"One of the members of the 1st Kansas Reg't died in the Hospital yesterday after a very short illness. After death the somewhat startling discovery was made by those preparing the body for burial, that their companion, beside whom they had marched and fought for nearly two years was a woman. You can imagine their astonishment. The Reg't is camped near us and I went to the Hospital and saw her. She was of pretty good size for a woman with rather masculine features. She must have been very shrewd to keep her secret for so long when she was surrounded by several hundred men. The 1st Kansas was one of the first Regiments that entered the service two years ago. This girl enlisted when they went to Missouri, so they knew nothing of her early history. She doubtless served under an assumed name. Poor girl! Who knows what trouble, grief, or persecution drove her to embrace the hardships of a soldier's life. She had always sustained an excellent reputation in the Regiment. She was brave as a Lion in battle and never flinched from the severest fatigues or the hardest duties. She had been in more than a dozen battles and skirmishes. She was a Sergeant when she died. The men in the company all speak of her in terms of respect and affection She would have been promoted to a Lieutenancy in a few days if she had lived."
Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of women disguised themselves as men and served in the Civil War. I present research, both previously published along with new discoveries, to document the lives and trials of these extraordinary women.
Sunday, June 5, 2016
Brave as a Lion:Alfred J. Luther....Or Someone Else?
On April 6th, 1863, while stationed at Lake Providence, Louisiana with the 1st Minnesota Light Artillery, Fred L. Haywood wrote to his sister, Loesa,
My Indiana Talks, 6/13 and 6/14/16
Everything was going as planned. I got home from church, ate a quick sandwich, loaded everything in the car, and headed west to the train station. I left the same time I always leave, which means I would arrive the same time I always arrive, typically 30-45 minutes prior to boarding. And then came the congestion on I-12. Traffic is always heavy in places on the interstate, but I had never just come to a complete stop before. And it happened in two different areas....both due to wrecks. One involved five vehicles.
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