As one of the world’s oldest occupations, espionage in one form or another has been around for as long as men have contended for territory and resources, waged wars,
vied for crowns, and pressed for industrial and scientific advantage and superiority. While in no way possessing the skills,
training, and technological tchotchkes of modern-day spies—or their counterparts
in some of cinema’s great blockbusters—covert agents played a vital role in the
American Revolution.
Anyone who’s watched the AMC hit
mini-series, “TURN” (although I will not vouch for its total accuracy), knows that George Washington, as well as his British adversaries,
relied heavily on gathering information about enemy strengths and weaknesses,
their movements and supply lines when planning their campaigns. He also expended time and energy in disseminating misleading information through the same channels. But
for the first few years of the war, American intelligence efforts were no match
for the superior training and methods of His Majestey’s agents.
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Spying is central to the plot in the second
and third books of my “Serpent’s Tooth” trilogy, set during the early years of the War for Independence. In Courting the Devil (book 2), we find our hero leading a band of “scouts” whose directive is to gather information vital to the American cause in advance of the British march on Albany. The heroine, Anne, is betrayed by a
particularly unscrupulous American agent to Loyalists who have been misled to think
she’s a spy. Her brutal “interrogation” is in no way far-fetched. In fact, I saved her
from a far worse fate: that suffered by the real-life Canadian Tory spy, “Miss Jenny,” at
the hands of French soldiers serving under Lafayette in 1778. Under the pretense
of seeking her father in their camp, she aroused suspicions and was arrested. Not
only did her captors try to beat the truth out of her, they raped her. If that
wasn’t despicable enough, they cut off her hair—an act considered the height of
humiliation at the time. Miss Jenny, however, did not relent and successfully
completed her mission. After returning to the British camp with her
intelligence, she vanished from history. It is interesting to note that
women, in general, were considered too “simple” to understand the complexities
of a military campaign, and for the most part, were not taken seriously. A rather short-sighted attitude on both sides of the conflict.
Captain Daniel Taylor, a
character who appears briefly in Courting
the Devil, was an actual Tory spy who plied his trade between New York City
and the area around the upper Hudson River during the British push toward Albany from Canada. Although elusive, he was eventually apprehended by
American soldiers, who went on to discover a coded message to General Burgoyne
concealed in a hollow bullet in his hair. Taylor immediately swallowed the incriminating
evidence, but was given a “strong emetic,” which did as it was intended. He was
convicted of spying and hanged. Some say his execution was in retaliation for
Nathan Hale’s death a year earlier.
In
The Partisan’s Wife (book 3 of the trilogy), the reader is
introduced to a number of shady characters, some real, some fictitious, as well
as Washington, himself, and a few of his spy masters, as the stakes for our hero and heroine become
deadly.
~*~
Kathy Fischer Brown is a BWL author of historical novels, and The Return of Tachlanad, her newly released epic fantasy adventure for young adult and adult readers. Check out her The Books We Love Author page or visit her website. All of her books are available in a variety of e-book formats and in paperback from Amazon and other online retailers.
Pictures courtesy of the Clements Library.