business together till their husbands or sons return. During the war, just daily tasks were switching for women, whether it was chopping wood to keep the house warm to becoming a nurse to aid the injured soldiers. Some even took on more dangerous roles such as becoming a secret soldier or spy during the Revolutionary War. Prime examples of outstanding women who played key wars in the war can be Abigail Adams, Deborah Sampson, and Mary Hays. Abigail Adams is the wife of Samuel Adams and through him she kept “Remembering the ladies” a live during the Revolutionary War. Deborah Sampson was a women that severed 17 months in the army as a disguised man. Last but not least, Mary Hays also known as Molly Pitcher, fetched water for soldiers on the battles fields and she also took over her husband’s position at a cannon when he was wounded. As you can see women did a lot for the Revolutionary War. They might not have got all the recognition, that they should have but it’s no doubt that they did help…
During World War Two, millions of American men were drafted into the army and participated in the war in Europe and in the Pacific. As millions of American men continued to join the war, there was a shortage of workers back in America, as men had previously held these jobs. The amount of job vacancies in America skyrocketed. Therefore, in the United States, millions of women stepped up and filled the jobs the men had left(Colman Women in Society 32).…
Women of the eighteenth century had very different roles before the Revolutionary War than after, and the movement of gender equality can be attributed to their increased importance in wartime. Before the war, women had primarily one job: manage and care for her household. While men were responsible for a family’s income, security, and overall leadership, women were responsible for the well-being of her home and children. Having many children was considered a wife’s duty, as sons would help their father, and daughters their mother. As a result, a woman’s place was often in the home, and when out in public, they were expected to be quiet, humble, and submissive.…
Before and during the French and Indian War from about 1650 to 1763, Great Britain not only left its American colonies to fend for themselves amidst Native attack, but also to essentially to govern themselves. This salutary neglect allowed the colonies to create unique political entities, social structures, and establish a new definition of what it means to be an American. However, after the French and Indian War, Great Britain immediately turned to the colonies to replenish their debt through a series of what the colonists viewed as unjust taxes, and strict regulations. These taxes coupled with Great Britain’s refusal to recognize the colonists as British citizens equal to those in Great Britain, eventually induced the American Revolution,…
Being a republican mother was the idea that woman were allowed to raise their children to be moral and in terms of political and societal concerns (Kerber, 2002). Women needed to be patriotic, meaning that they still needed to be biologically determined in order to properly educate their offspring. During this time, women had a way of living society. For example, women took part in many activities such as raising money by going door-to-door selling things that she may have made. With that money, they would send it to war efforts to protect the men in their families. During the time of the Revolutionary War, there were a group of women called camp followers, who provide service for their family members that serve in the army such as being nurses, cooked and cleaned, basically anything that cared for the men. Men looked heavily down upon women, which lead to women making great spies not just during the…
Women were finally able to receive credit for the work they did around and during the time of the Vietnamese War. Unlike the men, these women were purely volunteers. The reason these women volunteered were for a number of reasons, listed but not limited to: to serve their country, to help the men injured in battle, to receive real life training/experience to help further their medical career, to get a head start in their military careers, to prove themselves to others or sometimes just to do something different from their day to day lives. While these women had received various amounts of training or real life experience (some having little to none while some had 15 plus years), they…
Since joining the army also included a heavy amount of physical labor, it is believed that the women would become so active that they would stop menstruating. If that was not the case, soiled rags would have been easily tossed into the wounded soldier’s dirty laundry. Another factor that helped the women, was the number of young boys that enlisted in the war. Their higher pitched voices and smaller body frames allowed the women to blend in with the soldiers a little easier. The inability to grow facial hair was also attributed to youth, since there were so many younger men and boys serving. Also, since most men that served were not full-time soldiers, the women and men had to learn the life of a soldier at an equal pace. These factors…
From the Revolutionary War to the 1920s, the role of women dramatically changed from when women lacked political power and representation to when women were finally granted the right to vote. Although the role of women did gradually improve in that women given more freedoms, they still socially struggled because they were seen as inferior and therefore to this day still receive lower wages than men. Despite the fact that women during the times of war lived to serve those in higher positions, their roles changed over time through the development and progression of their own individual voices.…
The roles played by women and other minority groups during the Revolutionary War were mostly working the house like doing chores and such. “Women at Valley Forge gathered wood, cooked, washed clothes, and nursed the sick, and the injured”(Discovery Education). This shows that the women did things to impact the war. “When their survival at home was threatened by dwindling supplies or enemy advances, women had no choice but to follow the army. Gathering up children, pets, and valuables,…