volksjager ([info]volksjager) wrote in [info]wtf_history,

The many disguses of Sarah Edmonds

aka Frank Thompson civil war trany
a woman, a man , a black woman , solder in the Union army

Sarah Emma Edmonds (December 1841 – September 5, 1898), was an Canadian-born woman who is known for serving with the Union Army during the American Civil War. Edmonds was born in New Brunswick, Canada but left home after her verbally abusive father attempted to force her to marry a man she didn't love. She worked for a time in New Brunswick and New England selling Bibles but still afraid of being found by her father, she fled to the United States in 1856 where she settled in Flint, Michigan.

During the Civil War, she enlisted in the 2nd Michigan Infantry after four attempts, disguising herself as a man named "Franklin T. Thompson." Physical examinations were not required for enlistment at the time. She at first served as a male nurse, participating in several campaigns under McClellan, including the First Battle of Bull Run.

Frank Thompson's career took a turn before the war went full scale when a Union spy in Richmond Virginia was discovered and went before a firing squad, which opened up a slot in intelligence gathering for Thompson. When she (he) went before the committee for an interview, Thompson impressed the committee so much that the position was given to her.

Having to travel into enemy territory in order to gather information required Frank Thompson to come up with a disguise. In fact, Thompson established several. For example, for the first disguise, Edmonds used silver nitrate to dye her skin black, shaved her head, and walked into the Confederacy disguised as a black man by the name of Cuff. Another time she entered as an Irish peddler woman by the name of Bridget O'Shea. Yet another time she was working "for the Confederates" as a black laundress when a packet of official papers fell out of an officer's jacket. When Thompson returned to the Union with the papers, the generals were quite pleased.

Edmonds' career as Frank Thompson came to an end when she contracted malaria. Unable to go to the military hospital, because she would be revealed as a woman, she left the army and checked herself in to a private hospital, intending to return to military life once she had recuperated. Once she recovered, however, she saw posters listing Frank Thompson as a deserter. Rather than return to the army as a man (where she would be shot for deserting), she decided to serve as a female nurse at a Washington, D.C. hospital for wounded soldiers run by the United States Christian Commission.

In 1864 Boston publisher DeWolfe, Fiske, & Co. published Edmonds' accounting of her military experiences as The Female Spy of the Union Army. One year later her story was picked up by a Hartford, CT publisher who issued it with a new title, Nurse and Spy in the Union Army. It was a huge success, selling in excess of 175,000 copies. In 1867, she married L. H. Seely, a Canadian carpenter with whom she had three children; all three died young, so she adopted 2 boys. In 1882 she received a government pension of $12 a month, rewarding her military service, and after some campaigning, gained an honorable discharge. Edmonds died in La Porte, Texas, and is buried in Washington Cemetery, in Houston, Texas. She was inducted into the Michigan Women's Hall of Fame in 1892
Tags: 1800s, military, usa

  • Post a new comment

    Error

    Comments allowed for members only

    Anonymous comments are disabled in this journal

    Your IP address will be recorded 

  • 17 comments

[info]mememememeee

July 3 2008, 15:04:38 UTC 3 years ago

WOW. What a story :)

[info]templarwolf

July 3 2008, 15:09:50 UTC 3 years ago

Wow...that's very impressive.

[info]t3h_w0lfy

July 3 2008, 15:20:29 UTC 3 years ago

That's awesome.

[info]dinosaurbob

July 3 2008, 15:26:52 UTC 3 years ago

There is a nice little (and new) museum in Bardstown, KY dedicated to women in the Civil War. Their web page is here: http://www.civil-war-museum.org/about.html

I spent an hour or so there last week and they have a room dedicated to women who served in combat, usually disguised as men, during the war.

(That's a very cool icon, btw.)

[info]unhipster

July 3 2008, 16:09:54 UTC 3 years ago

That's so cool!

[info]malkiria

July 3 2008, 16:34:14 UTC 3 years ago

What a remarkable person!

[info]dcherrycoke

July 3 2008, 16:50:11 UTC 3 years ago

Wikipedia has a picture of her as Frank Thompson...she's pretty convincing :)

Also, Wikipedia has a interesting article (a link from the Sarah Edmundson article) about crossdressing during wartime

[info]poison_me

July 3 2008, 17:10:47 UTC 3 years ago

!!!!!!!!!!!

I was about to post this, mostly because she's my ancestress. :D

She has a monument in Michigan. For Frank Thompson on one side and Sarah Emma E. Edmonds on the other side.

[info]christhegeek

July 3 2008, 17:59:47 UTC 3 years ago Edited:  July 3 2008, 18:00:06 UTC

If this is the same woman I'm thinking of, they made the poor guy wear a dress in the nursing home at the end of his life because he was physically a woman.

[info]pris_stratton

July 3 2008, 18:38:26 UTC 3 years ago

Lol at the icon. I love that movie!

[info]dracula_disco

July 3 2008, 20:54:18 UTC 3 years ago

Really? I can't imagine how frustrating that must have been.

[info]nekooflove

July 3 2008, 22:28:57 UTC 3 years ago

I don't think she cross-dressed for gender reasons other than to get into the army.

[info]merinnan

July 3 2008, 23:22:38 UTC 3 years ago

Yeah, given afterwards she went back to life as a woman and even got married and had kids.

[info]postpossibly

July 3 2008, 19:09:08 UTC 3 years ago

Damn, what a woman.

[info]jaefire

July 3 2008, 20:32:45 UTC 3 years ago

That's so cool.

[info]lux_apollo

July 3 2008, 22:01:52 UTC 3 years ago

Awesome story! Thanks for posting!

[info]felis_ultharus

July 5 2008, 09:10:04 UTC 3 years ago

I published two similar cases on my website -- Esther Brandeau and Dr. James Barry.

Makes you wonder just how many transmen and women-dressed-as-men were out there, and were never discovered.
Create an Account
Forgot your login or password?
Facebook Twitter More login options
English • Español • Deutsch • Русский…