Posted on Jun 8, 2016
picture of woman who fought in the civil war - Google Search
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CPT Joseph K Murdock
Last night in my question focused on June 5 in the US Civil War I included a post from a British Officer on assignment as liaison to the confederate Army in an observer status.
"Friday, June 5, 1863: Lt. Col. Arthur Fremantle, of Her Majesty’s Coldstream Guards, visiting on assignment from the Crown, has visited the Confederate Army in Tennessee, and is preparing to travel on to Virginia. He has a singular encounter there with meeting a woman who had served in combat: “I left Chattanooga for Atlanta at 4.30 P.M. The train was much crowded with wounded and sick soldiers returning on leave to their homes. A goodish-looking woman was pointed out to me in the cars as having served as a private soldier in the battles of Perryville and Murfreesborough. Several men in my car had served with her in a Louisianan regiment, and they said she had been turned out a short time since for her bad and immoral conduct. They told me that her sex was notorious to all the regiment, but no notice had been taken of it so long as she conducted herself properly. They also said that she was not the only representative of the female sex in the ranks. When I saw her she wore a soldier’s hat and coat, but had resumed her petticoats.”
Last night in my question focused on June 5 in the US Civil War I included a post from a British Officer on assignment as liaison to the confederate Army in an observer status.
"Friday, June 5, 1863: Lt. Col. Arthur Fremantle, of Her Majesty’s Coldstream Guards, visiting on assignment from the Crown, has visited the Confederate Army in Tennessee, and is preparing to travel on to Virginia. He has a singular encounter there with meeting a woman who had served in combat: “I left Chattanooga for Atlanta at 4.30 P.M. The train was much crowded with wounded and sick soldiers returning on leave to their homes. A goodish-looking woman was pointed out to me in the cars as having served as a private soldier in the battles of Perryville and Murfreesborough. Several men in my car had served with her in a Louisianan regiment, and they said she had been turned out a short time since for her bad and immoral conduct. They told me that her sex was notorious to all the regiment, but no notice had been taken of it so long as she conducted herself properly. They also said that she was not the only representative of the female sex in the ranks. When I saw her she wore a soldier’s hat and coat, but had resumed her petticoats.”
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CPT Joseph K Murdock
Imagine the incipient courage manifested by that woman to serve in an all male regiment.
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