ELIZABETH VAN LEW: THE GIRL WHO RISKED ALL THAT SLAVERY MIGHT BE
ABOLISHED AND THE UNION PRESERVED
I
It was the winter of 1835. Study
hour was just over in one of Philadelphia’s
most famous “finishing schools” of that
day, and half a dozen girls were still grouped around
the big center-table piling their books up preparatory
to going to their rooms for the night. Suddenly
Catherine Holloway spoke.
“Listen, girls,” she said;
“Miss Smith says we are to have a real Debating
Club, with officers and regular club nights, and all
sorts of interesting subjects. Won’t it
be fun? And what do you suppose the first topic
is to be?”
Books were dropped on the table, and
several voices exclaimed in eager question, “What?”
“‘Resolved: That
Slavery be abolished.’ And Betty Van Lew
is to take the negative side!”
There was a chorus of suppressed “Oh-h-hs!”
around the table, then some one asked, “Who
is going to take the other side?”
The speaker shook her head. “I
don’t know,” she said. “I hope
it will be me. My, but it would be exciting to
debate that question against Betty!”
“You would get the worst of
it,” said a positive voice. “There
isn’t a girl in school who knows what she thinks
on any subject as clearly as Betty knows what she
believes about slavery.”
The speaker tossed her head.
“You don’t know much about it, if you
think that!” she declared. “We Massachusetts
colonists are just as sure on our side as she is on
hers-and you all ought to be if you are
not! Father says it is only in the cotton-raising
States that they think the way Betty does, and we
Northerners must stand firm against having human beings
bought and sold like merchandise. I just hope
I will be chosen on that debate against Betty.”
She was, but she came off vanquished
by the verbal gymnastics of her opponent, to whom
the arguments in favor of slavery were as familiar
as the principles of arithmetic, for Betty had heard
the subject discussed by eloquent and interested men
ever since she was able to understand what they were
talking about.
Never did two opponents argue with
greater fire and determination for a cause than did
those two school-girls, pitted against each other in
a discussion of a subject far beyond their understanding.
So cleverly did the Virginia girl hold up her end
of the debate against her New England opponent, and
so shrewdly did she repeat all the arguments she had
heard fall from Southern lips, that she sat down amid
a burst of applause, having won her case, proudly
sure that from that moment there would be no more
argument against slavery among her schoolmates, for
who could know more about it than the daughter of one
of Richmond’s leading inhabitants? And
who could appreciate the great advantages of slavery
to the slaves themselves better than one who owned
them?
But Betty had not reckoned with the
strength of the feeling among those Northerners with
whose children she was associated. They had also
heard many telling arguments at home on the side against
that which Betty had won because she had complied
so fully with the rules of debate; and she had by
no means won her friends over to her way of thinking.
Many a heated argument was carried on later in the
Quaker City school over that question which was becoming
a matter of serious difference between the North and
the South.
Before the war for Independence slavery
existed in all the States of the Union. After
the war was over some of the States abolished slavery,
and others would have followed their example had it
not been for the invention of the cotton-gin, which
made the owning of slaves much more valuable in the
cotton-growing States. East of the Mississippi
River slavery was allowed in the new States lying south
of the Ohio, but forbidden in the territory north
of the Ohio. When Missouri applied for admission
into the Union, the question of slavery west of the
Mississippi was discussed and finally settled by what
was afterward called “The Missouri Compromise
of 1820.”
In 1818, two years before this Compromise
was agreed upon, Elizabeth Van Lew was born in Richmond.
As we have already seen, when she was seventeen, she
was in the North at school. Doubtless Philadelphia
had been chosen not only because of the excellence
of the school to which she was sent, but also because
the Quaker City was her mother’s childhood home,
which fact is one to be kept clearly in mind as one
follows Betty Van Lew’s later life in all its
thrilling details.
For many months after her victory
as a debater Betty’s convictions did not waver-she
was still a firm believer that slavery was right and
best for all. Then she spent a vacation with a
schoolmate who lived in a New England village, in
whose home she heard arguments fully as convincing
in their appeal to her reason as those to which she
had listened at home from earliest childhood.
John Van Lew, Betty’s father, had ever been
one of those Southerners who argued that in slavery
lay the great protection for the negro-in
Massachusetts Betty heard impassioned appeals for
the freedom of the individual, of whatever race, and
to those appeals her nature slowly responded as a
result partly of her inheritance from her mother’s
Northern blood, and partly as a result of that keen
sense of justice which was always one of her marked
traits.
At the end of her school days in the
North, Betty’s viewpoint had so completely changed
that she went back to her Richmond home an unwavering
abolitionist, who was to give her all for a cause which
became more sacred to her than possessions or life
itself.
Soon after her return to Virginia
she was visited by the New England friend in whose
home she had been a guest, and to the Massachusetts
girl, fresh from the rugged hills and more severe life
of New England, Richmond was a fascinating spot, and
the stately old mansion, which John Van Lew had recently
bought, was a revelation of classic beauty which enchanted
her.
The old mansion stood on Church Hill,
the highest of Richmond’s seven hills.
“Across the way was St. John’s, in the
shadow of whose walls Elizabeth Van Lew grew from
childhood. St. John’s, which christened
her and confirmed her, and later barred its doors against
her.” Behind the house at the foot of the
hill stood “The Libby,” which in years
to come was to be her special care.... But this
is anticipating our story. Betty Van Lew, full
of the charm and enthusiasm of youth, had just come
home from school, and with her had come the Northern
friend, to whom the Southern city with its languorous
beauty and warm hospitality was a wonder and a delight.
The old mansion stood close to the
street, and “from the pavement two steep, curving
flights of stone steps, banistered by curious old iron
railings, ascended to either end of the square, white-pillared
portico which formed the entrance to the stately Van
Lew home with its impressive hall and great high-ceilinged
rooms. And, oh! the beauty of the garden at its
rear!”
Betty’s friend reveled in its
depths of tangled color and fragrance, as arm in arm
the girls wandered down broad, box-bordered walks,
from terrace to terrace by way of moss-grown stone
stairs, deep sunk in the grassy lawn, and now and
again the New England girl would exclaim:
“Oh, Betty, I can’t breathe, it is all
so beautiful!”
And indeed it was. “There
were fig-trees, persimmons, mock orange, and shrubs
ablaze with blossoms. The air was heavy with the
sweetness of the magnolias, loud with the mocking-birds
in the thickets, and the drone of insects in the hot,
dry grass. And through the branches of the trees
on the lower terrace one could get frequent glimpses
of the James River, thickly studded with black rocks
and tiny green islands.” No wonder that
the girl from the bleak North found it in her heart
to thrill at the beauty of such a gem from Nature’s
jewel-casket as was that garden of the Van Lews’!
And other things were as interesting
to her in a different way as the garden was beautiful.
Many guests went to and from the hospitable mansion,
and the little Northerner saw beautiful women and heard
brilliant men talk intelligently on many subjects of
vital import, especially on the all-important subject
of slavery; of the men who upheld it, of its result
to the Union. But more interesting to her than
anything else were the slaves themselves, of whom the
Van Lews had many, and who were treated with the kindness
and consideration of children in a family.
“Of course, it is better for
them!” declared Betty. “Everybody
who has grown up with them knows that they simply
can’t take responsibility,-and
yet!” There was a long pause, then Betty added,
softly: “And yet, all human beings have
a right to be free; I know it; and all the States
of the Union must agree on that before there is any
kind of a bond between them.”
