User:Don Djirosse/Hannah snell

Biography
Hannah Snell was born in Worcester, England, on 23 April 1723. She was the youngest daughter of her family, having other five sisters and three brothers. The military has been something very present in her family, as most of her siblings were either married to soldiers and sailors or becoming one. Her grandfather, Samuel Snell, was a professional soldier who fought in the wars that took place at the end of King William's reign, and also served in the English Army during Queen Anne's wars. Her father, on the other hand, despite being distinguished for his bravery, never got to fight in a battle, focusing instead on wit and trade. Hannah's older brother, also named Samuel Snell, was one of her brothers that ended up becoming a soldier by joining the Lord Robert Manner's Company, which was led by the Duke of Cumberland; he also sent to Flanders to fight in the Battle of Fontenoy where he was severely injured and eventually died. Since her early years, she showed interest in the army as, at the age of ten years, she used to gather with a group of children, comment on her desire to be a soldier, and eventually play the role of a chief commander of the company of young soldiers she had formed with them. In 1740, after both of her parents died, she moved to London to live with her sister who was married to a carpenter named James Gray. During this time, she got to meet a Dutch sailor named James Summes, with whom she first established a friendship that, over time, turned into love; after Summes received consent from Hannah to officialize their relationship, getting married on January 6th, 1744. During their marriage, Summes wasn't a loyal husband, as he began seeing other women for sexual company and also spending all his and Hannah's money in order to keep up with the expenses of his luxuries and the necessities of the women he was sleeping with. It was during this time that she became pregnant, and, at her seventh month, her husband left due to the debt that the expenses of his lifestyle created, abandoning Hannah and their soon to-be-born daughter in a poverty situation. After this incident, she gave birth to a girl named Susannah, who died a year later. After this incident, she borrowed a man's suit from James Gray, her brother-in-law-, assumed his name, and began to search for Summes, leaving her sister's home without telling anyone in her family about her plans or her whereabouts.

Years in the army and in the marine
Passing as James Gray, she travelled to Coventry, where she enlisted in Guise's regiment. After sharing some drinks with Capitan Miller and other soldiers, and, as the newest recruit, paying for the bill, while looking back at what happened that day, she got her foot injured, getting burned by a burning coal falling into her shoe. This accident caused her not to be able to walk, preventing her attending on the drum, which is a tradition for new recruits. During her stay in that city, she decided to look for her husband, trying to find any information about his whereabouts, unfortunately, she couldn't find anything, which made her get back on track on her future as a soldier. While being at the north, marching under the Corporal Bishop with seventeen other soldiers, she displayed a good performance and behaviors, where, instead of demonstrating fatigue like her colleagues, she appeared to be very cheerful and seemed little tired, keeping this conduct for three weeks. Additionally, while undergoing military training at Carlisle, she showcased the same level of skill and agility as any other soldier. The hardships started to happen not long after; one of the first ones happened due to her sergeant, Davis, who in order to conquer a young's woman's love, he went to Hannah asking for help; she, instead of carrying out his commands to assist him and creating a link between them, warned the lady about Davis' desire and advised her to avoid him; because Hannah's attitute wasn't common for a soldier, as when this happened she was already posing as a man, it resulted in the creation of an intimate friendship between the young lady and her. When the surgeon Davis found out about it, feeling mad at Hannah's disobedience, came to present what happened as a negligence of duty to the authority, what resulted in the commanding officer sentencing her to receive 600 lashes. She received her punishment while having her hands tied up to the gate of a castle and enduring 500 but, thanks to the intercession of some officers, she didn't not receive the last 100. This incident and adding the resentment that the sergeant Davis kept felling towards her, caused her to start thinking about deserting. Sometime after this a new recruit from Worcester named George Black, who used to previously work as a carpenter, joined her regiment after arriving in London in hopes of finding better employment opportunities. As he was from her same hometown, first enlisted at her brother's quarters and was with them while Hannah decided to leave, even though he seemed not to recognise her face or to has any idea of her name, the constant fear of being discovered was what made her finally decide to desert.

After abandoning Guise's regiment, with the help of the young lady she was friends with, Hannah could go to Portsmouth and enlist in the marine. She was then sent on board the Swallow fleet, with captain Rosier, bound to Boscawen. Throughout her time there, Wyegate of the marines, noticing her washing and dressing skills, assigned her the role of assistant cook. Some of her main duties also included being one of the after guards, having to keep watch every four hours during the day and also at night, and to go aloft. While they were navigating through the Madeiras, their living conditions changed drastically, having access to only a pint of water a day. Hannah and the rest of the marines joined the English army that had encamped after a long march when they arrived in St. Davids. As a member of the army, she was sent to Pondicherry, where she was exposed to a fortification fire, an attack in which Hannah fired 37 rounds and was also severely injured, with a ball in the groin, six wounds in one leg, and five in the other. She was then sent to a hospital but, instead of letting her wounds be treated by the medical staff, she extracted the ball that was in her groin herself. After 3 months, when she was physically fully recovered from that incident, she sailed to Bombay with Capitan Lloyd; while on the shore, he first asking her to sing, and she refused, he asked her again but not just as a question but as as a command, she still refused arguing that it wasn't part of the duties of a soldier and, therefore, he had to authority to make her do it; Lloyd, as a punishment, made her lie in irons for five days and then receive a thousand lashes at the gangway. She got to protect her sexual identity while receiving this punishment by tying a handkerchief around her neck and spreading the ends of it over her breasts. Astonished by this injustice, once they arrived in England, one of the sailors dropped block on Lloyd's head, killing him. In 1750, after spending her last four and a half years as a marine, she went back to her hometown, claimed her pay at Downing Street and revealed all the truth in a local bar. A writer picked up her story and she got to build a stage career by performing some of her stories. In 1759 she got married to her second husband, Samuel Eyes, and, after he died, she married Richard Habgood, whom she spends her rest of her days until she died in Bethlehem Hospital.