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Prison Life in the Old Capitol and Reminiscences of the Civil War cover

Prison Life in the Old Capitol and Reminiscences of the Civil War

Chapter 3: ILLUSTRATIONS
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About This Book

A first-person prison diary recounts arrest and confinement in a wartime city jail, detailing daily routine, accommodations, rations, illnesses, guards, and the habits prisoners adopted to endure long confinement. The narrative follows parole and transfer to a parole camp, the exchange process, and a subsequent journey through Southern territory back toward active service, with vivid travel impressions of rivers, towns, and military camps. Interwoven are reflections on the treatment of prisoners of war, efforts to correct public misconceptions about prison officials, lists of fellow inmates, maps and illustrations, and anecdotes collected from other captives.

ILLUSTRATIONS

 PAGE
Old Capitol Prison[Frontispiece]
Exemption Certificate 16
Pass Through Confederate Lines 17
Carroll Prison (Duff Green’s Row) 21
Arch Window in Room No. 16 24
Colonel William P. Wood, Superintendent 33
James J. Williamson 39
Stove in Room No. 16 55
Map of James River, from Fortress Monroe to Richmond 93
John H. Barnes 96
Lieutenant Albert Wrenn 99
Colonel John S. Mosby 106
Lieutenant Frank Fox 109
Brigadier-General Edwin H. Stoughton 116
Certificate of Membership 118
Major Henry Wirz 133
Rev. F. E. Boyle 140
Rev. Bernardin F. Wiget, S. J. 143
Gunnell House (General Stoughton’s Headquarters) 155