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  1. A true heroine of the American Revolution, Nancy Hart was a larger-than-life personality who became a patriotic legend. Nancy Ann Morgan, was born in 1747 in North Carolina. Nancy was six feet tall with a muscular build and folklore describes her as having red hair, crossed eyes and a small pox scarred face.

  2. Apr 24, 2024 · Nancy Hart (born c. 1735, Pennsylvania or North Carolina [U.S.]—died 1830, Kentucky) was an American Revolutionary heroine around whom gathered numerous stories of patriotic adventure and resourcefulness.

  3. Aug 12, 2005 · Georgia’s most acclaimed female participant during the Revolutionary War (1775-83) was Nancy Hart. A devout patriot, Hart gained notoriety during the revolution for her determined efforts to rid the area of Tories, English soldiers, and British sympathizers.

  4. Nancy Morgan Hart was a Revolutionary era woman who became an American legend as her story was shared and embellished in 19th century publications.

  5. As the Revolutionary War unfolded, Nancy Hart swiftly stepped into the fray, showcasing unwavering dedication to the American cause. Her pivotal role emerged as she became a spy for the Patriots, undertaking the crucial task of gathering intelligence on British troop movements.

  6. Feb 14, 2021 · On this day in 1779, an unsung Revolutionary War heroine fights gallantly in the Battle of Kettle Creek! Or . . . maybe she didn’t. Nancy Harts story is “too good not to tell,” as one historian notes, but it also “seem[s] to hang in a mythical realm somewhere between fiction and history.”

  7. Apr 21, 2015 · April 21, 2015. Nancy Hart was a Confederate guerrilla soldier and spy during the American Civil War (not to be confused with revolutionary heroine Nancy Morgan Hart ). Born circa 1846, Hart was raised in Roane County in western Virginia, where she learned to be a skilled horse rider and an excellent shot with both rifles and pistols.

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