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Women of the Confederacy

Fill the boxes with the individual names by matching it with their description. Each name will be used only once.
Horizontales
Hospital Administrator at Robertson Hospital in Richmond, VA; known as the "Angel of the Confederacy"; only woman given the commission of Captain.
Chief Matron at Richmond's Chimborazo Hospital from 1862 until the surrender of Richmond in April 1865.
Confederate spy known as "A fire-eating secessionist in skirts"; was arrested in May 1862 and was imprisoned at Ship's Island, MS for 3 1/2 months.
Honorary aide-de-camp for JEB Stuart and John Mosby; arrested in 1863 for espionage and spent several months at the Old Capitol Prison in Washington, DC.
The only female Confederate smuggler and spy that was never caught; daughter of a physician, she smuggled large amounts of quinine and morphine; her family home was a meeting place for Coleman's Scouts.
Operated a spy network at Crab Point, NC; captured January 1865 and found guilty of smuggling; sentenced to death, but for unknown reasons, was released after two months.
Confederate spy known as the "Rebel Rose"; credited with passing information that helped win First Battle of Manassas; became a Confederate Ambassador to Europe in 1863.
Known as the "Siren of the Shenandoah"; while a prisoner at the Old Capitol Prison in Washington, DC, she would fly the Confederate Flag out her window and sing "Dixie" at the top of her lungs.
Confederate spy who relayed information to Captain John Jackson Dickison; lead to the "Battle of Horse Landing" on the St John's River, south of St Augustine, FL, where a Confederate Calvary sunk a Union warship, the USS Columbine, in May 1864.
Verticales
Confederate spy. home was used as a supply base and respite for Confederate soldiers and spies; she and her husband, Judge James Clark, were members of the Confederate Spy Ring, Knights of the Golden Circle.
Lived 8 miles south of Memphis, TN; when Memphis fell in June 1862, she smuggled supplies, medicine and information to the Confederate Troops.
Confederate Spy and Soldier. Born in Cuba, immigrated to New Orleans at the age of 7; known to have fought at First Battle of Manassas, Battle of Ball's Bluff, Battle of Fort Donelson, and Battle of Shiloh under the alias "Harry T. Buford" before her identity was discovered.
Born in Scotland, she was the Hospital Matron of the Medical Department of the Army of Tennessee; organized field hospitals in the Tennessee and Kentucky campaigns.
Confederate spy for the Knights of the Golden Circle; carried messages between Memphis and Ohio.