2009-05 - Following the Drum: Women at the Valley Forge Encampment. Author; Nancy K. Loane. 206 pages. 2009
I had seen a poster advertising this book and the talk the author was going to give about the book and the subject at a local library branch. Purchasing the book was already a forgone conclusion living at the back door of Valley Forge as we do.
The book reads very much like the talk that the author gave. The title of the book however is deceptive, this book is about much more than the story of women at the Valley Forge Encampment, in fact the actual stories of the Valley Forge Encampment is perhaps only half of the book.
The book divides itself into three sections; the ladies, the military family, and the camp followers. These division follow the divisions of society and it’s military in the 18th century. The stories of the ladies comprise the bulk of the text. This section focuses on Lady Washington, Catherine Greene, Lucy Knox, Lady Stirling and one or two others. The experience of each of these women at the Valley Forge encampment is told in as much detail as could be expected given the general paucity of documentary evidence. Their stories are added to by following each woman through all eight encampments of the war and into their lives after the war until their death and the death of their spouses and children. It is in the passed on oral histories and remembrances often of their children and grandchildren recorded later that we get a truer sense of what was experienced and accomplished.
The second section is devoted to those women who traveled with Washington’s Headquarters doing laundry, sewing, cooking, cleaning and other day to day tasks needed for a platoon sized staff and retinue. These women were accorded a greater status than commoners due to their proximity to His Excellency. Their stories are told in some detail even unto their deaths after the conflict. Details though are scarce as these people were hired servants or slaves who did their job best when only their actions were proof of their existence.
The last section is devoted to the other women, the camp followers, the laundresses, wives, cooks, hangers on, and whores. The lives, experiences and even identities of these women have been mostly lost in the mists of time. They existed, they drew rations, they are referenced, and though not usually in a positive manner and they were tolerated as a necessity. This book does an adequate job of introducing their history and plight during the eight long years of war. For a more in depth look I would recommend; Belonging to the Army: Camp Followers and Community During the American Revolution by Holly A. Mayer, which is referenced several times in this book.
The writing is generally crisp and it really only bogs down near the beginning when the author lays out lists and items taken from local farms, families, and communities during the Philadelphia Campaign as the armies marched through the Great Valley. The point of hardship is made and then we are overburdened with it. This is the only real drawback to the book.
On the whole this book is more than a mere niche book. It takes a specialized subject and makes it into a popular history. It will satisfy many a casual reader and spark the desire for deeper study in students of the war, society, rolls, and relations. It helps to provide a needed holistic view of the army and it society.