She spoke like an old lady, her arm
leaning on the window-sill, with her dimpled chin
resting in her hand, and as the moonlight gleamed
across the window-sill, young as she was, in Betty
Van Lew’s face there was a gleam of that purpose
which in coming years was to be her consecration and
her baptism of fire, although a moment later the conversation
of the girls had drifted into more frivolous channels,
and a coming dance was the all-important topic.
As we know, when Missouri applied
for admission into the Union, the slavery question
was discussed and finally settled by the so-called
“Missouri Compromise” in 1820. Now,
in 1849, a new question began to agitate both North
and South. Before that time the debate had been
as to the abolishing of slavery, but the question
now changed to “Shall slavery be extended?
Shall it be allowed in the country purchased from
Mexico?” As this land had been made free soil
by Mexico, many people in the North insisted that
it should remain free. The South insisted that
the newly acquired country was the common property
of the States, that any citizen might go there with
his slaves, and that Congress had no power to prevent
them. Besides this, the South also insisted that
there ought to be as many slave States as free States.
At that time the numbers were equal-fifteen
slave States and fifteen free. Some threats were
made that the slaveholding States would leave the Union
if Congress sought to shut out slavery in the territory
gained from Mexico.
That a State might secede, or withdraw
from the Union, had long been claimed by a party led
by John C. Calhoun, of South Carolina. Daniel
Webster had always opposed this doctrine and stood
as the representative of those who held that the Union
could not be broken. Now, in 1850, Henry Clay
undertook to end the quarrel between the States, and
as a result there was a famous debate between the most
notable living orators, Webster, Calhoun, and Clay,
and a new compromise was made. It was called
the Compromise of 1850, and it was confidently hoped
would be a final settlement of all the troubles growing
out of slavery. But it was not. With slow
and increasing bitterness the feeling rose in both
North and South over the mooted question, and slowly
but surely events moved on toward the great crisis
of 1860, when Abraham Lincoln was elected President
of the United States.
“The Southern States had been
hoping that this might be prevented, for they knew
that Lincoln stood firmly for the abolition of slavery
in every State in the Union, and that he was not a
man to compromise or falter when he believed in a
principle. So as soon as he was elected the Southern
States began to withdraw from the Union, known as the
United States of America. First went South Carolina,
then Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana.
Then delegates from these States met in Montgomery,
Alabama, and formed a new Union which they called
the ‘Confederate States of America,’ with
Jefferson Davis as its President. Then Texas
joined the Confederacy, and events were shaping themselves
rapidly for an inevitable culmination.
“When South Carolina withdrew
there was within her boundary much property belonging
to the United States, such as lighthouses, court-houses,
post-offices, custom-houses, and two important forts,
Moultrie and Sumter, which guarded the entrance to
Charleston harbor, and were held by a small band of
United States troops under the command of Major Robert
Anderson.
“As soon as the States seceded
a demand was made on the United States for a surrender
of this property. The partnership called the Union,
having been dissolved by the secession of South Carolina,
the land on which the buildings stood belonged to
the State, but the buildings themselves, being the
property of the United States, should be paid for
by the State, and an agent was sent to Washington to
arrange for the purchase.
“Meanwhile, scenting grave trouble,
troops were being enlisted and drilled, and Major
Anderson, fearing that if the agent did not succeed
in making the purchase the forts would be taken by
force, cut down the flagstaff and spiked the guns
at Fort Moultrie, and moved his men to Fort Sumter,
which stood on an island in the harbor and could be
more easily defended, and so the matter stood when
Mr. Lincoln was inaugurated, March 4, 1861.”
Fort Sumter was now in a state of
siege. Anderson and his men could get no food
from Charleston, while the troops of the Confederacy
had planted cannon with which they could at any time
fire on the fort. Either the troops must very
soon go away or food must be sent them. Mr. Lincoln
decided to send food. But when the vessels with
food, men and supplies reached Charleston, they found
that the Confederates had already begun to fire on
Fort Sumter. Then, as Major Anderson related:
“Having defended the Fort for thirty-four hours,
until the quarters were entirely burned, the main
gates destroyed by fire ... the magazine surrounded
by flame, and its doors closed from the effects of
heat, four barrels and three cartridges only being
available, and no provisions remaining but pork, I
accepted terms of evacuation offered by General Beauregard
... and marched out of the Fort, Sunday the 14th instant,
with colors flying and drums beating.”
When the news of the fall of Sumter
reached the North, the people knew that all hope of
a peaceable settlement of the dispute with the South
was gone. Mr. Lincoln at once called for 75,000
soldiers to serve for three months, and the first
gun of the Civil War had been fired.
While these momentous events were
stirring both North and South, Betty Van Lew, in her
Richmond home, was experiencing the delights of young
womanhood in a city celebrated for its gaiety of social
life. “There were balls and receptions
in the great house, garden-parties in the wonderful
garden, journeyings to the White Sulphur Springs, and
other resorts of the day, in the coach drawn by six
snowy horses,” and all sorts of festivities
for the young and light-hearted. Even in a city
as noted for charming women as was Richmond, Betty
Van Lew enjoyed an enviable popularity. To be
invited to the mansion on the hill was the great delight
of her many acquaintances, while more than one ardent
lover laid his heart at her feet; but her pleasure
was in the many rather than in the one, and she remained
heart-whole while most of her intimate friends married
and went to homes of their own. It is said that
as she grew to womanhood, she was “of delicate
physique and a small but commanding figure, brilliant,
accomplished and resolute, with great personality
and of infinite charm.” At first no one
took her fearless expression of opinion in regard
to the slavery question seriously, coming as it did
from the lips of such a charming young woman, but
as time went on and she became more outspoken and more
diligent in her efforts to uplift and educate the negroes,
she began to be less popular, and to be spoken of
as “queer and eccentric” by those who
did not sympathize with her views.
Nevertheless, Richmond’s first
families still eagerly accepted invitations to the
Van Lew mansion, and it was in its big parlor that
Edgar Allan Poe read his poem, “The Raven,”
to a picked audience of Richmond’s elect, there
Jenny Lind sang at the height of her fame, and there
as a guest came the Swedish novelist, Fredrika Bremer,
and in later years came Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, whose
admiration of Elizabeth Van Lew was unbounded because
of her service to the Union.
Betty’s father having died soon
after she came from school, and her brother John being
of a retiring disposition, Mrs. Van Lew and Betty
did the honors of the stately house on the hill in
a manner worthy of Southern society women, and as
years went by and Betty became a woman, always when
they had brilliant guests she listened carefully, saying
little, but was fearlessly frank in her expression
of opinion on vital subjects, when her opinion was
asked.
“And now, Sumter had been fired
on. Three days after the little garrison marched
out of the smoking fort, Virginia seceded from the
Union, and Richmond went war-mad. In poured troops
from other States, and the beautiful Southern city
became a vast military camp. Daily the daughters
of the Confederacy met in groups to sew or knit for
the soldiers, or to shoot at a mark with unaccustomed
hands. One day a note was delivered at the Van
Lew mansion, and opened by Mrs. Van Lew, who read
it aloud to her daughter:
“’Come and help us make
shirts for our soldiers. We need the immediate
assistance of all our women at this critical time....’”
The silence in the room was unbroken
except for the heart-beats of the two women facing
a sure future, looking sadly into each other’s
eyes. Suddenly Elizabeth threw back her head
proudly.
