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Women Soldiers in the Civil War
This nonfiction resource book talks about the many women who wanted to be soldiers or became soldiers.
A group of over twenty Virginia women wanted to organize a volunteer regiment. They wrote to the Confederate Secretary of War and he rejected their offer.
Black women in Northern cities offered to be “nurses, seamstresses, and warriors if need be.” Local officials refused.
But some women did muster into the army. Fanny Wilson and Nellie Graves wanted to be near their boyfriends.
Malinda Pritchard Blalock served both the Union and the Confederacy as a soldier.
Women cut their hair short and dressed in soldier’s uniforms, often escaping detection simply because no one expected it.
Great book for Civil War research and history lovers.
-Sandra Merville Hart
Amazon
Published on May 29, 2018 23:00