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Heroic Women on the Homefront

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We naturally focus on the heroics of our soldiers, but often we don’t acknowledge the bravery of our women during wartime. Here are a few stories of Rhode Island women who courageously protested British taxes, capably did the their work and that of their soldier husbands, tended to soldiers in their camps, nursed hospitalized soldiers, committed to military service and risked themselves to manufacture armaments.

Daughters of Liberty

Colonial women had the responsibility of purchasing and making goods their families needed. In 1766 women made their protest to being taxed by the British by gathering to spin their own yarn and fabrics instead of buying them from Great Britain. Reports of these spinning bees were mentioned in newspapers and the bees were located throughout Rhode Island. Ninety-two women gathered in Newport. The elite class of women were not used to spinning and there was a report of a seventy year old women learning to spin for the protest. The women spent the day spinning and produced 170 skeins of yarn. Wearing homespun clothes instead of fancy fabrics from England was an effective and peaceful way to protest, but it also required courage for those who liveed in cities like Newport that had close ties to England. They were willing to make the sacrifices needed to make a political statement. It gave women a voice at a time when they couldn’t hold public office.

Women on the Home Front


“Keep the home fires burning” means to maintain a home’s daily routines and provide the necessities of life, often while someone is away. While their husbands were called to serve in the army, it was their wives that shouldered the extra burdens of tending to a farm or business. After the war the government gave a small amount of money to those who served in the Revolutionary War and we have records of the work some of these wives had to do. Dorcas Matteson of Coventry was the mother of nineteen children. She was married in 1770 to David Matteson. In the pension application she made years after the war, she listed some of the difficulties she endured for the “glorious cause.” When her husband went to fight in General Sullivan’s Rhode Island Campaign in 1778, it was hay time. She had to cradle her baby on some hay in a shady spot in the meadow while a young lad helped her load hay and put it in a barn. She was close enough to hear the “roar of the cannon” during the Battle of Rhode Island and she imagined the danger her husband was in. He returned a few days later when his militia duty had expired. He was safe and sound, but he did have a “bullet hole about him” that was made as they retreated from the Island. The bullet was stopped from injuring her husband by a chunk of cheese that Dorcas had sent and David had placed in his backpack.

A Special Camp Follower

Caty Greene was married to Nathanael Greene in 1774 and found herself quickly involved in the Revolutionary War effort. Nathanael moved quickly from commander of the Rhode Island Militia to general in the Continental Army. She opened her home in Coventry as a hospital when the Rhode Island troops were inoculated for small pox. Caty traveled to wherever her husband was stationed (New York City, Valley Forge, Carolinas), even after the birth of their first child in 1776. There were women and children who were called “camp followers” who served as cooks or clothes washers. Caty had more comfortable quarters than they did, and she put her efforts into organizing events for the soldiers. She became friends with Martha Washington because they were often in camp together. She gave birth to five children during the years of the Revolution, but when she travelled she often left her children in the care of others. Being away from her children and being away from her husband were heartaches for Caty. We don’t have the letters that Caty wrote to her husband because she burned them. We do have some of his letters to her and we can get a sense of what her letters were like from how he answered her. During the Siege of Newport, Nathanael wrote:

“I am sorry to find you are getting unwell. I am afraid it is the effect of anxiety and fearful apprehension. Remember the same good Providence protects all places, and secures from harm in the most perilous situation. Would to God it was in my power to give peace to your bosom, which I fear, is like a troubled ocean….” Caty, like many other spouses of Americans in the Rhode Island Campaign, must have been fearful of the battle ahead.

Civil War Nurse.

Nursing the injured is one important and heroic role that women have played though the years. Back in the Civil War days (1860s), nursing was not really a formal job with training. Women volunteered to help and learned to care for patients on the job. In 1862 Katherine Wormsley was living in Newport and was asked to be the head nurse at Lovell Hospital here in Portsmouth. She brought with her a staff of all women to supervise nurses who cared for patients in this 1700 bed hospital. Up until this time the supervisors had been all men. Katherine moved quickly and efficiently to set up round the clock schedules for proper care of patients. She asked for repairs to holes in the walls and appealed to towns like Portsmouth, Middletown and Newport for food and goods for the wounded soldiers. Her service lasted only a year, but those who worked with her describe her as being “clever, spirited, and energetic.” I would add heroic. Caring for wounded soldiers was a difficult task.

Mary Lopes, a Portsmouth woman who answered the call.

