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  1. Catharine ("Caty") Littlefield Greene (February 17, 1755 – September 2, 1814) was an American patriot who traveled to her husband, Continental Army General Nathanael Greene's, encampments during the American Revolutionary War. She entertained and comforted the soldiers, officers, and officer's wives.

  2. Catharine Littlefield Greene Miller was a generals wife who dealt with the repercussions of the American Revolution for decades after its official end.

  3. Catharine Littlefield Greene. Fue una inventora estadounidense que junto a Eli_Whitney invento la primera desmotadora de algodón. Sumario. 1 Síntesis biográfica. 1.1 De una vida cómoda a la gestión de una plantación. 1.2 La desmotadora de algodón. 1.3 Muerte. 2 Fuente. Síntesis biográfica.

  4. Born on December 17, 1755, in New Shoreham, on Block Island, 12 miles off the Rhode Island coast, Catharine Littlefield has been identified as the second or third child of Phebe Ray Littlefield and John Littlefield.

  5. Catherine Littlefield Greene (1755-1814) is credited with aiding Eli Whitney in his invention of the cotton gin —an invention that revolutionized the plantation economy of the American south. Her husband, Nathanael Greene, was a decorated army officer who served with distinction during the Revolutionary War.

  6. 27 de jul. de 2004 · Catharine “Caty” Greene was the noted wife of Revolutionary War general Nathanael Greene, the mother of five, and an active participant in events that occurred during the fight for American independence.

  7. Catharine Littlefield Greene. Born February 17, 1755 (Block Island, Rhode Island) Died July 20, 1814 (Cumberland Island, Georgia) Businesswoman. Catharine "Caty" Littlefield Greene witnessed, and at times participated in, some of the most far-reaching events in American history through her marriage to General Nathanael Greene (1742–1786).