By Susan F. Craft
My
fascination with colonial America ,
especially the Revolutionary War, began as a child watching the Disney series
about Johnny Tremain and the Liberty Tree. I responded to an advertisement for
a record of the theme song, The
Sons of Liberty, which I played over and over on my small record player,
marching around my bedroom like a continental soldier.
The
Revolutionary War was a turbulent time of high passions and human drama --America ’s
first civil war that tore families and neighbors apart. Everything about the era appeals to
me. A soft glow reflected in a pewter mug, a crisp white mobcap, delicate lace
dripping from the elbow of a sleeve, a neatly tied cravat, fiery and
impassioned voices arguing over the war, the smell of freshly brewed tea – all
of these things stir my imagination.
Often
when I’m researching (which is my favorite part of writing), I discover tidbits
of information. I get so excited about them I call them “my treasures.” I try to weave my treasures into
my stories so subtly, so naturally, that my reader isn’t even aware that he or
she is learning something.
I want to
give my readers a sense that they’ve stepped back in history. I strive to
provide them the excitement of an adventure and a feeling that they’ve gotten
to meet, know, and care about a cast of interesting people.
I
especially enjoy shining the candlelight on the contributions of women in
history, particularly the backcountry women of the South.
Most
everyone has heard of “steel magnolias,” southern women who are strong and
independent yet very feminine. Women who can rip another woman up and end it
with “bless her heart.”
Another
group of women I call “cast iron chamomiles,” backcountry women who, when their
husbands left to fight in the Revolutionary War, faced head on an enemy that
rode up to their front porches, burned their homes, stole their food,
livestock, and left them to fend for themselves and their families with
sometimes only the clothes on their backs. Women who could not only “bring home
the bacon and fry it up in a pan,” but who could shoot the pig, haul it to the
barn, and butcher it, making use of every single part, including the hair on
its jowls.
Not
surprisingly, in my research I’ve come across familiar names like Dolley
Madison, Betsy Ross, and Molly Pitcher, whom I had read about in my American
history classes.
But what
about women like Nancy Hart, the sturdy wife of a farmer named Benjamin, who
lived in a log cabin in Georgia ?
She was muscular, six feet tall, cross-eyed, and had a vicious temper and was
quite a marksman with her musket. The Indians called her Wahatchee,
meaning War Woman, out
of the healthy respect and fear they had for her.
She hated
the Tories and never lost an opportunity to show her feelings for them.
In one
account, five Tories paid a visit to Nancy .
After entering her cabin, they asked if it was true that she had helped a Whig
rebel escape from the British. Nancy not
only admitted it, but proceeded to tell them how, laughing at how easily she
had fooled the king’s men.
The
Georgia Whigs used Nancy
as a spy on several occasions. One time she dressed as a man and entered a
British camp, pretending to be crazy, and was able to come away with vital
information on the British troop movements. Another time the Georgia Whigs
badly needed information about what was going on the Carolina side
of the Savannah
River . As there were no volunteers for the mission,
Nancy tied a few logs together with grapevines, crossed the river, and obtained
the needed information.
______________________________________________________________
Susan F.
Craft, author of The Chamomile,
a Revolutionary War romantic suspense, has a degree in Broadcast Journalism
from the University of SC.
The Chamomile, published by Ingalls Publishing Group, won the Southern
Independent Booksellers Alliance Fall 2011 Okra Pick. It is the fourth book she
has authored. The first two were SC State Library award-winning professional
works in the field of mental health, and the third, published in 2006, is A Perfect Tempest, a historical
fiction set in Columbia during
the Civil War. Craft is
a member of the American Christian Fiction Writers, the Palmetto Christian
Writers Network, the Historical Novel Society, the SC Writers Workshop, the SC
Historical Society, the Robert Burns Society, the Colonial American Christian
Writers, John 316 Marketing Network, She Writes, Goodreads, Facebook, and
Pinterest. Website http://www.susanfcraft.com
blog http://historicalfictionalightintime.blogspot.comI’m
a member of Colonial American Christian Writers, and we have a fabulous blog,http://colonialquills.blogspot.com.
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