Maria Lewis | |
---|---|
Birth name | Maria Lewis |
Other name(s) | George Harris |
Born | c. 1846 Albemarle County, Virginia |
Died | Unknown |
Allegiance | Union Army |
Years of service | 1863-1865 |
Rank | Private |
Unit | Company C of the 8th New York Cavalry |
Battles / wars | Battle of Waynesboro, Virginia, Battle of Gettysburg |
Maria Lewis, also known by the alias George Harris, was a Union Civil War soldier, and former slave, who gained distinction in the Eighth New York Cavalry.
Biography
Lewis was born around 1846, in Albemarle County, Virginia, where she and her family were kept as slaves. At the age of seventeen, she emancipated herself from slavery by disguising herself as a "darkly tanned" white man, and joining company C of the 8th New York Cavalry. She adopted the name George Harris, after the character from Uncle Tom's Cabin, who similarly escaped by passing himself for a Spanish man. She originally planned to use the identity to travel North, she decided to stay with the army, after finding she enjoyed the freedom life as a white man brought her. Lewis remained with General Philip Sheridan's cavalry unit in the Shenandoah Valley for an additional eighteen months. While serving, she fought at the Battle of Waynesboro on the second of March. Lewis distinguished herself amongst her fellow soldiers, and became a member of the honor guard assigned to present seventeen captured rebel flags to the Secretary of War, Edwin Stanton. She became friends with an abolitionist family from New York, the Wilburs, and after her service, she came to them and confessed to being a woman. The family gave her skirts, and found her a place to work. Lewis later received "lessons" from Julia's sister, Frances, presumably learning to read and write, of which was barred to enslaved people prior to the civil war. Little is known about her life after the war.
See also
References
- Schulte, Brigid (29 April 2013). "Women Soldiers Fought, Bled, and Died in the Civil War, then were Forgotten". The Washington Post. Retrieved 13 August 2018.
- ^ Wilbur, Julia (4 April 1865). "Julia Wilbur Diary" (PDF): 497. Retrieved 13 August 2018.
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(help) - "Harris, George W." www.nps.gov. National Park Service. 2018. Retrieved 16 December 2018.
- ^ Monson, Marianne (2018). Women of the Blue and Gray. Shadow Mountain. p. 21. ISBN 9781629724157.
- Cordell, Melinda (2016). "She Rode in the Front Ranks". Courageous Women of the Civil War: Soldiers, Spies, Medics, and More. Chicago Review Press. ISBN 978-1613732038.
- 1840s births
- African-American female military personnel
- African Americans in the American Civil War
- 19th-century American slaves
- Female wartime cross-dressers in the American Civil War
- 19th-century African-American women
- African-American United States Army personnel
- Union army soldiers
- 19th-century African-American people