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Hannah Snell

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Hannah Snell
Born23 April 1723
Died8 February 1792(1792-02-08) (aged 68)
London, England
Resting placeOld Burial Ground, Royal Hospital Chelsea
OccupationSoldier
Years active1745–1750
Known forDisguising herself as a man to serve as a soldier

Hannah Snell (23 April 1723 – 8 February 1792) was an English soldier who disguised herself as a man to join the British military. Snell was mentioned in James Woodforde's diary entry of 21 May 1778 selling buttons, garters, and laces.[1]

Early life

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Hannah Snell was born in Worcester, England,[2] on 23 April 1723. She was the youngest daughter of her family, with five sisters and three brothers. Her father Samuel Snell was a hosier and dyer. Due to Snell's grandfather’s service in the military and the money that she inherited from him, her father and his second wife, Mary Williams[3] were wealthy enough to live comfortably and provide adequate education for all their children.[4] Despite this, Snell learned to read but never learned to write.[4] Locals dubbed her the "young Amazon Snell" and she often played soldier as a child.[5]

Snell’s parents died when she was 17.[6] She moved to London on 25 December 1740 to live with her older sister, Susanah, in her house in Wapping.[7] She married James Summs, a Dutch seaman,[8] on 18 January 1744. Summs often sought the company of other women and grew to despise Snell. He used her possessions to pay for his luxurious lifestyle and solicit prostitutes.[9] They quickly fell into debt and became impoverished.[9] Summs abandoned Snell during her pregnancy with their daughter,[10] Susanna, who died in infancy.[11]

Snell moved back in with her sister Susannah and her brother-in-law, James Gray. On 23 November 1745, Snell put on her brother-in-law's clothes, assumed his name, and went to Coventry to search for Summs.[12][13][14] Later, she learned that her husband had been executed for murder.[15]

While in Coventry, she enlisted in the British Army.[13] She joined John Guise's regiment, the 6th Regiment of Foot.

Military career

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Hannah Snell's military career as James Gray started when she was 25 years old.[16] She joined the regiment of General Guise in 1747 where she received training in military exercises and greatly excelled. During this time, she had a falling out with a sergeant in her regiment named Davis who accused Gray of neglecting her duties. This incident was prompted due to Gray's refusal to facilitate a sexual encounter between Serjeant Davis and a local woman.[17] For this accused neglect, Gray was sentenced to “600 lashes" and received 500 while tied to the castle gate in Carlisle. In Robert Walker's biography on her life, it is mentioned that she eluded discovery due to the manner in which her arms were tied to the gate as well as the small size of her breasts.[18] After these events, Snell deserted and went to join the Marines. She boarded the ship Swallow at Portsmouth and sailed as a cabin boy under Captain Rosier to Lisbon. Her unit was to invade Mauritius, but the attack was called off. Her unit then sailed to India.[citation needed]

In August 1748, her unit was sent to an expedition to capture the French colony of Pondicherry in India. Later, she fought in the battle in Devicottail in June 1749. She was injured a total of eleven times, with one shot in her groin and five in her leg.[19] After the battle she was sent to a hospital at Cuddylor which she was seen to by two physicians. To avoid revealing her sex, she either removed the bullet herself or was assisted by a local woman, instead of being tended by the regimental surgeon.[20][21]

After her three-month recovery she was reunited with her fleet and returned to duty on the undermanned ship. She then spent some time in Bombay where her crewmates noticed that she did not shave her face and nicknamed her "Miss Molly Gray". This prompted her to "begin flirting with the local women" as a way to reduce suspicion about her sex.[22] Shortly thereafter, Gray returned home to England after being discharged for complications with her wounds.[23]

In 1750, her unit returned to Britain and travelled from Portsmouth to London, where she revealed her sex to her shipmates on 2 June. She petitioned the Duke of Cumberland, the head of the army, for her pension. She also sold her story to London publisher Robert Walker, who published her account, The Female Soldier, in two different editions.[15] She also began to appear on stage in their uniform presenting military drills and singing songs.[24] Three painters painted her portrait in her uniform and The Gentleman's Magazine reported her claims. She was honourably discharged and the Royal Hospital, Chelsea officially recognized Snell's military service in November, and granted her a pension in 1750 (increased in 1785), which was rare at the time.[citation needed]

Later life

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Hannah Snell, engraving, 1789

Sources claim that after receiving her pension, Snell retired to Wapping and kept a pub named either The Female Warrior or The Widow in Masquerade, but it did not last long.[25][26] By the mid-1750s, Snell was living in Newbury in Berkshire. In 1759, she married Richard Eyles there, with whom she had two children. In 1772, she married Richard Habgood of Welford, also in Berkshire, and the two moved to the Midlands. In 1785, she was living with her son George Spence Eyles, a clerk, on Church Street, Stoke Newington.[27]

