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12 May, 23:48

Why do you think Nancy Hart's story is still told in textbooks? What is her significance even though there are very few primary sources about her?

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  1. 13 May, 02:03
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    I think it is told because it shows the fearlessness and bravery of a woman who had so much courage.

    She was a spy who spied on the British, British. Dressed as a man, she would enter British camps pretending to be feeble-minded to gain information, which she handed off to the Patriots. Hart's most famous act involved five or six British soldiers, who killed her last turkey and demanded that she cook it for them. She devised a plan to get the soldiers drunk on her corn liquor, take their guns and hold them captive. Hart sent her daughter Sukey to get some water and to use a hidden conch shell to alert neighbors of the British presence. While the soldiers ate and drank, Hart began sneaking their guns out through a hole in the wall. Caught holding the third gun, she drew it and threatened to shoot. When a soldier rushed at her, she killed him and wounded another; the rest surrendered.
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