She Was A Soldier Too
By Diane Wylie
Author of Secrets
and Sacrifices, Jenny’s Passion, Lila’s Vow, Adam’s Treasure,
and Moonlight
& Illusions
"I am a soldier too."
You may remember those poignant
words spoken by Jessica Lynch of the U.S. Army's 507th Maintenance
Company when her rescuers came to get her from the Iraqi hospital where she was
being held prisoner during the early days of the Iraq War.
While women today can openly enlist
in the military, women in American history had no such freedom. Some women were
allowed to serve as nurses or camp followers, or sometimes they acted as spies.
In fact, during the U.S. Civil War, women like Belle Boyd and Rose Greenhow became
household names due to their daring exploits spying for their chosen armies.
Lesser known in our history is the role of a woman as a fighting soldier.
Many people today never realized
that nineteenth century women from both sides of the Civil War put aside their
wide skirts and bonnets, cut their hair, donned trousers, and passed themselves
off as men.
But, how
could a woman sneak into the army in 1861? The answer to that question and many
more are explained in Elizabeth D. Leonard’s fascinating book called All the
Daring of the Soldier-Women of the Civil War Armies.
In her
book, Leonard claims that "probably somewhere between five hundred and a
thousand women, who disguised themselves as men, enlisted as full-fledged
soldiers during the Civil War." Ms. Leonard continues to cite
well-documented cases, complete with names like Sara Edmonds, Rosetta Wakeman,
and Jennie Hodgers, who became Yankees, and Anna Clark and Malinda Blalock, who
became Rebels.
There were many reasons women
enlisted in both armies, knowing they would be marching off to war. Like the
men, some women felt called to service by patriotic duty, some to escape their
dreary lives, and some to earn a much-needed paycheck. But, unlike the men,
some women enlisted to follow their loved one, unable to bear the idea that he
should be gone from her side.
Whether true story or fictional, the story of a female
soldier during the Civil War captures the imagination. The image of the
Southern woman of the time has been established for many by the book and movie,
Gone With the Wind. The idea that Scarlett O'Hara would have dressed in
a man's clothing to march off to war is inconceivable! However, many Southern
women did just that. In Secrets and Sacrifices, Charlotte “Charlie”
Garrett, follows her husband into the Confederate army and becomes a crack
sharpshooter for the Twenty-Fifth Virginia infantry.
To
understand how women could enlist during the, mid-nineteenth century, military
life must be taken into consideration. So great was the need for recruits on
both sides, that a physical examination, if performed at all, was very
perfunctory. Sometimes the exam was nothing more than demonstrating the
presence of a trigger finger or opening one's mouth to show teeth strong enough
to tear open a powder cartridge.
When a
female enlisted, some may wonder, wouldn't she be noticed right off, short hair
or not? Certainly, women were generally smaller in stature, had more highly
pitched voices, and were quite beardless. But, there were so many young men and
boys signing up, some as young as fifteen, that one more smooth-skinned, small
boy would not attract undue notice. Because of the way people dressed during
that time period, the mentality of the day was, "if it wore pants, it was
male."
If this
lady could make it past the enlistment process, what about the physical demands
on a soldier? Since army recruits of the time came from all walks of life, a
male clerk struggling to handle his gear would draw no more attention than the
young "boy" doing the same. Like the male recruits, these women
learned to carry forty to fifty pounds of gear—gun, bayonet, scabbard,
ammunition, blanket, canteen, cooking implements, rations, clothing, etc. One
can only imagine how many troops had sore muscles, male or female.
Then there
was the question about personal hygiene and bodily needs. Camp life for both
Confederate and Union troops was not terribly restrictive, thus enabling a
woman to take care of her needs by just walking off into the trees and brush,
away from prying eyes as Charlotte had to do.
In addition, the uniforms of the
day were loose fitting to accommodate many different body types…and she, like
all other soldiers, would normally only receive one. Therefore, soldiers of the
time rarely changed their clothing. While smelly, another problem for the lady
soldier was solved.
Then there
was the strictly feminine issue of a young woman's monthly cycle. In her book,
Leonard puts forth the argument that many women soldiers probably became lean
and athletic from the long arduous marches and simply stopped menstruating. Or
she might have managed to dispose of the evidence of her menstrual periods by
burying it or sneaking it in with the similar-looking cloth from the hospital
tents.
With all of
these ways to escape detection, did the women get caught? Some female soldiers
were discovered . The most obvious end to some military careers came when the
woman was wounded during battle. In some cases, however, a female soldier gave
herself away by an inadvertent act such as her "unmasculine manner of
putting on her shoes and stockings." Charlotte, of Secrets and
Sacrifices, had to learn to spit and burp as the men around her to try and
blend in. One woman gave herself away by displaying proper table manners!
Nevertheless, some female soldiers wanted so badly to remain in the army that,
upon being put out of one regiment, she would simply assume a new name and
reenlist in another.
But some women were never detected.
One lady, who called herself, "Otto Schaffer," survived the war and
lived out the rest of her life as a man. She spent most of her days living as a
hermit. The Chicago Times-Herald published the story of
"Schaffer," the war veteran's death when a bolt of lightning
destroyed "his" cabin. It was the coroner who discovered the old
soldier's secret, and "his" identity as a woman was revealed at last.
One cannot help but admire the
gumption of these women who, like Charlotte, simply wanted to be with her
husband, and the others, who chose to fight for what they believed in, like
Jessica Lynch. The brave ladies of the Civil War, and those who continue to
fight today, deserve to be remembered and recognized for their sacrifices.
Leonard, Elizabeth D. All the Daring of the Soldier-Women
of the Civil War Armies, New York, NY, W.W. Norton & Company, Inc.
1999.
Wylie, Diane. Secret and Sacrifices. Ladsen, SC:
Vintage Romance Publishing, 2006.






3 comments:
Fascinating article. I'd always wondered how women got away with it in the civil war. Thanks for such a lucid explanation...Jean
What an amazing blog, Diane. I learned so much. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for responding, Jean and Tina.
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