“Never!” she said.
“Right is right. We must abide by the consequences
of our belief. We will work for the Union or sit
idle!”
The testing of Elizabeth Van Lew had
come. Fearlessly she made her choice-fearlessly
she took the consequences. From that moment her
story is the story of the Federal Spy.
II
“Out in the middle of the turbulent
river James lay Belle Isle Prison surrounded by its
stockade. In the city of Richmond, at the foot
of Church Street, almost at Betty Van Lew’s
door, was the Libby, with its grim, gray walls; only
a stone’s throw farther away were Castle Lightning
on the north side of Cary Street, and Castle Thunder
on the south side. In July of 1861 the battle
of Bull Run was fought, and the Confederate army defeated
and put to flight by the Union soldiers. The
Libby, Belle Isle and Castle Thunder all were overflowing
with scarred and suffering human beings,-with
sick men, wounded men, dying men, and Northern prisoners.”
Here was work to do!
Down the aisles of the hastily converted
hospitals and into dim prison cells came almost daily
a little woman with a big smile, always with her hands
full of flowers or delicacies, a basket swinging from
her arm. As she walked she hummed tuneless airs,
and her expression was such a dazed and meaningless
one that the prison guards and other soldiers paid
little heed to the coming and going of “Crazy
Bet,” as she was called. “Mis’
Van Lew-poor creature, she’s lost
her balance since the war broke out. She’ll
do no harm to the poor boys, and maybe a bit of comfortin’.
A permit? Oh yes, signed by General Winder himself,-let
her be!” Such was the verdict passed from sentry-guard
to sentry in regard to “Crazy Bet,” who
wandered on at will, humming her ditties and ministering
to whom she would.
One day a cautious guard noticed a
strange dish she carried into the prison. It
was an old French platter, with double bottom, in which
water was supposed to be placed to keep the food on
the platter hot. The dish roused the guard’s
suspicions, and to a near-by soldier he muttered something
about it. Apparently unheeding him, “Crazy
Bet” passed on beyond the grim, gray walls,
carrying her platter, but she had heard his words.
Two days later she came to the prison door again with
the strange dish in her hand wrapped in a shawl.
The sentry on guard stopped her.
“I will have to examine that,” he said.
“Take it!” she said, hastily
unwrapping it and dropping it into his hands.
It contained no secret message that day, as it had
before-only water scalding hot, and the
guard dropped it with a howl of pain, and turned away
to nurse his burned hands, while “Crazy Bet”
went into the prison smiling a broad and meaningless
smile.
Well did the Spy play her rôle, as
months went by; more loudly she hummed, more vacantly
she smiled, and more diligently she worked to obtain
information regarding the number and placing of Confederate
troops, which information she sent on at once to Federal
headquarters. Day by day she worked, daring loss
of life, and spending her entire fortune for the sake
of the cause which was dearer to her than a good name
or riches-the preservation of the Union
and the abolishing of slavery.
From the windows of the Libby, and
from Belle Isle, the prisoners could see passing troops
and supply-trains and give shrewd guesses at their
strength and destination, making their conjectures
from the roads by which they saw the Confederates
leave the town. Also they often heard scraps
of conversations between surgeons or prison guards,
which they hoarded like so much gold, to pass on to
“Crazy Bet,” and so repay her kindness
and her lavish generosity, which was as sincere as
her underlying motive was genuine. Meals at the
Van Lew mansion grew less and less bountiful, even
meager,-not one article did either Elizabeth
Van Lew or her loyal mother buy for themselves, but
spent their ample fortune without stint on the sick
and imprisoned in their city, while there was never
an hour of her time that the Federal Spy gave to her
own concerns. If there was nothing else to be
done, she was writing a home letter for some heart-sick
prisoner from the North, and secretly carrying it
past the censors to be sure that it should reach the
anxious family eagerly awaiting news of a loved one.
“Crazy Bet” loaned many
books to the prisoners, which were returned with a
word or sentence or a page number faintly underlined
here and there. In the privacy of her own room,
the Spy would piece them together and read some important
bit of news which she instantly sent to Federal headquarters
by special messenger, as she had ceased using the
mails in the early stages of the war. Or a friendly
little note would be handed her with its hidden meaning
impossible to decipher except by one who knew the
code. Important messages were carried back and
forth in her baskets of fruit and flowers in a way
that would have been dangerous had not “Crazy
Bet” established such a reputation for harmless
kindness. She had even won over Lieutenant Todd,
brother of Mrs. Lincoln, who was in charge of the
Libby, by the personal offerings she brought him of
delectable buttermilk and gingerbread. Clever
Bet!
So well did she play her part now,
and with such assurance, that she would sometimes
stop a stranger on the street and begin a heated argument
in favor of the Union, while the person who did not
know her looked on the outspoken little woman with
a mixture of admiration and contempt. At that
time her lifelong persecution, by those who had before
been her loyal friends, began. Where before she
had been met with friendly bows and smiles, there
were now averted glances or open insults. She
encountered dislike, even hatred, on every side, but
at that time it mattered little to her, for her heart
and mind were occupied with bigger problems.
What she did mind was that from time
to time her permit to visit the hospitals and prisons
was taken away, and she was obliged to use all the
diplomacy of which she was mistress, to win it back
again from either General Winder or the Secretary
of War. At one time the press and people became
so incensed against the Northern prisoners that no
one was allowed to visit the prisons or do anything
for their relief. Among the clippings found among
Betty Van Lew’s papers is this:
RAPPED OVER THE KNUCKS.
One of the city papers contained Monday
a word of exhortation to certain females of Southern
residence (and perhaps birth) but of decidedly
Northern and Abolition proclivities. The
creatures thus alluded to were not named....
If such people do not wish to be exposed and dealt
with as alien enemies to the country, they would
do well to cut stick while they can do so with
safety to their worthless carcasses.
On the margin in faded ink there is
written: “These ladies were my mother and
myself. God knows it was but little we could do.”
Spring came, and McClellan, at the
head of the Army of the Potomac, moved up the peninsula.
“On to Richmond!” was the cry, as the troops
swept by. It is said that the houses in the city
shook with the cannonading, and from their roofs the
people could see the bursting of shells. “Crazy
Bet,” watching the battle with alternate hope
and fear, was filled with fierce exultation, and hastily
prepared a room in the house on the hill with new
matting and fresh curtains for the use of General
McClellan. But the Federal forces were repulsed
by the Confederate troops under General Lee and “drew
away over the hills.” General McClellan
had failed in his attempt to take Richmond, and within
that room freshly prepared for his use bitter disappointment
and dead hope were locked.
There was great rejoicing in Richmond
in this repulse of the Federal army, and even those
old friends who were now enemies of Elizabeth Van
Lew, could afford to throw her a smile or a kind word
in the flush of their triumph. She responded
pleasantly, for she was a big enough woman to understand
a viewpoint which differed from her own. Meanwhile,
she worked on tirelessly through the long days and
nights of an unusually hot summer, meeting in secret
conferences with Richmond’s handful of Unionists,
to plot and scheme for the aid of the Federal authorities.
“The Van Lew mansion was the fifth in a chain
of Union Secret Service relaying stations, whose beginning
was in the headquarters tent of the Federal army.
Of this chain of stations the Van Lew farm, lying
a short distance outside of the city, was one.
