Margaretha Geertruida Zelle MacLeod was famous as a World War 1 spy, though at the time no proof of her being a spy was shown. She gained great popularity for exotic dancing and the suspicion of espionage.
nurses and spies
mata hari
Yes - even the women spies.
Because no one suspected women.
Some spies were women, who were not readily seen as being involved in the war.
spy
Women may not have worked as clerks till World War I, but women worked as spies in many wars including the American Civil War and the Revolutionary War.
nurses and spies
mata hari
I saw this question in our database and it is fairly old now. I thought I better let you know than an essay about women spies in World War 2 is exactly that: an essay that tells about women who spied for either the Axis Forces or the Allied Forces. There were women spies on both sides. There were more women spying for the Allied Nations than for the Axis nations.
it made it easier for the other team to know what there doing
Yes - even the women spies.
Spies especially women spies helpes influence the out come of the civil war in depth they carried very important information to and from the soldiers without women spies the whole outcome of the war could have changed
Some women did fight in World War 2. Some were nurses, some had desk jobs, and some were spies. Some were just women in the line of fire.
There were women spies in World War 1. The most famous female spy was Mata Hari. She was a Dutch woman living in Paris that spied for Germany.
there were three women spies belle boyd,elizabeth van lew,and rose o` neal grennhow.
Because no one suspected women.