Abigail Adams was a silent hero during the Revolutionary War. She never received a proper education and is known for the letters she sent to John Adams. The soldiers were grateful for her during the war and knew her as a silent hero. Abigail Adams was the first known women’s rights activists. When Abigail Adams was young she had an illness and could not attend school. Her mother taught her at home in Weymouth, Massachusetts. John Adams was her third cousin and attended Harvard. At first her parents said no to the marriage. Abigail knew that he was intelligent, so she kept insisting to marry him. Her mother finally agreed and they got married. Despite Abigail being ill as a child, she had five children with John. She stayed home …show more content…
After the soldiers got muskets to fight with, they didn’t get bullets. Abigail saw them struggling and decided to help. She had her children help collect all of the silver and steel in their household and melted it down to make bullets for soldiers. The soldiers respected her for this. She also provided meals and lodging for soldiers at her home day and night. She took care of the sick and wounded despite her own sickness. She sympathized in the sufferings of those around her and tried her best to make them feel better. She was also assigned by the Massachusetts General Court to question women who were thought to be remaining loyal to Britain in 1775 along with Mercy Warren and Hannah Winthrop. Abigail Adams also had the same duties and struggles as other women of the war. Women during this time had to run the family farm. This made them excited about their masculine duties after the war. The women also had to educate and raise children alone and struggled to get by during wartime shortages. Women, including Abigail Adams who wrote to her husband during this time, suffered from a general sense of …show more content…
I feel for the unhappy wretches, who know not where to fly for succor. I feel still more for my bleeding countrymen, who are hazarding their lives and their limbs! To the agonized hearts of thousands of women went the roar of the cannon booming over those hills! Many a bosom joined in breathing that prayer: “Almighty God! cover the hands of our countrymen, and be a shield to our dear friends.” She also wrote about the fear they had during the war. She wrote that she felt differently about spring than she did a month before because they didn’t know if it was safe to plant or to even stay at their own homes without the fear of having to hide in the woods to stay safe from the British. She also wrote to him about feeling lonely and being scared for him. She wrote that she would rather write letters to him than eat more than one meal a day for three weeks. “I had rather give a dollar for a letter by the post, tho the consequence should be that I Eat but one meal a day for these 3 weeks to