It was seldom difficult for Betty Van Lew to get passes
for her servants to make the trip between the farm
and the Richmond house, and this was one of her most
valuable methods of transmitting and receiving secret
messages. Fresh eggs were brought in from the
farm almost every day to the house on Church Hill,
and no one was allowed to touch them until the head
of the house had counted them, with true war-time economy,
and she always took one out, for her own use in egg-nog,
so she said. In reality that egg was but a shell
which contained a tiny scroll of paper, a message
from some Union general to the Federal Spy. An
old negro brought the farm products in to Richmond,
and he always stopped for a friendly chat with his
mistress, yes, and took off his thick-soled shoes
that he might deliver into her hands a cipher despatch
which she was generally awaiting eagerly! Much
sewing was done for the Van Lews at that time by a
little seamstress, who worked at both farm and city
home, and in carrying dress goods and patterns back
and forth she secreted much valuable information for
the Spy, on whom the Union generals were now depending
for the largest part of their news in regard to Confederate
plans and movements of troops.” And she
did not disappoint them in the slightest detail.
She must have a disguise in which
she could go about the city and its environs without
fear of detection, and she must also gain more valuable
and accurate information from headquarters of the
Confederacy. This she resolved, and then set to
work to achieve her end. At once she wrote to
a negro girl, Mary Elizabeth Bowser, who had been
one of the Van Lews’ slaves, but who had been
freed and sent North to be educated, inviting her
to visit the stately mansion where she had grown up,
and the invitation was eagerly accepted. On her
arrival in Richmond, she was closeted a long time with
her one-time mistress, to whom she owed her liberty,
and when the interview ended the girl’s eyes
were shining, and she wore an air of fixed resolve
only equaled by that of Betty Van Lew.
A waitress was needed in the White
House of the Southern Confederacy. Three days
after Mary Bowser arrived at the Van Lews’, she
had applied for the position and become a member of
Jefferson Davis’s household. Another link
had been forged in the long chain of details by which
the Spy worked her will and gained her ends.
Despite the suspicion and ill-will
felt in Richmond for the Van Lews, more than one Confederate
officer and public official continued to call there
throughout the war, to be entertained by them.
The fare was meager in comparison to the old lavish
entertaining, but the conversation was brilliant and
diverting, and so cleverly did Betty lead it that
“many a young officer unwittingly revealed much
important information of which he never realized the
value, but which was of great use to ‘Crazy
Bet’ when combined with what she already knew.
“And when night fell over the
city Betty would steal out in her disguise of a farm-hand,
in the buckskin leggins, one-piece skirt and
waist of cotton, and the huge calico sunbonnet, going
about her secret business, a little lonely, unnoticed
figure, and in a thousand unsuspected, simple ways
she executed her plans and found out such things as
she needed to know to aid the Federal authorities.”
History was in the making in those
stirring days of 1862, when, having failed to take
Richmond, General McClellan had returned North by sea,
when the Confederates under General Lee prepared to
invade the North, but were turned back after the great
battle of Antietam. Thrilling days they were
to live through, and to the urge and constant demand
for service every man and woman of North and South
instantly responded. But none of the women gave
such daring service as did Elizabeth Van Lew.
Known as a dauntless advocate of abolition and of
the Union, suspected of a traitor’s disloyalty
to the South, but with that stain on her reputation
as a Southerner unproved from the commencement of
the war until its close, her life was in continual
danger. She wrote a year later, “I was an
enthusiast who never counted it dear if I could have
served the Union-not that I wished to die.”
For four long years she awoke morning after morning
to a new day of suspense and threatening danger, to
nights of tension and of horrible fear. “No
soldier but had his days and weeks of absolute safety.
For her there was not one hour; betrayal, friends’
blunders, the carelessness of others; all these she
had to dread.” All these she accepted for
the sake of a cause which she believed to be right
and just.
As her system of obtaining information
in regard to movements of the Confederates became
more perfect, she was connected more closely with
the highest Federal authorities,-so closely
connected, in fact, that flowers which one day grew
in her Richmond garden stood next morning on General
Grant’s breakfast table.
“One day she received a letter
from General Butler, which was to be delivered to
a Confederate officer on General Winder’s staff.
In the letter this officer was asked to ’come
through the lines and tell what he knew,’ and
there were promises of rewards if it should be done
successfully. The Spy sat quietly thinking for
some time after receiving this letter. If it
should fall into Confederate hands it would be the
death-warrant of its bearer. Who could be trusted
to take it to the officer for whom it was intended?
Coolly Elizabeth Van Lew arose, went out, and walked
straight to the office of General Winder, took the
letter from her bosom, and handed it to the officer
for whom it was intended, watching him closely as
he read it.
“In the next room were detectives
and armed guards, the whole machinery of the Confederate
capital’s secret police. The officer
had but to raise his voice and her game would be up;
she would pay the penalty of her daring with her life.
She had been suspicious of the officer for some weeks,
had marked him as a traitor to his cause. Was
she right?
“His face whitened, his lips
were set as he read, then, without a quiver of a muscle,
he rose and followed her out of the room; then he
gave way and implored her to be more prudent.
If she would never come there again he would go to
her, he said. And so she gained another aid in
her determined purpose of ’striking at the very
heart of the Confederacy.’
“Another day there was a message
of vital importance to send to General Grant, who
had asked her to make a report to him of the number
and placing of forces in and about Richmond. The
cipher despatch was ready, but if it were to reach
Grant in time there was not an hour to lose in finding
a messenger. At that time no servant of hers could
leave the city, and no Federal agent could enter it.
Hoping for an inspiration, she took her huge market-basket
on her arm, the basket which was so familiar by this
time as a part of ‘Crazy Bet’s’ outfit,
and with it swinging at her side, humming a tuneless
song, she passed down the street, smiling aimlessly
in return for mocking glances-and all the
while in her hand she held the key to Richmond’s
defenses!
“As she walked a man passed
her and whispered, ’I’m going through
to-night!’ then walked on just ahead of her.
She gave no sign of eagerness, but she was thinking:
Was he a Federal agent to whom she could intrust her
message, or was he sent out by the police to entrap
her as had often been attempted? The cipher despatch
in her hand was torn into strips, each one rolled
into a tiny ball. Should she begin to drop them,
one by one? In perplexity she glanced up into
the man’s face. No! Her woman’s
instinct spoke loud and clear, made her turn into
a side street and hurry home. The next day she
saw him marching past her house for the front with
his Confederate regiment, in the uniform of a junior
officer, and knew that once again she had been saved
from death.”
But although she had many such escapes
and her wit was so keen that it was a powerful weapon
in any emergency, yet as the conflict between the
North and the South deepened the need of caution became
more necessary than ever, for Confederate spies were
everywhere. In her half-destroyed diary which
for many months lay buried near the Van Lew house,
over and over again the writer emphasizes her fear
of discovery. She says:
“If you spoke in your parlor
or chamber, you whispered,-you looked under
the lounges and beds. Visitors apparently friendly
were treacherous.... Unionists lived ever in
a reign of terror. I was afraid even to pass
the prison; I have had occasion to stop near it when
I dared not look up at the windows. I have turned
to speak to a friend and found a detective at my elbow.
Strange faces could sometimes be seen peeping around
the columns and pillars of the back portico....
Once I went to Jefferson Davis himself to see if we
could not obtain some protection.... His private
Secretary told me I had better apply to the Mayor....
Captain George Gibbs had succeeded Todd as keeper
of the prisoners; so perilous had our situation become
that we took him and his family to board with us.
