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It's True! Your Cat Could Be a Spy Page 2

Once he had to take over

  the wheel in an emergency

  on board a ship – in

  a pink, see-through

  nightgown! Luckily, the

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  crew knew his secret. The King of England, Edward VII, fell in love with ‘Edith’, and a young French officer proposed marriage. Another time, Herbert was chased

  around a train by a German officer.

  Eventually, Herbert was tired of having to live as a

  girl and retired from spying. He returned to working

  at sea, and sailed on an Australian expedition to the

  Antarctic with famous Australian explorer Douglas

  Mawson. He retired to Melbourne’s Mornington

  Peninsula. There, he invited children to spend their

  summer holidays with him and spent the evenings

  telling them of his adventures.

  FRENCH FRILLS AND

  RUSSIAN ROYALTY

  Herbert Dyce Murphy wasn’t the only male

  cross-dressing spy. In 1755 a pretty young woman

  left Paris, on her way to the court of Empress

  Elizabeth of Russia. ‘She’ was the Chevalier d’Eon, an

  excellent swordsman, who had played at dressing as

  a woman at parties, to see if he could get away with

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  it. King Louis XV of France wanted to re-establish

  contact with Russia without the British knowing, and

  Chevalier d’Eon agreed to be his spy. A woman had a

  better chance of surviving this mission, as she would

  be less likely to be suspected of spying. Chevalier

  d’Eon’s mission to have Empress Elizabeth sign a treaty

  with France was successful, and he left for England. But in England he became a double agent, working both

  for the British Secret Service and

  the French. When he refused to

  come home, he was paid off by

  the French on the condition that

  he wore women’s clothes for the

  rest of his life. They thought he

  couldn’t do them any harm

  as a woman, but perhaps

  Chevalier d’Eon was happier

  wearing women’s clothes.

  14

  3

  BELLE, BET

  AND HARRIET:

  WOMEN

  UNDERCOVER

  About 150 years ago, a terrible war was fought between

  the Northern and Southern states of America. This was

  the American Civil War (1861 to 1865).

  One of the reasons for this war was slavery. The

  South had slaves, the North didn’t. The slaves were the

  descendants of African people kidnapped for the slave

  trade. They wanted freedom, so many of them wanted

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  the Northern army to win. Slaves made good spies

  because their masters didn’t think of them as people.

  Secrets were discussed in front of them as if they

  were invisible.

  Women from both sides

  also spied. Nobody paid much

  attention to them either – a bad

  mistake! Harriet Tubman was

  Image rights

  a very brave woman who had

  unavailable

  smuggled many slaves to freedom

  before the war. She became a spy,

  disguising herself as a field-hand

  or farm wife while organising

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  spy networks for the Northern army. Harriet had been

  a slave herself, before escaping to freedom, and if she

  had been caught, she would have died horribly.

  THE DOUBLE-CROSS-DRESSING SPY

  Like other white women at this time, Sarah Emma

  Edmonds disguised herself as a man to fight for the

  Northern army, under the name ‘Frank Thompson’.

  When a spy was needed for a mission in Virginia, she

  disguised herself as a male slave. She wore a wig and coloured her skin, then joined a group of Southern

  slaves who were building defence fortifications in

  Yorktown. When the dye started to come off her skin,

  she explained that she was turning white because her

  mother was a white woman!

  She then got herself the job of carrying water

  around the Southern camp, so she could listen to

  soldiers’ conversations and check out the fortifications.

  One night, Sarah (still disguised as a man) was sent

  to take supper to the guards, and was startled to be

  handed a gun. Some of the guards had been shot and

  the slaves had to replace them. Sarah took the gun

  and slipped away to report the information about the

  Southern fortifications to her own army.

  Not many spies in the Civil War were trained.

  Often a general only had to buy a newspaper from the

  other side to find out the enemy’s plans! Cracking the

  enemy code was sometimes as easy as reading

  the washing.

  Reading the washing . . . ?

  SUDS AND SIGNALS

  The Dabneys, a married black couple, escaped from

  slavery and found their way to the Northern army’s

  camp, on one side of the Rappahannock River in

  Virginia. Mr Dabney was fascinated by the army’s flag

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  signalling system and asked many questions. He got the

  hang of it, and then he and his wife made a plan.

