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Researching Women in the American Revolution

Men were certainly not the only ones affected by—or involved in—the American Revolution. Women boycotted British goods, produced home-spun cloth and supplies for soldiers, and some even took to the battlefield. This presentation will look at women’s role in the fight for American independence and how to research your female ancestors during this period.

Come explore the past and bring your ancestors’ Revolutionary War experiences into clearer focus!

Registration in this program includes access to a 60-minute live broadcast, recording, and other materials for the foreseeable future.


Lecture Recording

To come.

 

Lecture Materials

To come.


About the Speaker

Melanie McComb, Senior Genealogist, holds a Bachelor of Science degree from the State University of New York at Oswego. She is an international lecturer who teaches on various topics including colonial through twentieth-century American military research, genetic genealogy, Atlantic Canadian, African American, Jewish, and Irish genealogy. She is also an Honorary Fellow of the Massachusetts Historical Society. She has had articles published in American Ancestors Magazine and Fifty Plus Advocate. She is a blogger, known as The Shamrock Genealogist.

 

Other Resources

Revolutionary Roots website

American Ancestors magazine article: Finding Revolutionary War Patriots in Your Family Tree

American Ancestors magazine article: Strategies for Tracing Revolutionary War Veterans

Archived webinar: Friend or Foe: Researching Colonial Ancestors During the American Revolution

Archived webinar: Applying to Revolutionary War Lineage Societies