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Collection Reference Number GLC02437.01595
From Archive Folder The Henry Knox Papers [0046] September 17822 
Title Samuel Shaw to Tench Tilghman regarding Margaret Corbin and her application to keep her ration of liquor
Date 10 September 1782
Author Shaw, Samuel (1754-1794)  
Recipient Tilghman, Tench  
Document Type Correspondence; Military document
Content Description Writes that it is not in his power to send him Congress's resolve of 6 July 1779, concerning Margaret Corbin. Explains that her case is "peculiar": "Her husband and son killed and herself wounded in the services, were misfortunes of so aggravated as justly rendered her worthy of public attention." Congress has provided her with "a complete ration per day, and half pay for life," which Colonel [Lewis] Nicola helped her apply for, but she has received very little of the rations and pay she deserves. Explains that "[h]er present application is in consequence of the rum or whiskey which completes part of her ration being stopped by the commissary agreeable to his common custom in the issues to women of the army in general. Hers being so singular a case, she thinks that this regulation should not extend to her." If she receives what is owed her, the items "will render her present wretchedness a little more tolerable." Adds, finally, that "I am sorry to trouble you again on this subject, but the woman is truly an object of compassion. Her present husband is a poor crippled invalid who is of no other service to her but rather adds to her trouble. She herself in bad health and far advanced in her pregnancy." See GLC02437.01591 and GLC02437.01597 for related information.
Subjects Battle of Brandywine (Brandywine Creek)  Revolutionary War  Military History  Continental Army  Battle  Women's History  Injury or Wound  Death  Children and Family  Military Provisions  Soldier's Pay  Pension  Continental Congress  Congress  Alcohol  Health and Medical  
People Shaw, Samuel (1754-1794)  Tilghman, Tench (1744-1786)  Corbin, Margaret Cochran (1751-ca. 1800)  Nicola, Lewis (1717-1807)  
Place written West Point, New York
Theme The American Revolution; Women in American History; Children & Family; Government & Politics; Health & Medicine
Sub-collection The Henry Knox Papers
Additional Information According to the American National Biography, Corbin was wounded at the Battle of Fort Washington, although Shaw notes she was wounded at Brandywine. Her husband was operating a piece of artillery when he was killed, so Corbin took command of the cannon and received grape shot in her left shoulder. She wasn't granted pension until 1779, when Congress granted her a complete suit of clothes and half the monthly pay of a soldier as long as she remained disabled. After Congress's action, she enrolled in the Invalid Corps (performing garrison duties). In 1781, the Invalid Corps became an official part of the garrison at West Point where she remained until her discharge in 1783. She remained in the West Point/Highland Falls vicinity and was buried in the town of Highland Falls. Corbin's body was exhumed in 1926 by DAR and reinterred at West Point.
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Settlement, Commerce, Revolution and Reform: 1493-1859
Related documents Letter from Tench Tilghman to Samuel Shaw about Margaret Corbin who was wounded at Brandywine operating a cannon  Letter from Tench Tilghman to Samuel Shaw regarding Margaret Corbin and the issue of supplying rum to women  
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