Nurse and Spy in the Union Army

S. Emma E. EDMONDS

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Nurse and Spy in the Union Army
Nurse and Spy in the Union Army

"I WISH YOU TO BURY ME WITH YOUR OWN HANDS, THAT NONE MAY KNOW AFTER MY DEATH THAT I AM OTHER THAN MY APPEARANCE INDICATES": EMMA EDMONDS' NURSE AND SPY IN THE UNION ARMY, 1865

EDMONDS, S. Emma E. Nurse and Spy in the Union Army: Comprising the Adventures and Experiences of a Woman in Hospitals, Camps, and Battle-Fields. Hartford: W.S. Williams, 1865. Thick octavo, original gilt- and blind-stamped brown cloth.

1865 edition, the first issued under the title of Nurse and Spy in the Union Army—"a classic document for expanding our appreciation of women's roles in wartime"—Edmonds' dramatic record of serving in the Union Army disguised as a man, with frontispiece portrait and eight full-page plates, in original cloth.

Edmonds' "highly personal account" covers her experiences on the front lines as a soldier, nurse and spy for the Union Army (Nevins I:84). Featured are sensational eyewitness accounts of her role "in engagements at Blackburn's Ford, the first battle of Manassas, and the Peninsula campaign… Some of the most interesting exploits described in her book derive from her work as a spy. In her first expedition she blackened her face with silver nitrate and acted as a male slave in building Confederate fortifications. Later, as 'Bridget,' an Irish peddler woman, she crossed the Chickahominy River to learn about Confederate troop movements… it has been estimated that she made 11 trips behind the Confederate lines in 1862 and 1863… She is particularly significant in that she was acknowledged as a member of the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR), the only woman to receive this tribute. Like other chroniclers she does not apologize in her narrative for her transgressions of social convention. Her ability to impersonate a man and to spy in the guise of an Irishwoman or even a slave drew attention to the permeability of social categories, which many must have found threatening. Her story remains a classic document for expanding our appreciation of women's roles in wartime" (ANB). First issued in 1864 as The Unsexed: The Female Soldier. Sabin 21869. Nevins II:125. See Nevins I:84. Contemporary penciled owner signature dated 1867.

Interior generally fresh with light scattered foxing, mild edge-wear mainly to spine ends of original cloth. A near-fine copy.

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