William H. Seward, Lincoln’s Secretary of State, once said after visiting Winchester, Virginia, that “The men were all off in the Rebel army. The women were she-devils.”[1] Winchester has a pretty phenomenal war-time history, one that has been explored in several books and many articles over the years. The old town was settled in 1732 and was once home to George Washington. There were six battles fought nearby, and the town changed hands over seventy times during the 1860s.
Seward visited the area
in late March 1862, following the first battle of Winchester. Someone asked
Seward about Unionist sentiment in the town, and Seward made his now-famous “she-devils”
remark. The question is an interesting one. Many in the North believed that the
South was largely Unionist, controlled by a few rabid-fire eaters that had
pushed weak-minded politicians into secessionist and war. And there were
Unionist pockets and people, even in Winchester. But in early 1862, the South
was firmly behind the movement for a separate country.[2]
What led Seward to proclaim
the women in Winchester “she-devils”? Seward was in Winchester to personally
thank Brig. Gen. James Shields for holding off Stonewall Jackson’s forces at Kernstown
on March 23. Seward, with his son and daughter, and Mrs. Ellen Stanton (wife of
Secretary of War Edwin Stanton), spent about a day in the town and on the
battlefield. While his time there was short, Seward undoubtedly had time to
talk to the generals in the area and to base his assumption on their observations.
Later, Seward’s “she-devils”
came to be known as the “devil diarists.” Who were these “she-devils”?
(wikipedia) |
Emma Riely (1847-1942)
was just fourteen when the war began. She left a memorable quotation – writing that
“People used to have a basket to carry their money to market in but it bought
so little they could carry their provisions home in their pocketbooks.” When
forced to board Federal soldier officers in 1864, Riely slipped into their
rooms while they were out and stole brandy, lemons, and sugar which were
smuggled to Confederates in a local hospitals.[4]
Kate Sperry
(1843-1886) was eighteen when the war commenced. Her father was a Winchester
merchant who joined the Confederate army. In her diary, she kept accounts of
the work she did in local hospitals and of the depredations committed by
Federal soldiers when they occupied the town. On March 17, 1862, she noted that
the Federals “steal everything they lay their hands on…” and in April wrote “How
I detest these dreadful invaders, they are without exception the meanest set of
poor white trash I have ever beheld!” Kate eventually married a soldier, moved
to Goldsboro in 1864, and then to Mississippi after the war.[5]
Cornelia Peake
McDonald (1822-1909) wrote the earliest published diary of the “Devil Diarists
of Winchester” (1875), having a profound impact on Civil War histography. McDonald
noted that Federal soldiers stole the meal she was fixing her children on
Christmas Eve 1862, then in May 1862, took her fence and firewood. While she
refused to take the oath that would allow her to purchase foodstuffs for her
family from the Federals or sutlers, she did work out deals to trade flour for
coffee, sugar, and bacon. The McDonald
family would flee Winchester in 1863, settling in Lexington. She eventually
made her way to Louisville, Kentucky.[6]
There were others –
Laura Lee, Portia Baldwin Baker, Ann Cary Randolph Jones, Margaretta Miller, and
Mary Tucker Magill. There are even two who supported the Union, Julia Chase and
Harriet Hollingsworth Griffin, who wrote from Winchester during the war. While
there are other dairies and reminiscences from other Southern cities written or
concerning the war, the “she-devils” undoubtedly have contributed more per
capita than any other group, making the war-time experience of Winchester
unrivaled in the annals of Confederate history. What began as a nasty misogynist slur is now a
title for informal historians who left behind critical records for the future
study of the civilian experience in our nation’s great struggle.
If you were like to
learn more about civilians in Winchester during the war, check out Laura Jane
Ping’s 2007 master’s thesis, “Life in an Occupied City: Women in Winchester,
Virginia during the Civil War,” here.
2 comments:
I highly recommend one of my Appalachian State University mentor's, Sheila Phipps', biography of Mary Greenhow Lee, "Genteel Rebel," by LSU Press.
Thanks Tim!
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