They were certainly a great protection.... Such
was our life-such was freedom in the Confederacy.
I speak what I know.” The diary also tells
of Mrs. Van Lew’s increasing dread of arrest,
dear, delicate, loyal lady-for that was
constantly spoken of, and reported on the street, while
some never hesitated to say she should be hanged.
Another summer came and wore away,
and the third year of the war was drawing to a close
in the terrible winter of 1863-4. The Union army
in the East had twice advanced against the Confederates,
to be beaten back at Fredericksburg and at Chancellorsville.
In June and July of 1863 Lee began a second invasion
of the North, but was defeated at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.
In July, 1863, Vicksburg and Port Hudson were captured
and the Mississippi River was in Union hands, but in
the following autumn the Confederates of the West
defeated the Union army at Chickamauga, after which
General Grant took command and was victorious near
Chattanooga, and so with alternate hope and despair
on both sides the hideous war went on.
Through cipher despatches “Crazy
Bet” learned of an intended attempt of Federal
officers to escape from Libby Prison, and at once a
room in the Van Lew mansion was made ready to secrete
them if they achieved their purpose. The room
was at the end of one of the big parlors, and dark
blankets were hung over its windows; beds were made
ready for exhausted occupants, and a low light kept
burning day and night in readiness for their possible
arrival.
Meanwhile the prisoners in the Libby,
desperate because of the horrible conditions in the
buildings where they were quartered, were busily constructing
a tunnel which ran from the back part of the cellar
called “Rat-Hell” to the prison yard.
The work was carried on under the direction of Colonel
Rose, and his frenzied assistants worked like demons,
determined to cut their way through the walls of that
grim prison to the light and life of the outer world.
At last the tunnel was ready. With quivering
excitement over their great adventure added to their
exhaustion, the men who were to make their escape,
one after another disappeared in the carefully guarded
hole leading from the cellar of the prison into a
great sewer, and thence into the prison yard.
Of this little company of adventurous men eleven Colonels,
seven Majors, thirty-two Captains, and fifty-nine
Lieutenants escaped before the daring raid was discovered.
The news spread like wild-fire through the ranks of
the prisoners who were still in the building and among
those on duty. Immediately every effort was made
by those in charge to re-capture the refugees and
bring them back, and as a result, between fifty and
sixty of them were once again imprisoned in the squalid
cells of the Libby.
Just at that time John Van Lew, Betty’s
brother, was conscripted into the Confederate army,
and although unfit for military duty because of his
delicate health, he was at once sent to Camp Lee.
As he was a keen sympathizer with his sister’s
Union interests, as soon as he was sent to the Confederate
camp he deserted and fled to the home of a family
who lived on the outskirts of the city, who were both
Union sympathizers and friends of his sister’s.
They hid him carefully, and Betty at once came to
aid in planning for his escape from the city.
Unfortunately it was the night of the escape of the
Federal prisoners from the Libby, so a doubly strong
guard was set over every exit from Richmond, making
escape impossible. Here was a difficult situation!
Betty Van Lew knew that some way out of the dilemma
must be found; for the house where her brother was
secreted would surely be searched for the escaped
refugees, and it would go hard with those who were
concealing him if they were discovered harboring a
deserter.
With quick wit she immediately presented
herself at General Winder’s office, where she
used her diplomatic powers so successfully that the
general was entirely convinced of John Van Lew’s
unfit physical condition for military service, and
promised to make every effort toward his exemption.
When all efforts proved unavailing, the general took
him into his own regiment, and “the Union sympathizer
never wore a Confederate uniform, and only once shouldered
a Confederate musket, when on a great panic day he
stood, a figurehead guard at the door of a government
department. At last, in 1864, when even General
Winder could not longer protect him from active service
at the front, Van Lew deserted again, and served with
the Federal Army until after the fall of Richmond.”
Meanwhile the old Van Lew house, in
its capacity of Secret Service station, was a hive
of industry, which was carried on with such smooth
and silent secrecy that no one knew what went on in
its great rooms. And watching over all those
who came and went on legitimate business, or as agents
of the Federal Government on secret missions, was a
woman, alert of body, keen of mind, standing at her
post by day and by night. After all members of
her household were safely locked in their rooms for
the night, the Spy would creep down, barefooted, to
the big library with its ornamented iron fireplace.
On either side of this fireplace were two columns,
on each of which was a small, carved figure of a lion.
Possibly by accident-probably by design,
one of these figures was loosened so that it could
be raised like a box-lid, and in the darkness of the
night the swift, silent figure of the Spy would steal
into the big room, lift the carved lion, deftly slip
a message in cipher into the cavity beneath the figure
and cautiously creep away, with never a creaking board
to reveal her coming or going.
With equal caution and swift dexterity,
early the next morning an old negro servant would
steal into the room, duster and broom in hand, to
do his cleaning. Into every corner of the room
he would peer, to be sure there were no watching eyes,
then he would slip over to the fireplace, lift the
lion, draw out the cipher message, place it sometimes
in his mouth, sometimes in his shoe, and as soon as
his morning chores were done he would be seen plodding
down the dusty road leading to the farm, where some
one was eagerly waiting for the tidings he carried.
Well had the Spy trained her messengers!
The old mansion had also hidden protection
for larger bodies than could be concealed under the
recumbent lion by the fireplace. Up under the
sloping roof, between the west wall of the garret and
the tiles, was a long, narrow room, which was probably
built at the order of Betty Van Lew, that she might
have a safe shelter for Union refugees. All through
the war gossip was rife concerning the Van Lews and
their movements, and there were many rumors that the
old mansion had a secret hiding-place, but this could
never be proved. Besides those whom it sheltered
from time to time, and the one whose thought had planned
it, only one other person knew of the existence of
that garret room, and for long years she was too frightened
to tell what she had seen in an unexpected moment.
Betty Van Lew’s niece was visiting
in the old house during the blackest period of the
struggle between the North and South. She was
a little girl, and her bump of curiosity was well
developed. After tossing restlessly in bed on
a hot night, she opened her door in order to get some
air. To her surprise she saw Aunt Betty tiptoeing
through the other end of the dark hall, carrying something
in her hand. With equal stealth the curious child
followed the creeping figure up through the dark,
silent house into the garret-saw a hand
reach behind an old chest of drawers standing against
the wall in the garret, and with utter amaze saw a
black hole in the wall yawn before her eyes.
There stood her aunt before the opening of the wall,
shading with cautious hand the candle she carried,
while facing her stood a gaunt, hollow-eyed, bearded
man in uniform reaching out a greedy hand for the
food on the plate. The man saw the child’s
eyes burning through the darkness back of the older
woman, but she put a chubby finger on her lip, and
ran away before he had a chance to realize that she
was flesh and blood and not an apparition. Panting,
she ran swiftly down the long staircase and, with
her heart beating fast from fright, flung herself
on the bed and buried her head in the pillows, lying
there for a long time, so it seemed to her. Then,
scarcely daring to breathe, for fear of being discovered,
she stole out of bed again, opened her door, and once
more crept up through the silent mansion, this time
alone. In a moment she stood outside the place
where the hole in the wall had opened before her amazed
vision. Not a sound in the great, dark garret!
