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  1. Jan 18, 2014 · In the 1830s, she met Robert Greenhow, a prominent doctor, lawyer and linguist from Virginia. Their courtship was well received by Washington society, including famed society matron Dolley Madison. They married in 1835 and had four daughters: Florence, Gertrude, Leila and Rose.

  2. Scott assigned Allan Pinkerton, head of the recently formed Union Intelligence Service and the founder of America’s first detective agency in Chicago, to monitor Rose. On August 22, 1861, Pinkerton cased Greenhow’s house and noticed a young Union officer entering.

  3. Rose O’Neal Greenhow and her daughter in a photo taken while she was confined by the Union in 1862. Greenhow’s Spy Ring Uncovers the Union’s Campaign Strategy. It did not take long for Greenhow to put together an espionage ring that would prove to be highly efficient and productive.

  4. His widow, Eliza O'Neal, had four daughters to support and a cash-poor farm. After being orphaned as children, Greenhow and her sister Ellen were invited to live with their aunt in Washington, D.C., around the year 1830.

  5. Sep 3, 2013 · On August 23, 1861, Allan Pinkerton, head of the federal government’s newly formed secret service, arrested Greenhow and conducted a raid of her home. She and her youngest daughter, Little...

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  6. Dec 29, 2022 · When Rose O’Neal Greenhow first arrived in Washington D.C. as a young girl, most dismissed her for her “low birth.” They had no idea that she’d grow up to become one of the Civil War’s most influential spies.

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  8. Rose O’Neal Greenhow was the Confederacy’s most celebrated female spy at the start of the Civil War. A popular Washington widow and hostess, Mrs. Greenhow moved easily in the social circles of the nation’s capital. Few were better connected than she when hostilities commenced in the spring of 1861.

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