United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Prisoners and prisons
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United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Prisoners and prisons
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United States
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Incoming Resources
- Subject of30
- Prison life among the Rebels, recollections of a Union chaplain, edited by Edward D. Jervey
- Life and death in Civil War prisons, the parallel torments of Corporal John Wesley Minnich, C.S.A. and Sergeant Warren Lee Goss, U.S.A., J. Michael Martinez
- Confederate heroines, 120 southern women convicted by Union military justice, Thomas P. Lowry
- What I saw in Dixie, or, Sixteen months in rebel prisons, by S.H.M. Byers
- Recollections of prison life at Andersonville, Georgia and Florence, South Carolina, by C.A. Smith ; edited and with an introduction by Steven Fenton
- Immortal captives, the story of 600 Confederate officers and the United States prisoner of war policy, by Mauriel P. Joslyn
- Confederate rage, Yankee wrath, no quarter in the Civil War, George S. Burkhardt
- John Ransom's Andersonville diary, by John L. Rnsom ; introduction by Bruce Catton
- To die in Chicago, Confederate prisoners at Camp Douglas, 1862-65, George Levy
- The immortal six hundred;, a story of cruelty to Confederate prisoners of war,, by Major J. Ogden Murray, one of the six hundred
- Elmira, death camp of the north, Michael Horigan
- "Out of the mouth of hell", Civil War prisons and escapes, Frances H. Casstevens
- A petition regarding the conditions in the C.S.M. Prison at Columbia, S.C., addressed to the Confederate authorities by Col. John Fraser, Ed. by George L. Anderson
- Life and death in rebel prisons, giving a complete history of the inhuman and barbarous treatment of our brave soldiers by rebel authorities, inflicting terrible suffering and frightful mortality, principally at Andersonville, Ga., and Florence, S.C., describing plans of escape, arrival of prisoners, with numerous and varied incidents and anecdotes of prison life, by Robert H. Kellogg ... Prepared from his daily journal. To which is added as full sketches of other prisons as can be given without repetition of the above, by parties who have been confined therein ..
- Tramping with the Legion, a Carolina rebel's story, C. Eugene Scruggs
- Victims, a true story of the Civil War, by Phillip Shaw Paludan
- Living by inches, the smells, sounds, tastes, and feeling of captivity in Civil War prisons, Evan A. Kutzler
- Prison life in the South, at Richmond, Macon, Savannah, Charleston, Columbia, Charlotte, Raleigh, Goldsborough, and Andersonville, during the years 1864 and 1865, by A.O. Abbott
- Civil War prisons & escapes, a day-by-day chronicle, Robert E. Denney ; foreword by Edwin C. Bearss
- Rebels at Rock Island, the story of a Civil War prison, Benton McAdams
- Eighteen months a prisoner under the Rebel flag, a condensed pen-picture of Belle Isle, Danville, Andersonville, Charleston, Florence and Libby prisons, from actual experence, S.S. Boggs
- While in the hands of the enemy, military prisons of the Civil War, Charles W. Sanders, Jr
- Portals to hell, the military prisons of the Civil War, Lonnie R. Speer
- Prison life during the rebellion, being a brief narrative of the miseries and sufferings of six hundred Confederate prisoners sent from Fort Delaware to Morris' Island to be punished, written by Fritz Fuzzlebug [pseud.] one of their number ; published by the author
- Civil War prisons, edited by William B. Hesseltine
- The capture, the prison pen, and the escape, giving a complete history of prison life in the South ..., by Willard W. Glazer
- Nineteen months a prisoner of war, narrative of Lieutenant G.E. Sabre, Second Rhode Island Cavalry, of his experience in the war prisons and stockades of Morton, Mobile, Atlanta, Libby, Belle Island, Andersonville, Macon, Charleston, and Columbia, and his escape to the union lines ; to which is appended a list of officers confined at Columbia, during the winter of 1864 and 1865
- The biographical roster of the Immortal 600, by Mauriel Joslyn
- In and out of rebel prisons, by A. Cooper
- Civil War prisoners of war, a study of the changes in disposition of Federal and Confederate prisoners of war, between the shelling of Fort Sumter and the surrender Appomattox Courthouse, by Harry Boyd
Outgoing Resources
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