Welcome to Selene Castrovilla's blog!

I'm an author spreading the words. Read about my books at www.SeleneCastrovilla.com







Showing posts with label spies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spies. Show all posts

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Wife, Mother &...Spy?

Sorry for the delay of this Revolutionary Saturday post. Both of my sons needed my attention, which had to come first.

This is a fitting segue into my introduction of Anna Smith Strong, a Setauket, Long Island resident during the Revolutionary War. Anna was a devoted wife and mother – and, we can say with relative certainty – she was also part of George Washington’s Culper Spy Ring.



Why we can only say this with relative certainty is because there is no definitive proof – only circumstantial evidence. Historians believe she was involved with the ring, but never mentioned in the letters because she was a woman.

Legend has it that Anna hung her petticoats on a clothesline as a signal that a message was ready to be taken to Washington (hopefully this coincided with her laundry needs.) This story has been told so often that most people who know about the Culper Spy Ring name her as a member.


The Daughters of the American Revolution clearly embrace Anna's petticoat legend.
They have an Anna Smith Strong chapter.





As a matter of fact¸ Anna was the reason I became intrigued with the spy ring.


School children in the Setauket area are taught about Anna's petticoats.

I was visiting a sick friend, who’d recently moved from Setauket.

“I miss being there,” he told me.

“Why?” I asked. All I knew about Setauket was it was way out on the island – pretty secluded.

“It’s so historical there,” he said.

“In what way?” I pressed.

“A woman used to hang her petticoats as a signal for George Washington’s spy ring,” he told me.

WHAT? My story sensor spiked. A WOMAN spy during the American Revolution? I didn’t even know that Long Island was involved with the revolution at all!

Thanks goodness for Google. When I got home I entered a few key words, and presto – I knew enough about the Culper Spy Ring to know that I wanted to know more. I wanted to write their story.

The ironic thing was that I couldn’t include Anna in the events of my story, because I couldn't prove she was a spy. The person who’d ignited my passion had to be edited out.

Here’s to Anna Smith Strong: A patriot, for sure. She stayed on occupied Long Island and took care of the family homestead while her husband was confined to a British prison ship.

Was she a spy?

 I think so.

But we’ll never know for sure....

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Revolutionary Saturday!

           Abraham Lincoln said, “...if you want to test a man's character, give him power.
            I say, “If you want to know someone’s character, give them a gun.”
            Throw them in the middle of a war.
            Your real character comes out when you’re fighting for your life.
            I realized this when I started researching the American Revolution. The fact that I wanted to write about a war was a great surprise to me. The prospect of writing about history was shocking. And gosh, if you told me in the third grade that I was going to write about George Washington someday, I would’ve called you a flat-out liar.
            But the universe works in mysterious ways.
            I was led to the story of George Washington’s spy ring when a sick friend happened to mention that a woman hung her petticoats on a clothesline as a secret signal. With that one image I was hooked. Imagine a woman risking her life for such intrigue! Imagine craving something that much.
            When you think of people in the American Revolution, don’t dwell on our differences. They didn’t have cell phones, cars, computers...So what? They possessed wants and needs and passions just as we do. What’s in our hearts never changes.
            The more I researched, the more I realized this. And the more I empathized with these people who sacrificed so much to be free.
            I will tell you stories about unsung heroes of the American Revolution in the coming weeks.
            But let me start with George Washington.
            I truly believe we would not be a country if not for this man. Put simply¸ he refused to give up. He was grace under pressure. Much is made of the fact that he lost battle after battle at the beginning of the war. Much should be made of the fact that he kept going.
            When I read the story of the Battle of Long Island I couldn’t believe we weren’t shouting it from the rooftops. This was better than fiction! But somehow Washington’s crossing of the East River was overshadowed by his crossing of the Delaware. Folks, he couldn’t have gotten to the Delaware if he hadn’t crossed the East River first.
            Washington’s ragtag troops were defeated in a matter of hours. They dragged themselves into trenches, waiting for the British to take them prisoner or kill them. When the British hesitated, Washington made his bid to save his men.
            What happened that August night was nothing short of miraculous.
            Think you know George Washington?
            Think again.
            Because if you want to test a man’s character, watch what he does when he’s defeated.
            George Washington would not surrender.
            A lesson for any time.

Here’s a shameless plug for my picture books on the American Revolution, published by Calkins Creek Books/Boyds Mills Press:


The American Revolution Comes To Life
with Little Known True Tales

George Washington In a Whole New Light!
Author and historian Selene Castrovilla unearths two new facets of the father of our country in her picture books about the American Revolution: BY THE SWORD & UPON SECRECY.
Washington’s other crossing. We all know the story of George Washington crossing the Delaware, but he never would’ve made it there if he hadn’t first crossed the East River. Washington’s valiant and miraculous retreat of all his men to safety following his devastating loss at the Battle of Long Island is perhaps his greatest moment – and yet largely unknown. Learn about this amazing feat in BY THE SWORD (Calkins Creek Books, 2007.)
AN INTERNATIONAL READING ASSOCIATION NOTABLE BOOK
NEW YORK STATE READING ASSOCIATION - Recommended Intermediate Reading
MOONBEAM CHILDREN'S BOOK AWARD GOLD MEDALIST FOR NONFICTION
A Kansas Reading Circle Selection

George Washington, spy? Yes, the father of our country was also a superb spymaster – and thank goodness, because that’s how he won the revolution! Major George Beckwith, head of British intelligence operations in the colonies, put it like this: “George Washington did not really outfight the British; he simply outspied us!” Somehow this fascinating and vital part of Washington’s character has been vastly ignored by history – until now. In UPON SECRECY (Calkins Creek Books, 2010) you’ll follow Washington’s most valued spies – Long Island’s Culper Spy Ring – on their most important and exciting mission. Without this contribution, we would likely not be a country.
A Bank Street College of Education Best Children’s Book of the Year, 2010

Read an excerpt of BY THE SWORD:
http://selenecastrovilla.com/excerpt_sword.html

Read an excerpt of UPON SECRECY:
http://selenecastrovilla.com/excerpt_secrecy.html

Order BY THE SWORD on Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/Sword-Selene-Castrovilla/dp/1590784278/ref=sr_1_5?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1319873584&sr=1-5

Order UPON SECRECY on Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/Upon-Secrecy-Selene-Castrovilla/dp/1590785738/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1319873714&sr=1-1