What women? Have you named one that FOUGHT in COMBAT in the civil war ...
.. or does your "participate" have to do with carrying water or mending wounds?
Originally Posted by LexusLover
Oh, yes! With name and pictures @ http://www.eccie.net/showpost.php?p=...&postcount=104.
Her name was Frances Clalin Clayton. You're illiteracy is astounding, LL.
Frances Clalin Clayton, disguised as a man, and using the pseudonym "Jack Williams" enlisted with the Union alongside with her husband during the fall of 1861. Both Clalin and Elmer were born and lived in the North, but despite living in the state of Minnesota they enlisted in a Missouri regiment. It is unknown which units specifically they fought in, but Clalin is said to have served in both cavalry and artillery units. Clalin served side by side with her husband until he died in battle in 1862. Clalin is known to have fought in the Battle of Fort Donelson in Tennessee, February 13, 1862, where the Union won after three days of fighting. During this battle Clalin was wounded, but was not discovered because of her injury. Clalin was engaged in seventeen battles other than Fort Donelson. Reports say she was wounded a total of three times, and even taken prisoner once.
It was during the Battle of Stones River (or Murfreesboro), on December 31, 1862, that her husband died. He was only a few feet in front of Clalin when he died, but some sources say that she did not stop fighting - she stepped over his body and charged when the commands came.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Clalin
Another is Jennie Irene Hodgers:
"On August 6, 1862, she enlisted into the 95th Illinois Infantry using the name Albert Cashier and was assigned to Company G. The regiment was part of the Army of the Tennessee under Ulysses S. Grant and fought in approximately forty battles, including the siege at Vicksburg, the Red River Campaign and the combat at Guntown, Mississippi, where they suffered heavy casualties."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Cashier
Here's what your article said about your FIGHTING CROSS-DRESSER ...
"Williams enlisted in the United States Regular Army on 15 November 1866 at St. Louis, Missouri for a three year engagement, passing herself off as a man."
The last surrender happened: June 23, 1865. Over a year earlier.
#1: The civil war was over so by your own admission you are full of shit ... and
#2: Even after she "enlisted" ...
"There is no record that she ever engaged an enemy or saw any form of direct combat while she was enlisted."
Quoted right out of YOUR article. There is NO EVIDENCE (or even a report) that she "participated in battles"!!!!
You are just making crap up out of nothing. To prove what?
Nothing.
"....no record that she ever engaged an enemy or saw any form of direct combat ..."
"....no record that she ever engaged an enemy or saw any form of direct combat ..."
"....no record that she ever engaged an enemy or saw any form of direct combat ..."
Originally Posted by LexusLover
Cathay Williams' two year COMBAT tour with her COMBAT unit, the 38th Infantry Regiment, was against the Apaches during the ongoing Indian wars in the West. She served as a COMBAT infantry rifleman from 1866 to 1868. Those are documented facts, and nothing you've foolishly connived to post has refuted those facts. Your trifling notion that since she didn't fire her weapon in action means she didn't serve in a COMBAT unit in a hostile, COMBAT situation is ridiculous. BTW, marching 500 to 600 miles, fording streams, rivers and crossing deserts carrying a 56 inch, 9 lb rifle with pack and other personal and military accoutrements isn't sitting around drinking gin and playing cards -- just an FYI.