In 1791, her mental condition suddenly worsened. She was admitted to Bethlem Hospital on 20 August and died on 8 February 1792. She was buried at Chelsea Hospital (now the Old Burial Ground, Royal Hospital Chelsea).[8]

Legacy

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Snell portrayed by H. J. Ford, 1913

Playwright Shirley Gee has written two fictional dramatizations of Snell's life: a radio play, Against the Wind (1988) and a stage play, Warrior (1989).[28]

Hannah Snell is mentioned in the 1969 film The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie as a woman who was prepared to "serve, suffer and sacrifice."[This quote needs a citation]

There are numerous accounts of Snell’s life. Snell’s memoir The Female Sailor was released in 1750 by London publisher Robert Walker.[29] It has continued to be in circulation even to the present day, available in the following books: The Female Soldier; Or, The Surprising Life and Adventures of Hannah Snell (2011), The Lady Tars: The Autobiographies of Hanna Snell, Mary Lacy, Mary Talbot, and Mary Anne Talbot (2008), and The Female Soldier: Two Accounts of Women Who Served & Fought as Men (2011).[30][31][32] Snell’s life is also the subject of further examination. For instance, Hannah Snell: The Secret Life of a Female Marine (2014) investigates the context in which her life took place, while Female Husbands (2020) discusses themes related to Snell’s and other figures’ "transing" of gender.[33][34]  

Abbreviated magazine and newspaper accounts of Snell’s life were also widespread both within and beyond England.[29] One such early article was released in a 1750 issue of London’s The Gentleman’s Magazine.[35] Records of later 1800s publishings show the reach of Snell’s narrative; articles on Snell’s in U.S. magazines and newspapers, for instance, are found in The New York Ledger (1865), Boston’s Ballou’s Dollar Monthly (1855–1865), Minnesota’s The St. Paul Globe (1890), and Utah’s The Salt Lake Herald (1893).[36][37][38][39] Snell’s media presence decreased in the 1900s.  Documented publications about her during this period, however, were still present in Utah’s The Salt Lake Tribune (1910) and Oregon's The Gazette-Times (1914).[40][41]

The pronouns and gender identity assigned to Snell vary between publications. In Snell’s original 1746 memoir, she referred to herself as "Hannah Snell" and used female pronouns.[29] However, the subsequent 1750 version identified the author as James Gray.[29] Later editions and newspaper articles reverted back to using "Hannah Snell".[29] Much of the academic work on Snell likewise uses her birth name and pronouns, although papers in transgender studies and related fields have diverged from this norm.[29]   

