Although explicit details concerning most of her life are unknown, Nancy Ann Morgan Hart is believed to have been born in
North Carolina around 1741, in the
Yadkin River valley, though some researchers think that she was born in
Pennsylvania or
New York state. She married Benjamin Hart of that area. His extended family's descendants included such famous later political figures as
Missouri Senator Thomas Hart Benton and
Kentucky Senator
Henry Clay. Hart was well connected through family ties to other prominent figures in early American history. She was a cousin to
Revolutionary War general
Daniel Morgan, who commanded victorious American forces at the
Battle of Cowpens in
South Carolina on January 17, 1781. According to contemporary accounts, "Aunt Nancy", as she was often called, was a tall, gangly woman. She was rough-hewn and rawboned, with red hair and a face scarred by
smallpox. One early account said that Hart had "no share of beauty—a fact she herself would have readily acknowledged, had she ever enjoyed an opportunity of looking into a mirror." Hart was said to have a feisty personal demeanor characterized by a hotheaded temper, a fearless spirit, and a penchant for exacting vengeance upon those who offended her or harmed her family and friends. Many remembered that she, rather than her husband, ran the Hart household. They had a total of six sons and two daughters. Although she was illiterate, Hart was amply blessed with the skills and knowledge necessary for frontier survival; she was an expert
herbalist, a skilled hunter, and an excellent shooter. ==Revolutionary War accounts==