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Book of the week

An imposter of no ordinary rank : the true story of Loreta Janeta Velazquez, alias Confederate Lt. Harry T. Buford, and her Civil War memoir, The woman in battle

book cover

By William L. Post, Jr. 

"In 1876 Madame Loreta Janeta Velazquez published a 600-page memoir, The Woman in Battle, which recounted her exhilarating adventures in the American Civil War disguised as a Rebel soldier, alias Lieutenant Harry T. Buford. She claimed she fought valiantly at the Battles of Bull Run, Ball's Bluff and Shiloh. Her male soldier disguise fooled generals time and again, but she was found out and thrown in Castle Thunder Prison! She reinvented herself into a slippery female Confederate spy who tricked U.S. Secret Service Chief Lafayette Baker when he hired her to find herself. Some historians and writers have been unsure whether to believe true all Velazquez claimed, but others have become her advocate. One documentarian said it is "one of the most dramatic untold stories of Latino American contributions to a pivotal event of American history- the American Civil War." Because of Velazquez's unbelievable claims, dispute has followed her autobiography, but regardless, every new generation is mesmerized by it. An Imposter of No Ordinary Rank tells the true story of the unique, legendary and controversial Madame Velazquez. She was captivatingly loquacious, intelligent and energetic... but she had a dark side. Mark...

Last updated 09/29/2025 by S. Wilson

University Archives & Digital Special Collections

Colored American - August 7, 1841
Sarah Parker Remond
Weekly Anglo-African - May 12, 1860
Impartial Citizen - February 28, 1849
Weekly Anglo-African - December 17, 1859
Voice of the Fugitive - March 26, 1851
Voice of the Fugitive - October 22, 1851
Elevator - October 20, 1865
Black Republican - April 15, 1865
Samuel Ringgold Ward
Weekly Anglo-African - April 27, 1861
Alexander Crummell
J. W. C. Pennington
Colored American - November 17, 1838
Elevator - June 9, 1865
Frederick Douglass' Paper - June 30, 1854
Elevator - April 21, 1865
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