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قراءة كتاب The Only Woman in the Town, and Other Tales of the American Revolution
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The Only Woman in the Town, and Other Tales of the American Revolution
The Only Woman in the Town
And Other Tales of the
American Revolution
BY
SARAH J. PRICHARD
Author of the History of Waterbury, 1674-1783
PUBLISHED BY
MELICENT PORTER CHAPTER
Daughters of the American Revolution
Waterbury, Conn.
1898
Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1898
By the Melicent Porter Chapter
Daughters of the American Revolution,
In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington
The celebration of the Centennial Anniversary of the United States at the city of Philadelphia in 1876, and the exhibit there made of that nation’s wonderful growth and progress, gave a new and remarkable impulse to the germs of patriotism in American life. The following tales of the American Revolution—with the exception of the last—were written twenty-two years ago, and are the outcome of an interest then awakened. They all appeared in magazines and other publications of that period, from which they have been gathered into this volume, in the hope that thereby patriotism may grow stronger in the children of to-day.
PAGE | |
The Only Woman in the Town | 9 |
A Windham Lamb in Boston Town | 38 |
How One Boy Helped the British Troops Out of Boston in 1776 | 47 |
Pussy Dean’s Beacon Fire | 67 |
David Bushnell and His American Turtle | 75 |
The Birthday of Our Nation | 117 |
The Overthrow of the Statue of King George | 127 |
Sleet and Snow | 135 |
Patty Rutter: The Quaker Doll who slept in Independence Hall | 151 |
Becca Blackstone’s Turkeys at Valley Forge | 159 |
How Two Little Stockings Saved Fort Safety | 169 |
A Day and a Night in the Old Porter House | 181 |
One hundred years and one ago, in Boston, at ten of the clock one April night, a church steeple had been climbed and a lantern hung out.
At ten, the same night, in mid-river of the Charles, oarsmen two, with passenger silent and grim, had seen the signal light out-swung, and rowed with speed for the Charlestown shore.
At eleven, the moon was risen, and the grim passenger, Paul Revere, had ridden up the Neck, encountered a foe, who opposed his ride into the country, and, after a brief delay, had gone on, leaving a British officer lying in a clay pit.
At midnight, a hundred ears had heard the flying horseman cry, “Up and arm. The Regulars are coming out!”
You know the story well. You have heard how the wild alarm ran from voice to voice and echoed beneath every roof, until the men of Lexington and Concord were stirred and aroused with patriotic fear for the safety of the public stores that had been committed to their keeping.
You know how, long ere the chill April day began to dawn, they had drawn, by horse power and by hand power, the cherished stores into 10 safe hiding-places in the depth of friendly forest-coverts.
There is one thing about that day that you have not heard and I will tell you now. It is, how one little woman staid in the town of Concord, whence all the women save her had fled.
All the houses that were standing then, are very old-fashioned now, but there was one dwelling-place on Concord Common that was old-fashioned even then! It was the abode of Martha Moulton and “Uncle John.” Just who “Uncle John” was, is not known to the writer, but he was probably Martha Moulton’s uncle. The uncle, it appears by record, was eighty-five years old; while the niece was only three-score and eleven.
Once and again that morning, a friendly hand had pulled the latch-string at Martha