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Drawn portrait of Grace Growdon Galloway

Grace Growdon Galloway

Imagine losing everything, and there was nothing you could do to stop it.

A small image of Grace shown on a map in Pennsylvania, an image of Joseph appears with a heart between them.

Early Life and Marriage

Grace was born in 1727 into the prosperous Growden family of Pennsylvania. In 1753, Grace wed Philadelphia lawyer Joseph Galloway, the son of an equally wealthy Maryland family.

An illustrated map showing a marker near Philadelphia with the images of Grace and Joseph.

While representing Pennsylvania at the First Continental Congress, Joseph introduced the Plan of Union to create avenues for the 13 colonies to stay in the British Empire with more equal representation in Parliament.

An illustrated map showing Joseph going to New York where a British marker is shown.

When Congress failed to adopt the plan, Galloway, a staunch loyalist, refused to continue serving in the Continental Congress. After the Second Continental Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence, Joseph fled to British strongholds in New York.

An illustrated map showing an American marker at Valley Forge

He soon became a trusted advisor to British General William Howe, assisting in the British occupation of Philadelphia in September 1777. This occupation was intended to demoralize the Continental forces and weaken the rebellion, but instead, Washington's army emerged more disciplined after their harsh winter at Valley Forge.

The Consequences of Loyalty—and the Law

As loyalists, the Galloway family was in a favored position in their townhome on Sixth and Market Streets while the British Army occupied Philadelphia.

However, in 1778, everything changed when the British, under new leadership, retreated to New York. Howe had resigned from command earlier that year, facing criticism for failing to crush the rebellion, and his successor, General Henry Clinton, was ordered to withdraw troops due to shifting British priorities—especially with France joining the war.

An illustrated map showing Joseph getting on a boat for England.

When the British Army retreated, Joseph went with them, taking with him the couple's only child, Elizabeth. They sailed for England in October, leaving Grace alone in Philadelphia to defend their property and land holdings from confiscation—much of which Grace herself brought into her marriage.

But the American colonies still abided by the legal constraints of coverture, meaning that at the time of her marriage Grace relinquished ownership of any property or inheritance to her husband, including her family’s country estate, Trevose Manor, in nearby Bucks County. Grace held no legal rights over what was now considered Joseph’s property.

Soon, the patriot government came knocking, ready to confiscate any and all property of Grace’s prominent loyalist husband—and Grace’s hands were tied.

An illustrated map showing Grace by Philadelphia.

Grace's Tell-All

Now alone in their townhome in the city, Grace took pen to paper and committed her thoughts to her diary. Her first entry on June 18, 1778, chronicles the event of the evening before, Grace now finding herself "parted with my dear Husband & child." From there, Grace's new status as an estranged loyalist's wife escalated. The very next day, she notes, "American troops came into Town,” and the day after that, "was warne'd by Peale that he must take possession of my house for the state."

An illustrated map showing Grace by Philadelphia and a battle marker for Battle of Monmouth.

Grace's diary proves she was keeping an eagle eye on the progress of the war and the aftermath of the Philadelphia Campaign. On June 30, 1778, she lamented the news that "the English are beat in (New) Jersey," referring to the Battle of Monmouth just two days prior, where Washington's army demonstrated their newfound discipline. She reveals her deteriorating mood ("am very low") and her sense of betrayal by the English, whom she trusted to protect her ("I was very low & mad to think we that are ruin'd by them was the least noticed").

Losing Everything but Finding Herself

On July 21, the patriot government's plan to confiscate the Galloway property set in motion as Grace opened her door to the city's confiscation agents, but Grace was determined not to lose her home: "I told them they may do as they pleased but till it was decided by a Court I wou'd not go out Unless by (the) force of a bayonet." But her determination did not even linger past her diary entry, as she closed with "all hope is over."

In August, the day finally came as patriot agents forced Grace out of her home. She spent the rest of her life in rented rooms while fighting for her property to be reinstated. Grace was not successful at reclaiming her land or reputation, but by April 1779, she had reclaimed her sense of self. Through her pain, she wrote: "…for I had been stripped & Turn’d out of Doors yet I was still (the) same…for I shou'd be Grace Growdon Galloway to (the last)."

Themes of the period
Modern-day Legacy

Grace's ancestral home

Built in the late 17th century by the Growden family, Grace's ancestral home, Trevose Manor, still stands today. Maintained by Bensalem Township in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, the home is on the National Register of Historic Places and is open to the public.

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