Sarah Bradlee Fulton (December 24, 1740, Dorchester - November 9, 1835, Medford)[1] was an active participant of the Revolutionary War on the American side.
[4] Friends and neighbors, who were Boston's most devoted patriots, regularly gathered to enjoy his codfish suppers on Saturday nights.
In June 1775, after the Battle of Bunker Hill, the wounded were brought into town, and the large open space by Wade's Tavern was turned into a field hospital.
[6] She dispatched an important message from John Brooks, the mayor of Medford, to George Washington to the Charlestown war front.
[1] A play Sarah Bradlee Fulton, Patriot: A Colonial Drama in Three Acts was written about her by Grace Jewett Austin in 1919.