  Mrs Dabney went across the river and got a job as

  a laundress, washing clothes at the headquarters of a

  Southern general. Not long after, Mr Dabney began

  to pass on accurate information to Northern officers

  about the Southern army’s movements. The officers

  were amazed. They asked, ‘How do you do it, without ever leaving the camp?’

  Mr Dabney took them to the riverbank and showed

  them. Across the river, Mrs Dabney was hanging

  clothes on the line. The Dabneys had worked out

  their own code. Each piece of clothing had a meaning.

  Even the way it was hung told a story.

  19

  ‘CRAZY BET’

  One Southern woman, Elizabeth Van Lew, found a way

  to help the Northern Union. She had been taught in

  a Quaker school and the Quakers were firmly against

  slavery. Elizabeth freed all her slaves and asked one

  of them, Mary Bowser, to help her by working in the

  home of the Southern President, Jeff Davis. Elizabeth

  pretended to be insane, and became known in her

  home town of Richmond, Virginia, as ‘Crazy Bet’.

  Under this disguise, she set up a network of couriers to get information through to

  the North.

  While ‘Crazy Bet’ was

  sending her reports on what

  the Southern army was

  doing, using secret code and

  letters written in invisible

  ink, her friend Mary Bowser

  listened in to conversations

  and memorised military

  documents. She reported

  20

  to Crazy Bet by hiding documents in hollow eggs or in

  the false bottoms of dinner trays.

  After the war, Elizabeth Van Lew was shunned by

  her neighbours as a traitor. Was she a traitor? Which is more important, being loyal to your country or acting

  according to your beliefs?

  Invisible letters

  How do you make invisible ink? The simplest kind

  is lemon juice. You dip a toothpick or a small stick in

  the juice, write your message (in code, of cou
rse)

  and let it dry. To read your secret message you need

  to heat the paper. Use an iron to make your message

  visible – the letters will appear brown.

  BOYISH BELLE BOYD

  There were also quite a few women doing their bit

  for the Southern army. One of these was Belle Boyd.

  She was captured a number of times, but was always

  released. No one believed a woman could possibly be guilty of spying.

  When Belle was sixteen, her town in West Virginia

  was occupied by Northern troops. She gathered

  information for the Southern army by mixing with

  the Northerners. When soldiers tried to break into her

  mother’s home, she shot one of

  them. (This incident

  later appeared in a

  novel called Gone

  With the Wind.)

  She was tried in

  court, but

  was let off

  because it was

  in self-defence.

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  Belle moved to

  another town, where

  she could be of more use

  collecting information

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  about Northern troop

  movements. Disguised as a

  boy, she rode many miles

  to deliver the information

  to the Southern General,

  ‘Stonewall’ Jackson, then

  continued with other

  spy missions. When she became too well known to

  continue spying, she got a job delivering important

  secret documents from the Southern states to Europe.

  On the way, the ship was captured, and Belle fell in

  love with a man from the other side, a Northern naval

  officer, Samuel Hardinge. He helped her escape to

  England, and was dismissed from the navy for doing so.

  They married and settled in England, but Samuel died

  only a year later. After the war, Belle made a living as an actress and lecturer, telling people her story.

  23

  AERIAL SNOOPING

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  4

  SECRET SERVICE

  IN THE TWO

  WORLD WARS

  In both World War I and World War II, many men

  and women risked their lives to get urgent military

  information through to their commanders. Some were

  trained to be spies, others were asked to spy because of their special knowledge or skills. But some people took

  up spying just for the money.

  25

  THE DANCING SPY

  When we speak of a female

  spy, we often call her

  a ‘Mata Hari’. But

  the real Mata Hari

  wasn’t very good at spying

  and no one is really sure who

  she was working for. Her real

  name was Margaretha Zelle

  and she was famous as a dancer.

  During World War I (1914–

  1918), Mata Hari was asked to

  spy for Germany. She decided

  she could use the money.

  Then she was offered a job spying for the French, who

  were fighting the Germans. She agreed to do it, for

  a million francs, but she was mistaken for another

  German spy and was dragged off to England for

  questioning. She said she was working for the French,

  but the French spy agency denied it. Still, Mata Hari