Yes there was a civil war spy named Loretta Boyd. She began her work in the Civil war as a nurse for the Union. She later became a spy for the Confederate. Her sister, Belle Boyd, was also a spy.
she was a confederate spy
because she was a spy in the American civil war
To spy on the enemy
She was a civil war spy that worked for the confederates in the 1800's
Yes, there was. See the Related Links for "Women Spies in the Civil War" to the bottom for the answer.
No. She was a spy during the Civil War
Yes, there was. See the Related Links for "Women Spies in the Civil War" to the bottom for the answer.
Harriet Beecher StoweHarriet TubmanClara BartonLucretia MottSocial ReformerRose O'Neal GreenhowConfederate Spy
There were several women spies during the US Civil War, including Rose O'Neal Greenhow, a prominent Confederate spy, and Belle Boyd, who spied for the Confederacy. Other notable women spies included Elizabeth Van Lew, who was a Union spy, and Mary Elizabeth Bowser, an African American woman who worked as a spy for the Union while posing as a slave in Confederate households.
no Antonia Willard was not captured in the war. she was a confederate spy in the civil war
Yes there was a civil war spy named Loretta Boyd. She began her work in the Civil war as a nurse for the Union. She later became a spy for the Confederate. Her sister, Belle Boyd, was also a spy.
she was a confederate spy
Harriet Tubman served as a spy and scout for the Union Army during the Civil War.
because she was a spy in the American civil war
spy
In the civil war they didn't care how old you were. Also you could be a woman or a man. They would even let small children spy. As long as they got info.