Putting her mouth close to the partition she called
softly to the soldier, and presently a deep voice
told her how to press the spring and open the secret
door. Then, a shivering but determined little
white-robed figure, she stood before the yawning chasm
and talked with the big, Union soldier, who seemed
delighted at the sound of his own voice, and years
afterward she remembered how he had looked as he said:
“My! what a spanking you would
have got if your aunt had turned around!” She
did not dare to stand there talking to him long, for
she was old enough to realize that there must be a
reason for his being in hiding, and that if the secret
room should be discovered it might bring unhappiness
to her aunt. So in a very few moments the little
white-gowned figure flitted silently, swiftly down-stairs
again, and no one knew until years later of that midnight
excursion of hers-or of the secret room,
for which the old house was thoroughly searched more
than once.
The winter of 1863-4 was one full
of tense situations and of many alarms for both Confederates
and Unionists. In February, after the daring
escape of the Federal officers from the Libby, there
were several alarms, which roused young and old to
the defense of the city. The enemy made a movement
to attack the city on the east side, but were driven
back. Again on the 29th of the month, the bells
all rang to call men to service. The city battalions
responded, while General Wilcox ordered all men who
were in the city on furlough, and all who could bear
arms, out to protect the city, for Kilpatrick was
attempting a raid on Richmond, along Brook turnpike.
“But while he was dreaming of taking Richmond,
Gen. Wade Hampton suddenly appeared with his troops
and routed him, taking three hundred and fifty prisoners,
killing and wounding many, and capturing a large number
of horses.”
Then came an event for which the Federal
sympathizers, and especially those in the Union Secret
Service, had prepared with all the caution and secrecy
possible, trying to perfect every detail to such a
degree that failure would be impossible. To release
all Federal prisoners in Richmond-this
was but a part of the audacious scheme in which Betty
Van Lew and a Union sympathizer called “Quaker,”
for purposes of disguise, played an important part.
On the 28th of February, 1864, Col.
Ulric Dahlgren left Stevensburg with a company of
men, selected from brigades and regiments, as a picked
command to attempt a desperate undertaking. At
Hanovertown he crossed with his men, all dressed in
Confederate uniforms, confidently expecting to get
into Richmond by stealth. Unfortunately their
movements were discovered, and when they rode along
through the woods near the road at Old Church, in
their disguise, a party of Confederates in ambush
opened fire on them, captured ninety white men and
thirty-five negroes, and killed poor little crippled
Dahlgren, a small, pale young officer, who “rode
with crutches strapped to his saddle, and with an
artificial leg in the stirrup, as he had lost a limb
a few months before. His death was as patriotic
as was his desperate attempt, for bravely his eager
band rode into the ambush-there was a volley
of shots from the thicket by the roadside, and the
young colonel fell from his horse, dead. Some
of his men managed to escape, but most of them were
captured.”
In Dahlgren’s pocket was found
an order to all of his men and officers. To the
officers he said:
“We will have a desperate fight,
but stand up to it. When it does come, all will
be well. We hope to release the prisoners from
Belle Isle first, and having seen them fairly well
started, we will cross James River into Richmond,
destroying the bridges after us, and exhorting the
released prisoners to destroy and burn the hateful
city, and do not allow the rebel leader Davis and
his traitorous crew to escape.”
To his guides and runners he said:
“Be prepared with oakum, turpentine,
and torpedoes. Destroy everything that can be
used by the rebels. Shoot horses and cattle,
destroy the railroads and the canal, burn the city,
leave only the hospitals, and kill Jeff Davis and
his Cabinet.”
A dangerous plan indeed! Small
wonder that when its details became known in their
diabolical cruelty, the people of Richmond cried out
for revenge, and the hanging of the prisoners; but
this was not heeded by the officials, who had a saner
judgment.
The raid had failed! Ulric Dahlgren
had lost his life in a daring attempt to which he
was evidently urged by Betty Van Lew and the so-called
Quaker. Bit by bit the reasons for its failure
filtered through to the Spy, chief of which was the
treachery of Dahlgren’s guide, by which the
forces of the raiders, after separating in two parts
for the attack, lost each other and were never able
to unite. The brave, crippled young commander
riding fearlessly on to within five miles of the city
into the ambush, his command falling under the volley
of shots from a hidden enemy-when these
details reached Betty Van Lew her anguish was unbearable,
for she had counted on success instead of failure.
And now, there was work to do! Pacing the floor,
she made her plans, and with swift daring carried them
out.
Dahlgren was buried on the very spot
where he fell; but a few days later the body was taken
to Richmond by order of the Confederate government,
where it lay for some hours at the York River railroad
station. Then, at midnight, it was taken away
by the city officials and buried, no one knew where.
But Betty Van Lew says in her diary: “The
heart of every Unionist was stirred to its depths ...
and to discover the hidden grave and remove his honored
dust to friendly care was decided upon.”
Admiral Dahlgren, father of the unfortunate
colonel, sent one hundred dollars in gold to Jefferson
Davis, asking that the body of his son be sent to
him. The order was at once given to the chief
of police, with the added command to have the body
placed in a decent coffin; but when the police went
to carry out the order, taking with them the soldiers
who had buried Dahlgren, the grave was empty!
Through the daring act of Secret Service
agents, doubtless, and of Betty Van Lew’s assistants,
on a bitter cold and stormy night, two Union sympathizers
went out to the grave, the location of which had been
cleverly discovered by the Unionists. The body
of young Dahlgren was quickly taken up and carried
to a work-shop belonging to Mr. William Rowley, who
lived a short distance in the country. He watched
over the remains all night, and during the hours of
darkness more than one Union sympathizer stole out
to the shop to pay their last respects to the pathetic
young victim of the attempted raid. At dawn the
body was placed in a metallic coffin and put on a
wagon, under a load of young peach-trees, which entirely
concealed the casket. Then Mr. Rowley, who was
a man of iron nerves and great courage, jumped to the
driver’s seat and bravely drove the wagon with
its precious freight out of Richmond, past the pickets,
without the visible trembling of an eye-lash to betray
his dangerous mission.
“As he had feared, at the last
picket post, he was stopped and challenged. His
wagon must be searched. Was his brave hazard lost?
As he waited for the search to be made which would
sign his death warrant, one of the guards recognized
him as an old acquaintance, and began a lively conversation
with him. Other wagons came up, were searched,
and went on. Presently the Lieutenant came from
his tent and called to the guard to ‘Search
that man and let him go!’
“The guard looked with interest
at the well-packed load, and remarked that it would
be a shame to tear up those trees.
“Rowley gave no sign of fear
or nervousness. Nonchalantly he said that he
had not expected them to be disturbed, but that he
knew a soldier’s duty.
“Another wagon drove up, was
searched, and sent on. Again the Lieutenant gave
an order to ‘search the man so that he can go!’
Could anything save him now? Rowley wondered.
If he had not been a born actor he would have shown
some sign of the terrible strain he was under as he
waited for the discovery of his hidden burden.
“A moment of agonizing suspense,
then the guard said, in a low voice, ‘Go on!’
and Rowley, without search, went on with his concealed
burden.
“Meanwhile, two accomplices
had flanked the picket, and they presently joined
Rowley and showed him the way to a farm not far away,
where a grave was hastily dug and the coffin lowered
into it. Two loyal women helped to fill it in,
and planted over it one of the peach-trees which had
so successfully prevented discovery. So ended
the Dahlgren raid-and so the Spy had been
foiled in one of the most daring and colossal plots
with which she was connected. Because of the stealing
of the young Colonel’s body, Admiral Dahlgren’s
wish could not be complied with until after the war.”