References

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  1. ^ Barrow, Mandy (2013). "Understanding old British money - pounds, shillings and pence". Project Britain.[self-published source?]
  2. ^ Creighton, Margaret S.; Norling, Lisa (1996). Iron Men, Wooden Women: Gender and Seafaring in the Atlantic World, 1700-1920. JHU Press. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-8018-5160-5.
  3. ^ Anonymous (2011). "The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Female Soldier, by Anonymous". The Project Gutenberg eBook. p. 3.
  4. ^ a b Anonymous (2011). "The Project Gutenberg EBook, the Female Soldier, by Anonymous". The Project Gutenberg eBook. p. 3.
  5. ^ Wheelwright, Julie (23 September 2004). "Snell, Hannah [alias James Gray] (1723–1792), sexual impostor". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  6. ^ Laskow, Sarah (9 March 2022). "Britain's Most Famous 1700s Sailor Spent 4 Years Disguised as a Man". Atlas Obscura.
  7. ^ Anonymous (2011). "The Project Gutenberg EBook, the Female Soldier, by Anonymous". The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Female Soldier, by Anonymous. p. 6.
  8. ^ a b "Blue plaque: Britain's most famous female soldier Hannah Snell was a Worcester girl". Worcester News. 9 May 2018.
  9. ^ a b "The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Female Soldier, by Anonymous". www.gutenberg.org. p. 6. Retrieved 3 April 2023.
  10. ^ The female soldier; or, the surprising life and adventures of Hannah Snell, Born in the City of Worcester, who took upon herself the name of James Gray; and, being deserted by her husband, put on mens apparel, and travelled to Coventry in quest of him, where she enlisted in Col. Guise's Regiment of Foot, and marched with that Regiment to Carlisle, in the Time of the Rebellion in Scotland; shewing what happened to her in that City, and her Desertion from that Regiment. Also a full and true account of her enlisting afterwards into Fraser's Regiment of Marines, then at Portsmouth; and her being draughted out of that Regiment, and sent on board the Swallow Sloop of War, one of Admiral Boscawen's Squadron, then bound for the East-Indies. With the many Vicissitudes of Fortune she met with during that Expedition, particularly at the Siege of Pondicherry, where she received Twelve Wounds. Likewise, the surprising Accident by which she came to hear of the Death of her faithless Husband, whom she went in quest of. The Whole Containing The most surprising Incidents that have happened in any preceding Age; wherein is laid open all her Adventures, in Mens Cloaths, for near five Years, without her Sex being ever discovered. 1750. OCLC 642217841. Gale CW0104689797.
  11. ^ Wheelwright, Julie (23 September 2004). "Snell, Hannah [alias James Gray] (1723–1792), sexual impostor". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/25975. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  12. ^ Creighton, Margaret S.; Norling, Lisa (1996). Iron Men, Wooden Women: Gender and Seafaring in the Atlantic World, 1700-1920. JHU Press. p. 11. ISBN 978-0-8018-5160-5.
  13. ^ a b "The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Female Soldier, by Anonymous". www.gutenberg.org. p. 7. Retrieved 3 April 2023.
  14. ^ Laskow, Sarah (1 July 2015). "Britain's Most Famous 1700s Sailor Spent 4 Years Disguised as a Man". Atlas Obscura. Retrieved 3 April 2023.
  15. ^ a b Snell, Hannah (1989). The Female Soldier: Or the Surprising Life and Adventures of Hannah Snell. William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, University of California. ISBN 978-0-404-70257-1.[page needed]
  16. ^ Anonymous (2011). "The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Female Soldier, by Anonymous". The Project Gutenberg eBook. p. 7.
  17. ^ "The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Female Soldier, by Anonymous". 2011. p. 8.
  18. ^ Anonymous (2011). "The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Female Soldier, by Anonymous". The Project Gutenberg eBook. p. 34.
  19. ^ Anonymous (2011). "The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Female Soldier, by Anonymous". The Project Gutenberg eBook. p. 15.
  20. ^ Pennington, Reina; Higham, Robin (2003). Amazons to Fighter Pilots: A-Q. Greenwood Press. p. 404. ISBN 978-0-313-32707-0.
  21. ^ Druett, Joan (2000). She Captains: Heroines and Hellions of the Sea. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 106. ISBN 978-0-684-85690-2.
  22. ^ Manion, Jen (2020). Female Husbands A Trans History. Cambridge university press. p. 78. doi:10.1017/9781108652834. ISBN 9781108652834. S2CID 214092853.
  23. ^ Manion, Jen (2020). Female Husbands A Trans History. Cambridge university press. p. 72. doi:10.1017/9781108652834. ISBN 9781108652834. S2CID 214092853.
  24. ^ "Hannah Snell, 1750 (c)". National Army Museum. London. NAM Accession Number 1963-05-63-1.
  25. ^ "Trans and Gender-Nonconforming Histories". Historic England.
  26. ^ Anonymous (11 January 2014). "Hannah Snell: The Famous 'Woman in Men's Cloaths". JaneAusten.co.uk. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  27. ^ Anonymous (26 March 2023). "Hannah Snell: The Famous "women In Men's Cloaths". Jane Austen Centre.
  28. ^ Bradley, B.G (16 November 2007). "'Warrior' a feast for senses and mind". The Mining Journal. Archived from the original on 14 March 2012.
  29. ^ a b c d e f Manion, Jen (2020). "Chapter 3: The Sailors and Soldiers". Female Husbands: A Trans History. Cambridge University Press. p. 80. ISBN 9781108652834.
  30. ^ Snell, Hannah (2011). The Female Soldier; Or, The Surprising Life and Adventures of Hannah Snell. Prepared by Chris Curnow, Joseph Cooper, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. Project Gutenberg.
  31. ^ Snell, Hannah; Lacy, Mary; Talbot, Mary (2008). The Lady Tars: The Autobiographies of Hannah Snell, Mary Lacy and Mary Anne Talbot. Fireship Press. ISBN 9781934757352.
  32. ^ Snell, Hannah (2011). The Female Soldier: Two Accounts of Women Who Served & Fought as Men. Leonaur Ltd. ISBN 9780857066763.
  33. ^ Stephens, Matthew (2014). Hannah Snell: The Secret Life of a Female Marine, 1723-1792. Ship Street Press.
  34. ^ Manion, Jen (2020). Female Husbands: A Trans History. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781108652834.
  35. ^ "Some Account of Hannah Snell, the Female Soldier". Digital Transgender Archive.
  36. ^ "A Female Soldier". Digital Transgender Archive.
  37. ^ "A Singular Character". Digital Transgender Archive.
  38. ^ "Women as Men". Digital Transgender Archive.
  39. ^ "A Woman Warrior". Digital Transgender Archive.
  40. ^ "Adventurous Lives of Women in Trousers". Digital Transgender Archive.
  41. ^ "Women Who Were Soldiers". Digital Transgender Archive.

Further reading

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