On the face of it Isabelle Boyd was an unlikely spy. She was from a very distinguished family, well known and well respected in the town of Martinsburg, Virginia (now West Virginia) her father owned several retail stores and her grandfather had served under General George Washington. In the 1850s women of her social class were expected to be good wives and mothers, but little else. Their world revolved around raising children, being perfect hostesses, and taking care of their husbands. Little else mattered. Belle was made of sterner stuff, though how she became a Confederate agent was apparently purely by chance.

Belle Boyd’s Early Years

Isabelle Boyd was born in May 8, 1844, daughter of a merchant businessman. She received a good education for the time, attending Mount Washington Female College from 1856 to 1860 She was not beautiful, even by Victorian standards, but had a good figure, a flirtatious charm, and a lively wit. It was also said she had shapely ankles, sexy in a time when women’s legs were covered by long dresses and feet were rarely seen.

Belle’s odyssey began in 1861, when Union soldiers burst into her home. A Union sergeant tried to raise the U.S. flag, and apparently harsh words were exchanged between him and Belle’s mother. One thing led to another, and in the heat of the moment 17-year old Belle shot the soldier dead. She was taken into custody, but a group of Northern officers ruled it was justifiable homicide.

Belle had escaped the hangman’s noose, but the experience emboldened her, not cowed her. She became a full-fledged Confederate spy. Her greatest service came early in the war, when she transmitted vital intelligence to General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson in May 1862. The information allowed him to capture Front Royal, Virginia, and move on to Winchester. Jackson himself acknowledged her skill, thanking her for the “immense service you have rendered your country.”

Belle Boyd, Espionage Agent

Belle continued to act as a spy until her lick ran out in July, 1862. She was captured and detained at Washington’s Old Capitol Prison. Once more her feminine wiles saved her. After some two months of incarceration, she was engaged to a fellow prisoner. The Warden of the prison also seems to have been an admirer. After her release, she broke off the engagement.

In 1864 she boarded the blockade runner Greyhound with some important dispatches in her possession. Once again, her luck seemed to run out, and once again her feminine charms came to her rescue. The Greyhound was captured by the U.S. navy and escorted back to Boston. En route, a young Navy lieutenant named Samuel Hardinge fell in love with her. He was so smitten he allowed Belle and Greyhound’s captain to escape, and act for which he was later court marshaled and dismissed from the service.