The raid had failed, and with the
return of spring, the Union Army was closing in around
Richmond, which made it an easier matter for Betty
Van Lew to communicate with the Union generals, especially
with General Grant, through his Chief of Secret Service.
As the weary months wore away, more than once the
Spy was in an agony of suspense, when it seemed as
if some one of her plots was about to bring a revelation
of her secret activities; as if disclosure by some
traitor was inevitable; but in every case she was
saved from danger, and was able to continue her work
for the Union.
And now the Confederate forces were
ransacking the South in search of horses, of which
they were sorely in need. The Spy quickly hid
her one remaining animal in the smoke-house, but it
was not safe there. Confederate agents were prowling
about the city, searching every building in which
a horse could be secreted. In the dead of night
Betty Van Lew led her steed, with feet wrapped in cloths
to prevent noise, from the smoke-house into the old
mansion itself, and stabled it in the study, where
she had covered the floor with a thick layer of straw
to deaden any sound of stamping hoofs. And the
horse in his palatial residence was not discovered.
General Grant was now at the head
of all the armies of the United States, and to him
was given the duty of attacking Lee. General
Sherman was at the head of a large force in the West,
and his duty was to crush the force of General Johnston.
On the fourth of May, 1864, each general
began his task. Sherman attacked Johnston, and
step by step drove him through the mountains to Atlanta,
where Johnston was removed, and his army from that
time was led by General Hood. After trying in
vain to beat Sherman, he turned and started toward
Tennessee, hoping to draw Sherman after him. But
he did not succeed; Sherman sent Thomas, the “Rock
of Chickamauga,” to deal with Hood, and in December
he destroyed Hood’s army in a terrible battle
at Nashville. Meanwhile Sherman started to march
from Atlanta to the sea, his army advancing in four
columns, covering a stretch of country miles wide.
They tore up the railroads, destroyed the bridges,
and finally occupied Savannah. There Sherman stayed
for a month, during which his soldiers became impatient.
Whenever he passed them they would shout: “Uncle
Billy, I guess Grant is waiting for us in Richmond!”
And on the first of February they resumed their march
to North Carolina.
Grant, meanwhile, had begun his attack
on Lee, on the same day that Sherman had marched against
Johnston. Starting from a place called Culpepper
Court House, Grant’s army entered the Wilderness,
a tract of country covered with a dense growth of
oak and pine, and after much hard fighting closed
in around Richmond, laying siege to Petersburg.
Bravely Lee and his gallant men resisted the Union
forces until April, 1865, when, foreseeing the tragic
end ahead, Lee left Richmond and marched westward.
Grant followed, and on the ninth of April Lee surrendered
his army at Appomattox Court House. Johnston surrendered
to Sherman near Raleigh, in North Carolina, about two
weeks later, and in May Jefferson Davis was taken
prisoner.
This ended the war. The Confederacy
fell to pieces, and the Union was saved. “In
the hearts of all Union sympathizers was a passionate
exultation that the United States was once again under
one government; but what a day of sorrowing was that
for loyal Southerners!”
It is said that on Sunday, the second
of April, when the end was in sight, children took
their places in the Sunday Schools, and congregations
gathered as usual in the churches, united in their
fervent prayers for their country and their soldiers.
The worshipping congregation of St. Paul’s Church
was disturbed by the sight of a messenger who walked
up the middle aisle to the pew where Jefferson Davis
was sitting, spoke hastily to him, then went briskly
out of the church. What could it mean?
“Ah!” says an historian,
“the most sadly memorable day in Richmond’s
history was at hand ... the day which for four long
years had hung over the city like a dreadful nightmare
had come at last. The message had come from General
Lee of the order to evacuate Richmond! Beautiful
Richmond to be evacuated! It was like the knell
of doom.
“President Davis and the other
officers of the Confederate government hastily prepared
to leave, and to carry such records and stores as
they were able. The officers of the State government
and the soldiers were preparing to march. The
news of the evacuation swept over the city, spreading
dismay and doom as it went. The people began to
collect their valuables and hide them or pack them
to carry to a place of safety, if any such place could
be found; and throughout the city there were scenes
of indescribable confusion. The streets were blocked
with furniture and other goods which people were trying
to move. All government store-houses were thrown
open, and what could not be carried away was left
to be plundered by those who rushed in to get bacon,
clothing, or whatever they could take. The Confederate
troops were rapidly moving toward the South....
At one o’clock it became known that under the
law of the Confederate Congress all the tobacco and
cotton in the city had been ordered burned to keep
it out of the hands of the enemy. In vain the
Mayor sent a committee to remonstrate against burning
the warehouses. No heed was paid to the order,
and soon tongues of lurid flame were leaping from
building to building, until the conflagration was
beyond all control. Men and women were like frenzied
demons in their efforts to save property; there was
terrific looting. Wagons and carts were hastily
loaded with goods; some carried their things in wheel-barrows,
some in their arms. Women tugged at barrels of
flour, and children vainly tried to move boxes of
tobacco. The sidewalks were strewn with silks,
satins, bonnets, fancy goods, shoes, and
all sorts of merchandise. There was no law and
there were no officers; there was only confusion,
helpless despair on every side. Before sunrise
there was a terrific explosion which shook the whole
city; the magazine back of the poorhouse was blown
up.... At six o’clock in the morning the
evacuation was complete, and the railroad bridges
were set on fire.”
The conflagration was at its height
when the vanguard of the Federal army entered the
city, the cavalry galloping at full speed.
“Which is the way to the Capitol?”
they shouted, then dashed up Governor Street, while
a bitter wail rose from the people of Richmond.
“The Yankees! The Yankees! Oh, the
Yankees have taken our city!”
As the cry went up, a United States
flag was unfurled over the Capitol. At once General
Weitzel took command and ordered the soldiers to stop
all pillaging and restore order to the city; but it
was many hours before the command could be fully carried
out. Then and only then did the exhausted, panic-stricken,
heart-sick people fully realize the hideous disaster
which had come to their beloved city; only when they
saw the destruction and desolation wrought by the fire
did they fully grasp the awful meaning of the cry,
“On to Richmond!” which for four long
years had been the watch-word of the Union forces.
And how fared it with the Federal
Spy during those hours of anguish for all true Southerners?
Betty Van Lew, who had been in close touch with the
Union generals, had for some time foreseen the coming
climax of the four years’ struggle, and weeks
earlier she had sent north to General Butler for a
huge American flag, eighteen feet long by nine wide,
which in some unknown way was successfully carried
into Richmond without detection by the picket guard,
and safely secreted in the hidden chamber under the
Van Lew roof.
And now General Lee had surrendered.
Virginia was again to be a State of the Union; came
a messenger fleet of foot, cautious of address, bringing
breathless tidings to the Spy: “Your house
is to be burned-the Confederate soldiers
say so. What can you do to prevent it?”
Even as she listened to his excited
words, Betty Van Lew’s heart was throbbing with
joyful excitement, despite the uproar in the city from
the constant explosion of shells, the sound of the
blowing up of gun-boats in the harbor, and of the
powder magazines, which was shaking the foundations
of the city, as red flames leaped across the black
sky. Even then there was in the heart of the Spy
a wild exultation. “Oh, army of my country,
how glorious was your welcome!” she exclaims
in her diary.
She heard the news that her home was
about to be burned. With head erect and flashing
eyes she went out alone and stood on the white-pillared
portico, a fearless little figure, defying the mob
who were gathering to destroy the old mansion which
was so dear to her.
