Most ancestors you find are ordinary people, farmers or laborers. Some bore arms or even gave their lives for their country. I am grateful for the sacrifices and hardships borne by those who helped to build a better life for their descendants. But often there is not much known about people beyond where they lived and died. Occasionally you find a criminal or a scoundrel, or a prominent townsperson. But every once in a while, you run across a really interesting and heroic person. I just discovered that the following woman is my 8th great aunt (via the families Coburn->McCulloch->Moss->Norman).
In the Revolution, she served as a courier. As an older woman, she was able to travel freely on horseback without raising supsicion. Her son was wounded at the battle of Guilford Court House. Upon hearing about this, she rode on horseback from Maryland to North Carolina to care for him. She fashioned a dripping tub over his wound to keep his infection clean and cool, and also treated other injured soldiers. For her deeds, she is remembered with a statue (the first dedicated to a heroine of the Revolution) at the battlefield.
As impressive as her feats were in her 60's, she must have continued to maintain an active lifestyle. She died after a fall from a horse while hunting with her grandsons in 1804, when she was likely in her 90's.
Link: Address at dedication of her statue
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