> Abigail Scott Duniway
> AH Tay
> Alice Cunningham Fletcher
> Amelia Stone Quinton
> Dr. Anita Newcomb McGee
> Anne Boleyn
> Anne Henrietta Martin
> Ann Eliza Leavitt Baker
> Annie Oakley
> Baby Doe McCourt
> Belle Boyd
> Belle Starr's Daughter
> Belle Starr
> Bessie Rockwell
> Big Nose Kate
> Calamity Jane
> Carrie Chapman Catt
> Carrie Nation
> Cassie Chadwick
> Cattle Kate
> Charley Parkhurst
> Clara Barton
> Creole Belles
> Cynthia Ann Parker
> Diana Fletcher
> Elizabeth Bradshaw
> Elizabeth Van Lew
> Dr. Eliza Cook
> Emma Lucy Gates Bowen
> Emmeline Pankhurst
> Ernestine Hielscher
> Etta Place
> Florence Merriam Bailey
> Harriet Tubman
> Hazel Vernon
> Helen Hunt Jackson
> Jeannette Rankin
> Jesse Benton Fremont
> Julie Bulette
> Kateri Tekakwitha
> Laura Ingalls Wilder
> Libby Smith Collins
> Margaret Cochran Corbin
> Margaret Heffernan Borland
> Mary Bradford Shockely
> Mary Elizabeth Bowser
> Mary Fields
> Mary Freeman
> Mary Surrat
> Mattie Silks
> Miriam "Ma" Ferguson
> Molly Brown
> Narcissa Prentiss
> Narcissa Whitman
> Natawista
> Nellie Cashman
> Pauline Cushman
> Pearl Hart
> Poker Alice
> Polly Bemis
> Women Railroad Work Gang
> Rose of Cimarron
> Sacagawea
> Sarah Winnemucca
> Sojourner Truth
> Susan B Anthony
> Willa Cather

> Billy the Kidd
> Bill Doolin
> Buffalo Bill
> The Wild Bunch: Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid

AmericanIndians.com
AmericanRevolution.com
HomeworkHotline.com
MedalofHonor.com
VietnamWar.com
Belle Boyd
Belle Boyd, Civil War Confederate Spy

   One of the most famous of Confederate spies, Belle Boyd served the Confederate forces in the Shenandoah Valley. Born in Martinsburg-now part of West Virginia-she operated her spying operations from her fathers hotel in Front Royal, providing valuable information to Generals Turner Ashby and "Stonewall" Jackson during the spring 1862 campaign in the Valley. The latter general then made her a captain and honorary aide-de-camp on his staff. As such she was able to witness troops reviews. Betrayed by her lover, she was arrested on July 29, 1862, and held for a month in the Old Capitol Prison in Washington. Exchanged a month later, she was in exile with relatives for a time but was again arrested in June 1863 while on a visit to Martinsburg. On December 1, 1863, she was released, suffering from typhoid, and was then sent to Europe to regain her health. The blockade runner she attempted to return on was captured and she fell in love with the prize master, Samuel Hardinge, who later married her in England after being dropped from the navy's rolls for neglect of duty in allowing her to proceed to Canada and then England. Hardinge attempted to reach Richmond, was detained in Union hands, but died soon after his release. While in England Belle Boyd Hardinge had a stage career and published Belle Boyd in Camp and Prison. She died while touring the western United States. (Sigaud, Louis, A., Belle Boyd, Confederate Spy, and Scarborough, Ruth, Belle Boyd.- Siren of the South)
Google