“I know you-and you-and
you!” she cried out, calling them each by name,
and pointing at one after another. “General
Grant will be in this city within an hour; if this
house is harmed your house shall be burned by noon!”
At the fearless words, one by one they turned, muttering,
and slunk away, and the Van Lew house was neither burned
nor harmed in any way.
The Union troops were coming near
now, marching to the center of the city. As the
long, dusty line of men in blue swung into Main Street,
Betty Van Lew ran up to the secret room under the garret
roof, drew out the great flag for which she had sent
in anticipation of this day, and when the Union soldiers
marched past the historic old mansion, the Stars and
Stripes were waving proudly over its portico.
The Confederacy was no more!
Despite her bravery, Betty Van Lew’s
life was now in danger. There was urgent need
of special protection for her. Feeling against
the northern victors was at fever height in poor,
desolated, defeated Richmond, and it is small wonder
that one born in their city, who yet stood openly
and fearlessly against all that the Southerners held
sacred, should have been despised, and worse than that.
Realizing her danger, and knowing the priceless service
she had rendered the Union generals in the four long
years of the war, Colonel Parke, with a force of men,
was sent to protect the Spy. To the General’s
utter amazement they did not find her in the old house.
She was found in the deserted Capitol, ransacking
it for documents which she feared might be destroyed
and which would be a loss to the Government.
As “Crazy Bet” and as
a Union Spy, Betty Van Lew’s long and remarkable
service of her country was ended. The Confederacy
was dissolved, and again the flag of the United States
of America could rightfully wave from every building
in the land. At the beginning of the war, when
Betty took on herself the rôle of Federal Secret Service
agent, she was light of heart, alert of body and mind.
Now, for four years, she had born a heavy burden of
fear and of crushing responsibility, for the sake
of a cause for which she was willing to sacrifice comfort,
wealth and other things which the average woman counts
dear, and her heart and brain were weary.
Two weeks after the inauguration of
Grant as President of the United States, as a reward
for her faithful service, he appointed Betty Van Lew
postmistress of Richmond. Well she knew that her
enemies would declare the appointment a reward for
her services against the Confederacy, and that it
would but make her more of an alien in Richmond than
ever she had been before. But she was desperately
poor, so she accepted the position and for eight years
filled it efficiently. When she came in contact
with old friends from time to time in a business way,
they were politely cold, and in her diary she writes:
“I live, as entirely distinct
from the citizens as if I were plague-stricken.
Rarely, very rarely, is our door-bell ever rung by
any but a pauper or those desiring my service.”
She adds: “September, 1875, my Mother was
taken from me by death. We had not friends enough
to be pall-bearers.”
When Grant had been succeeded by Hayes
as President of the United States, the one-time Spy
was obliged to ask for his aid:
“I am hounded down”-she
wrote to his private Secretary. “I never,
never was so bitterly persecuted; ask the President
to protect me from this unwarranted, unmerited, and
unprecedented persecution.”
From her own point of view, and from
that of those who fought for the abolition of slavery
and the preservation of the Union, Betty Van Lew’s
persecution was indeed “unwarranted and unmerited.”
But there was another side to the matter. Elizabeth
Van Lew, although the child of a Northern mother,
was also the daughter of John Van Lew, one of Richmond’s
foremost citizens. The loyalty of the Southerners
to the Confederacy and to one another, from their
viewpoint, was praiseworthy, and there is every reason
why they should have shunned one of Richmond’s
daughters, who not only approved the cause of the
hated Yankees, but who aided the Union generals in
their determination to sweep “On to Richmond,
to the defeat of the Confederacy.”
What to one was loyalty, to the other
was treason-what to the Spy was a point
of honor, to her old friends was her open and lasting
disgrace, and never can the two viewpoints be welded
into one, despite the symbol of Union which floats
over North and South, making the United States of
America one and “indivisible, now and forever!”
Betty Van Lew remained postmistress
of Richmond for eight years, then she was removed,
and there were black years of poverty and loneliness
for her, as she had not laid by a dollar for a day
of want, but had given lavishly to all in need, especially
to the negroes. She was not able to sell her
valuable but unproductive real estate, and was reduced
to actual need. “I tell you really and solemnly,”
she confesses to her diary, “I have suffered
for necessary food. I have not one cent in the
world. I have stood the brunt alone of a persecution
that I believe no other person in the country has
endured.... I honestly think that the Government
should see that I was sustained.”
At last she was given a clerkship
in the Post-Office Department at Washington, but after
two years this was taken from her, probably for political
reasons, and it was recommended that she be given a
clerkship of a lower grade. This was done, and
although she was cut by the injustice of the act,
she clung patiently to her only means of support.
Two weeks later, it is said that a Northern newspaper
contained an editorial which spoke sneeringly of “A
Troublesome Relic,” and ended with, “We
draw the line at Miss Van Lew.” Even though
she had not a penny in the world, she could not bear
the sting of that, and she wrote her resignation,
and went back to the great, lonely house on Church
Hill a heart-broken, pitiable woman, who had given
her all for what she believed to be the cause of right
and justice.
But she could not live in the old
mansion alone, and without food or money. In
despair she wrote a letter to a friend in the North,
a relative of Col. Paul Revere, whom she had
helped when he was a prisoner in the Libby. She
had to borrow a stamp from an old negro to send the
letter, and even worse to her than that was the necessity
of revealing her desperate plight. But she need
not have felt as she did. As soon as the letter
reached its destination there was a hurried indignation
meeting of those Boston men who knew what she had done
for the Union, and immediately and gladly they provided
an ample annuity for her, which placed her beyond
all need for the remaining years of her life.
This was, of course, a great relief; but even so, it
could not ease the burden of her lonely isolation.
“No one will walk with us on
the street,” she writes; “no one will go
with us anywhere.... It grows worse and worse
as the years roll on....”
And so the weary months and years
went by, and at last, in the old mansion with its
haunting memories, nursed by an aged negress to whom
she had given freedom years before, Elizabeth Van Lew
died. Among her effects there was found on a
torn bit of paper this paragraph:
“If I am entitled to the name
of ‘Spy’ because I was in the Secret Service,
I accept it willingly, but it will hereafter have to
my mind a high and honorable significance. For
my loyalty to my country, I have two beautiful names;
here I am called ‘Traitor,’ farther North
a ‘Spy,’ instead of the honored name of
Faithful.”
And well may she be called “Faithful”
by both friend and enemy, for she gave freely of youth
and strength, of wealth and her good name, of all
that human beings hold most sacred, for that which
was to her a consecrated and a just cause.
In the Shockhoe Hill Cemetery of Richmond,
there is to be seen a bronze tablet, erected to the
noble woman who worked tirelessly and without fitting
reward for a cause which she believed to be righteous.
The inscription on the tablet reads:
Elizabeth
L. Van Lew
1818
1900.
She risked everything that is dear
to man-friends, fortune, comfort,
health, life itself; all for the one absorbing
desire of her heart-that slavery might
be abolished and the Union preserved.
This Boulder
from the Capitol Hill
in Boston, is a tribute
from Massachusetts friends.
Elizabeth Van Lew was indeed a Spy
working against the city of her birth, and the friends
of her love and loyalty,-a traitor in one
sense of the word; but above all was she tireless in
working for her highest ideals, and so is she worthy
of respect and honor wherever the Stars and Stripes
float free over united America.