,
Arizona Territory, is where Pauline Cushman wed Jere Fryer. Because her undercover activities on behalf of the government were secret, there is a lack of corroborative information about her life at this time. After the war, however, she began a tour celebrating her experiences as a Union spy, working at one point with
P. T. Barnum. In 1865, a friend, Ferdinand Sarmiento, wrote an exaggerated biography titled
The Life of Pauline Cushman: The celebrated Union Spy and Scout, detailing her early history, her entry into the secret service, notes, and memoranda. She lost her child to sickness by 1868, and married again in 1872 in
San Francisco, but was widowed within a year. Sources state that in 1879 she met Jere Fryer, and moved to
Casa Grande,
Arizona Territory, where they married and operated a hotel and livery stable. Jere Fryer became the
sheriff of
Pinal County. Their adopted daughter, Emma, died on April 17, 1888, at 6 years old of a seizure. As a result, the Fryers separated in 1890. By 1892, she was living in poverty in
El Paso,
Texas. She had applied for back
pension based on her first husband's military service which she received in the amount of $12 per month beginning in June 1893 . Her last few years were spent in a boarding house in San Francisco, working as a
seamstress and
charwoman. Disabled from the effects of
rheumatism and
arthritis, she developed an addiction to pain medication, and on the night of 2 December 1893 she took a suicidal overdose of
morphine. She was found the next morning by her landlady. ==Death and legacy==