
When Most people think about the Civil War, they think about the sacrifices of men. But, there were several notable women who played important roles in the engagement, among them Sara Edmonds. Edmonds disguised herself as a Confederate male soldier in order to spy on the Army and was a field nurse during some of the bloodiest battles of the war. Some historians doubt the veracity of her claims, but there is no question she was there and received a pension for her service. And - let me repeat - she dressed as a man, successfully passed herself off as man, and FOUGHT A WAR AS A MAN!
This would make a great movie! In 1897, she became the second of only two women admitted to the Grand Army of the Republic, the Civil War Union Army veterans' organization. She was a member of the George B. Both items can be traced to her niece. That being said, the book contains a unique inscription on the first page - "Sara NYC".
Did Edmonds once own it? Dated 1865, book has some loose pages but is complete and both covers are attached with only small nicks to the cloth. The book has the attractive ragged cut edges and yellowing throughout but remains a nice example for being 160 years old. The man known as Franklin Flint Thompson to his fellow soldiers was really a woman - Sarah Emma Edmonds - one of the few females known to have served during the Civil War. Edmonds was born in Canada in 1841, but desperate to escape an abusive father and forced marriage, moved to Flint, Michigan in 1856, where she discovered that life was easier when she dressed as a man.
Compelled to join the military out of sense of duty, she enlisted in the 2nd Michigan Infantry as a male field nurse. As "Franklin Flint Thompson" Edmonds participated in several battles the took place during the Maryland Campaign of 1862, which included Second Battles of Manassas and Antietam. As a field nurse she would be dealing with mass casualties, especailly at Antietam which is known as one of the bloodiest battles of the Civil War. She is also said to have served as a Union spy and infiltrated the Confederate army several times, although there is no official record of it. One of her alleged aliases was as a Southern sympathizer named Charles Mayberry. Another was as a black man named Cuff, for which she disguised herself using wigs and silver nitrate to dye her skin. Malaria eventually forced Edmonds to give up her military career, since she knew she would be discovered if she went to a military hospital and her being listed as a deserter upon leaving made it impossible for her to return after she recovered. Nevertheless, she still continued serving her new country, again as a nurse, though now as a female one at a hospital for soldiers in Washington, D. In 1865, Edmonds published her experiences in the bestselling Nurse and Spy in the Union Army, and went on to marry and have children. But her heroic contributions to the Civil War were not forgotten and she was awarded an honorable discharge from the military, a government pension, and admittance to the Grand Army of the Republic as its only female member.