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Ramsburg suggests wearing vests, jackets and trousers one size too big to hide telltale curves. She also provides instructions for making an authentic chest binder she says flattens and protects one's breasts better than the sports bras some female re-enactors wear. Her online group numbers about 20, but Ramsburg said she doesn't know how many women pursue the hobby. She protects her group members' privacy and refused to divulge even her own unit's name for fear of being targeted by sexist detractors. The discrimination is often covert, Ramsburg wrote in an email. "For example, insisting that a female send in a picture to prove that she meets a specific set of requirements when males registering for the same event are not burdened with this requirement." Ramsburg said some privately run events have rules stating, "Women discovered in uniform will be dismissed from the field." And some enforce a 5-foot height requirement, ostensibly for safety, that limits female participation.
None of the women interviewed for this story said they dress up as men to press an agenda. Some are tomboys who've always preferred rough-and-tumble play. Most are history buffs who want to know firsthand what Civil War fighters, often their own ancestors, experienced. Lauren Wike literally wrote the book on Civil War female fighters. She and DeAnne Blanton documented 240 of these women in their 2002 volume, "They Fought Like Demons." The book is treasured by many of today's female re-enactors. Wike, of Fayetteville, N.C., started the project after a ranger ejected her from a 1989 living-history event at Antietam National Battlefield near Sharpsburg, Md. She said the ranger told her, "We don't allow women in uniform here." She sued the National Park Service and won a federal court victory in 1993. Now the agency incorporates into its biennial training for living-history staffers a reminder that excluding women who portray male soldiers isn't just unconstitutional
-- it's historically inaccurate. "In view of the fact that at least one woman (and possibly six women) did participate in the battle of Antietam, the presence of female volunteers appearing as male soldiers should be treated as an interpretive opportunity rather than as a liability," reads a memo used in the training. Mike Litterst, spokesman for the park service's Civil War sesquicentennial events, said four parks
-- Antietam, Appomattox Court House, Gettysburg and Shiloh -- have information about women fighters in their programs, brochures or websites. But Wike, 55, said she still hears from women who must fight for acceptance as uniformed re-enactors. "It's amazing to me that 18 years after what I went through, women still confront the issue," she said. Wike also objects to today's U.S. military ban on women in combat and infantry roles. "It's ridiculous that there are still barriers to women in today's military," she said. "I think the only reason that women were successful as soldiers during the Civil War is because nobody knew that they were women. They were disguised, so all of the prejudices, all the stereotyping, was not a factor. And that's the only reason women are barred from combat today." Some women just find a uniform more convenient than wearing period women's clothing. Elizabeth Charlton of Lawrence, Mass., wore bright red trousers and a navy coat and cap as she carried the colors of the Massachusetts Volunteer Militia 6th Regiment Company I down Pratt Street in Baltimore last spring. The parade commemorated the four Massachusetts soldiers and 12 civilians who died April 19, 1861, when Southern sympathizers attacked federal troops passing through the city en route to Washington. Charlton, a married mother of three, said she started re-enacting more than 10 years ago, portraying the wife of a soldier killed in Baltimore. When her local military re-enactor unit had an opening in the color guard, she volunteered and found pants preferable to a hoop skirt. "It's much easier to get dressed," she said.
[Associated
Press;
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