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    • Scout, guide, and spy for the Confederacy

      • Nancy Hart Douglas (1846–c. 1902 [1913 (?)]) was a scout, guide, and spy for the Confederacy during the American Civil War. Serving first with the Moccasin Rangers, a pro-Confederate guerrilla group in present-day West Virginia, she later joined the Confederate Army and continued to serve as a guide and spy under General Stonewall Jackson.
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  2. Nancy Hart Douglas (1846–c. 1902 [1913 (?)]) was a scout, guide, and spy for the Confederacy during the American Civil War. Serving first with the Moccasin Rangers, a pro-Confederate guerrilla group in present-day West Virginia, she later joined the Confederate Army and continued to serve as a guide and spy under General Stonewall Jackson .

    • 1846
    • American
    • 2
    • Joshua Douglas
  3. Mar 19, 2023 · Maria Boyd and Nancy Hart Douglas were two notorious West Virginia women who made their mark during the Civil War, fighting and spying for the Confederacy. West Virginia has its own unique history when it comes to the Civil War, and the break that the mountain state made from Virginia in order to join the Union was far from clean.

  4. In the decades after the Revolution, many of Harts adventures became the stuff of legend and inspiration. During the Civil War, a band of Georgia women formed a militia unit named in honor of Nancy Hart, illustrating how the legacy of Harts heroism has lived on.

    • Jone Johnson Lewis
    • Belle Boyd. She passed information on Union army movements in the Shenandoah to General T. J. (Stonewall) Jackson, and was imprisoned as a spy. She wrote a book on her exploits.
    • Antonia Ford. She informed General J.E.B. Stuart of Union activity near her Fairfax, Virginia, home. She married a Union major who helped gain her release.
    • Rose Greenhow. A popular society hostess in D.C., she used her contacts to gain information to pass to the Confederacy. Imprisoned for a time for her espionage, she published her memoirs in England.
    • Nancy Hart Douglas. She gathered information on federal movements and led rebels to their positions. Captured, she tricked a man into showing her his gun, and then killed him with it to escape.
  5. Jan 21, 2014 · Civil War telegrapher Marion H. Kerner, an officer who befriended Hart at the encampment, later made her story famous in the magazine, Leslie's Weekly. That same night, Hart escaped from the Union camp on Starr's horse and joined a regiment of about 200 Confederate soldiers led by Major R. Augustus Bailey (the Moccasin Rangers had been ...

  6. Jun 25, 2018 · Between 1861 and 1865, a group of 40 LaGrange women organized an all-woman militia, the Nancy Harts. Organized in military formations and skilled in marksmanship and battle tactics, the women...

  7. Aug 18, 2016 · Listen. Share this Article. According to tradition, Rebel spy Nancy Hart led a Confederate raid on the Union position at Summersville in Nicholas County on July 25, 1862. Hart was only in her late teens at the time. Early in the Civil War, she’d worked closely with the Confederate Moccasin Rangers as a scout and spy.

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