The female soldier, born at Worcester on the 23rd of April 1723, being the daughter of a hosier. In order to seek her husband, who had ill-treated and abandoned her, in 1745 she donned mans attire and enlisted as a soldier in Guises regiment of foot, but soon deserted, and shipped on board the sloop Swallow under her brother-in-laws name of James Gray. The Swallow sailed in Boscawens fleet to the East Indies, and took part in the siege of Araapong. Hannah served in the assault on Pondicherry and was wounded, but she succeeded in extracting the bullet without calling in a surgeon. When recovered she served before the mast on the Tartar and the Eltham, but when paid off she resumed womans costume. Her adventures were published as The Female Soldier, or the Surprising Adventures of Hannah Snell (1750), and she afterwards gave exhibitions in military uniform in London. She died insane in Bethlehem Hospital on the 8th of February 1792.