Deborah Sampson's favorite color is purple
Deborah Sampson han 3 kids earl, Mary, and patience and then she adopted 1 susannah shepered
Deborah Sampson, a woman who disguised herself as a man to serve in the Revolutionary War, married Benjamin Gannett in 1785. Benjamin Gannett did not die before Deborah; in fact, they remained married until her death in 1827. He outlived her, passing away in 1849.
December 17 1760she was born in Massachusetts in December 17, 1760 and she was the oldest of three daughters
Deborah Sampson's father was named Jonathan Sampson. He was a farmer and a veteran of the French and Indian War. Deborah was born in 1760 in Plympton, Massachusetts, and she later became known for disguising herself as a man to serve in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War.
Deborah Sampson's husband was Benjamin Gannett. They married in 1785 and had three children together. Sampson, known for disguising herself as a man to fight in the American Revolutionary War, returned to civilian life after the war and later settled into family life.
Deborah Sampson was a black woman.
Deborah Sampson
Deborah Sampson =]
Deborah Sampson was from Middlebrough Massachusetts
She over came the fact that she was caught as a woman and not a man.
a bio about deborah sampson
George Washington discharged Deborah Sampson because at the time, during the American Revolution, it was 'improper' for a woman to work in the military and people thought that a woman's place in her life was her home.
Deborah sampson wanted freedom
Gennet is Deborah Sampson's maiden name
Yes, and no. Deborah Sampson s her maiden name, Debroah Gannet is her married name.
Yes, Deborah Sampson was the first female soilder.
Deborah Sampson was a woman who pretended to be a man so that she could fight in the Revolutionary War. She fought for seventeen months before getting wounded, and being honorably discharged from the army. Deborah was unusually tall for a woman at that time, so it was easy for her to disguise herself as a man.