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  2. On May 6, 1806, she married John Casper Fritchie, a glove maker. Her father-in-law, John Caspar Fritchie, was one of seven British loyalists convicted of high treason against the United States in Frederick, Maryland, in June 1781, based on a plot to free British prisoners in Frederick and join with General Cornwallis in Virginia.

  3. Barbara Hauer Frietschie was an American patriot whose purported act of defiant loyalty to the North during the American Civil War became a highly embellished legend and the subject of literary treatment. Barbara Hauer was the daughter of German immigrants. In 1806 she married John C. Frietschie.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Born Barbara Hauer on December 3, 1766, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania; died at her home in Frederick, Maryland, on December 18, 1862; daughter of German immigrants; married John Frietschie.

  5. Jul 1, 2007 · Depends on whom you know and what you read. But one fact is for sure -- Barbara Fritchie is a timeless Frederick historical icon. Originally made famous through John Greenleaf Whittier's poem...

  6. Sep 12, 2023 · Unfortunately, this act of bravery has become conflated with the legendary defiance of Mary’s elderly neighbor, Barbara Fritchie. John Greenleaf Whittier immortalized Barbara Fritchie in his poem, “The Ballad of Barbara Fritchie,” and she has become a symbol of the patriotism of Maryland Unionists.

  7. ww.civilwarpoetry.org › union › homefrontAbout "Barbara Frietchie"

    In fact, the incident upon which the legend was based involved neither Jackson nor Frietchie but an unnamed Confederate officer and Mrs. Mary Quantrill, a Unionist in-law of the notorious Confederate raider William C. Quantrill.

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  9. She was born Barbara Hauer in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and married John Casper Fritchie, a glove maker, on May 6, 1806. She became famous as the heroine of the 1863 poem "Barbara Frietchie" by John Greenleaf Whittier, in which she pleads with an occupying Confederate general, "Shoot if you must this old gray head, but spare your country's flag."

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