The Naval Reserve Act of 1916 permitted qualified “persons” for service and the Secretary of the Navy began enlisting women as “Yeoman (F).” Over 11,000 women answered the call. They served in a variety of jobs: clerical, bookkeeping, inventory control, telephone operators, radio operators, pharmacists, photographers, torpedo assemblers and other positions. The women did not go to boot camp, but they were in uniform. They had some of the same responsibilities and benefits as the men. Like the men they earned about $28 a month. They were treated as veterans after the war.

What do we know about Mary? Her parents were Manuel Lopes and Georgina Lopes. Their farm seemed to be on Middle Road close to School House Lane but there are listings for East Main Road also. The town directory of 1919 lists her as a “Yeowoman” in the United States Navy and living at home.

After the war the women were quickly released from service, but Mary stayed very active in the Portsmouth Post 18 of the American Legion. She was later Post Commander of the Rhode Island Women’s American Legion Post. Mary even returned to service as a nurses’ aide with the American Red Cross during World War II.

Our “Rosie the Riveters”

 In 1943, Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson said “The War Department must fully utilize, immediately and effectively, the largest and potentially single source of labor available today—the vast reserve of women power.” At the Naval Torpedo Station in Newport women worked hard and long hours manufacturing torpedoes. At the Station, women worked in the Supply, Machine, Chemical, Personnel, Engineering, Design and Materials Departments. Newport resident, Isabella McNulty, was regularly exposed to poisons while she loaded equipment which screwed into the base of the torpedo shell. The building she worked in was incredibly loud and the powder she handled was poisonous. The women in this department did not wear gloves, because the parts they handled were so small that a gloved hand did not have the precision needed for the task. These were heroic women.

Women in the military today can serve in combat and non-combat roles. They can serve as pilots, mechanics, and infantry officers. Women continue brave service in support of the nation.

Block Island Revolutionary Connections – Patriots

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Block Island in the Revolution is on my mind as I prepare to visit a friend on Block Island. This is a collection of information on Revolutionary Block Island. My understanding is that the island remained uncommitted during the war, but Block Island people were involved in the fight for independence.

Caty Littlefield

A while back I researched women in the Revolution and I learned the story of Catherine Littlefield Greene Miller. Her family called her Caty and she was born on Block Island in 1755. Her mother descended from Block Island founders and her father, John Littlefield, was a member of the Rhode Island legislature. Her Block Island childhood ended with her mother’s death when she was only 10 years old, and Caty went to live with and aunt and uncle. At that time her uncle, William Greene, was a Supreme Court justice, but he went on to being Governor of Rhode Island. Under the guidance of her aunt and uncle, Caty learned how to read and write and how to manage a household. Caty would meet and marry General Nathanael Greene and she took a prominent role in his efforts. She opened her home in Coventry as a hospital when the Rhode Island troops were inoculated for small pox. Caty followed her husband to just about every assignment including Valley Forge.

William Littlefield

William Littlefield was Caty’s younger brother. We learn a little bit about his service in a letter he wrote to Washington to secure a federal position.

“I served my Country upwards of five years in the Continental line of the Army part of which time was in General Greenes family.”

The notes below the transcript of the letter inform us that he didn’t get the job, but he had been active in the war.

William Littlefield (1753–1822), a native of Block Island, R.I., was the younger brother of Catharine Greene, widow of Maj. Gen. Nathanael Greene. Littlefield had served with Varnum’s Rhode Island brigade during the early years of the Revolution and in 1779 had become an aide to his brother-in-law. He resigned on 20 June 1780 and returned to Block Island where he fell under suspicion of trading with the enemy although he was later exonerated (Bartlett, R.I. Records, 10:45). In 1785 and 1792 he represented Block Island in the Rhode Island legislature. Littlefield received no post in the civil service and later in the 1790s apparently moved to Tennessee. https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/05-04-02-0052

Before the war started he is listed as being an ensign in Block Island’s militia.

Captain Samuel Dunn

Another Block Island figure was involved in the Gaspee attack. The Gaspee Committeed issued this statement:
“We conclude that it was Captain Samuel Dunn, 1710-c1790 of New Shoreham (Block Island), RI that took part in the attack on the HMS Gaspee, and later went on to service in the Revolutionary War. The Gaspee Days Committee therefore recognizes Captain Dunn as a true American patriot.”

I am confused about which Samuel Dunn was part of the Gaspee action. This Samuel has a son Samuel Dunn, Jr. who was born in 1743. The elder Samuel Dunn would have been over sixty when the Gaspee incident occured.

The next blog will be on the “Battle of Block Island” that featured Esek Hopkins.