Elizabeth Van Lew: An Unlikely Union Spy
A member of the Richmond elite, one woman defied convention and the Confederacy and fed secrets to the Union during the Civil War
- By Cate Lineberry
- Smithsonian.com, May 05, 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
The bullying only made Van Lew more determined to help the Union. She passed information to prisoners using a custard dish with a secret compartment and communicated with them through messages hidden in books. She bribed guards to give prisoners extra food and clothing and to transfer them to hospitals where she could interview them. She even helped prisoners plan their escape, hiding many of them briefly in her home.
“One of the things that made women so effective as spies during this time period was that few people expected them either to engage in such ‘unladylike’ activity, or to have the mental capacity and physical endurance to make them successful,” said historian Elizabeth Leonard, author of All the Daring of the Soldier: Women of the Civil War Armies.
Union Spymaster
In December 1863, two Union soldiers who had escaped from Libby Prison with the help of Van Lew’s underground network told Union Gen. Benjamin Butler about Van Lew. Impressed with the stories, Butler sent one of the men back to Richmond with orders to recruit Van Lew as a spy. Van Lew agreed and soon became the head of Butler’s spy network and his chief source of information about Richmond. As instructed, Van Lew wrote her dispatches in code and in a colorless liquid, which turned black when combined with milk.
Her first dispatch, on January 30, 1864, informed Butler that the Confederacy was planning to ship inmates from Richmond’s overcrowded prisons to Andersonville Prison in Georgia. Her note suggested the number of forces he would need to attack and free the prisoners and warned him not to underestimate the Confederates. Butler immediately sent Van Lew’s report to Secretary of War Edwin Stanton, who ordered a raid, but the Confederate Army had been warned by a Union soldier on its payroll and successfully rebuffed the attack.
Though this attempt to free the prisoners failed, another one—this time by the prisoners themselves—had a better outcome. On February 14, 1864, one hundred Union officers escaped Libby Prison by digging a tunnel under the street—one of the most daring prison breaks of the war. Fewer than half were recaptured. The victory, however small, rallied the hopes of Northerners. Van Lew, however, became even more dedicated to helping the men still suffering in Richmond prisons, particularly those in Belle Isle Prison, which she visited after the Libby Prison escape. Of her stop there she wrote, “It surpassed in wretchedness and squalid filth my most vivid imagination. The long lines of forsaken, despairing, hopeless-looking beings, who, within this hollow square, looked upon us, gaunt hunger staring from their sunken eyes.”
On March 1, Union soldiers once again attempted to free Richmond’s prisoners but failed. Twenty-one-year-old Col. Ulric Dahlgren and Brig. Gen. H. Judson Kilpatrick led the raid. Dahlgren, who had lost his right leg at the Battle of Gettysburg, was killed in the skirmish and most of his men were captured. Confederate soldiers buried Dahlgren in a shallow grave the following day, but went back and dug up his body after hearing that papers found on Dahlgren proved he and his men were on a mission to kill Confederate President Jefferson Davis. The outraged men put Dahlgren’s body on display at a railroad depot, where crowds of onlookers gawked at it. His wooden leg and the little finger on his left hand were missing. After several hours, his body was taken down and, on orders of Confederate President Davis, secretly buried.
Van Lew was disgusted by the mutilation of Dahlgren’s body and promised “to discover the hidden grave and remove his honored dust to friendly care.” She asked her most trusted agents to help. Though the Confederates didn’t know it, one man had witnessed the secret burial and was able to tell Van Lew’s operatives where it had taken place. They dug up the body and reburied it until they could return it safely to Dahlgren’s family.
Grant’s Greatest Source
By June 1864, Van Lew’s spy network had grown to more than a dozen people. Along with the agents in government service, she relied on an informal network of men and women, black and white—including her African-American servant Mary Elizabeth Bowser. The group relayed hidden messages between five stations, including the Van Lew family farm outside the city, to get key information to the Union. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant later told Van Lew, “You have sent me the most valuable information received from Richmond during the war.”
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Comments (11)
AWESOME
Posted by Piediepie on March 21,2013 | 05:47 PM
What excitement in this story. I certainly am delighted to learn about this wonderful female.
Posted by Elijah lanmpkinson on March 13,2013 | 11:25 AM
she had an amazing journey
Posted by sunny sanchez on May 24,2012 | 10:49 AM
A wonderful play on the efforts of Elizabeth Van Lew and Mary Bowser to help the Union from the home of Jefferson and Varina Davis has been written by Paullette MacDougal, Artistic Director of Paradox Players, Austin, TX. We saw the play last night and absolutely loved learning about these amazing women and their part in this little known piece of American history.
Posted by Dianne Kaderli on May 20,2012 | 02:56 PM
Jim Furbush's comment above says he is a descendant of Elizabeth Van Lew. What I have read so far does not mention she had offspring. I am a genealogist and interested in Van Lew (variously VanLiew). Please contact me if you have any ancestry info on this topic. Thank you.
Posted by Richard Schneider on March 5,2012 | 03:03 PM
My wife is a descendent of Elizabeth Van Lew and we traveled to Richmond with her parents a couple of years ago to see where she had lived. The site of her home (which was razed, some say in retaliation)now has an elementary school on the property. Inside there is a tribute to Ms. Van Lew and Mary Bowser. Not surprisingly, when we went to the Richmond Visitors Bureau and asked for more information about her, the reception was rather cool. Also, when we visited the Tredegar Iron Works, which is now a National Historial Site, one entry in the visitors log had as a comment: "This truly was a war of Northern aggression". Some things never change.
Posted by Jim Furbush on January 31,2012 | 01:03 PM
ostracized by her fellow Richmonders for thinking (even slightly) different? No way.
Posted by Adam Talbott on January 17,2012 | 03:23 PM
what a lovely page i just love reading about a person that help us so much back in the day i mean its just great...
Posted by jahrell on September 13,2011 | 09:51 AM
This article does a great job of presenting Elizabeth "Bet" Van Lew's contributions--and alluding to those of Mary Bowser; my book about Bowser will be released by William Morrow in early 2012, providing readers with insights into black life in Richmond before and during the War.
As the historical facts about Van Lew evidence, the Union underground in Richmond was always quite strong--enfranchised Virginians (i.e., white men) opposed secession by a 2:1 margin well into early April 1861. Even as the majority came to vote in favor of seceding, a significant portion of Virginians retained their Union sympathies.
But the observation early in the article that, "These triumphs for the Union, however, would ultimately cost Van Lew not only her family fortune but also her place as a member of Richmond’s social elite," overlooks a salient aspect of Southern life in the 1860s: during the course of the war, many of Richmond's wealthiest families lost their fortunes, and their status as "social elites" was altered as war, and then defeat, took its toll on Virginia's upper class whites (who were always a minority of the total population).
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Portland-OR/Lois-Leveen/130653510344318
Posted by Lois Leveen on May 17,2011 | 01:36 AM
This is all weel and good, but let's face it, as men we know that we're far superior when it comes to fighting. It's just a natural truth.
Posted by NavySeal53 on May 16,2011 | 07:03 PM
What an amazing story on two levels: one inspiring, considering deeply southern Van Lew's mature and insightful understanding of duty to her country (the Union)...the other, a shameful tale of her mistreatment and ostracism by southerners long after the war had ended. This article was so well-written by Ms. Lineberry, and brings to light humanizing and important aspects of a conflict that defines us in many ways as a nation today. We would all do well to learn more about it, helping to make sense of much of current divergent attitudes and opinions.
Posted by Tanya Wagner on May 9,2011 | 07:12 PM