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s nearly twenty thousand Confederate prisoners were in confinement here, and they were occasionally overcrowded. Negro troops formed part of the guard, and such a vast number of prisoners naturally required a large organization to take care of them. In this photograph are shown all the officers in connection with the prison. From left to right, not counting the two soldiers holding the flags, they are: Dr. A. Heger, medical director; Captain C. H. Drew, assistant adjutant-general; Captain H. E. Goodwin, assistant quartermaster; Lieutenant H. C. Strong, assistant quartermaster; Brigadier-General James Barnes; Major A. G. Brady, provost-marshal; Dr. T. H. Thompson, surgeon; Captain J. W. Welch, ordnance officer; Lieutenant Wilson, aide-de-camp; and the last is Lieutenant J. T. Cantwell, engineer. containing barracks, belong entirely to the North. All of them were overcrowded at times; the drainage was frequently bad, and the water supply was generally insufficient. Though several
r Point, Va., II., 111. Goddard, C., X., 19. Godwin, A. C., III., 332. Gold: scarcity caused by Southern agents in the North, VIII., 300. Golding's Farms, Va., I., 366. Goldsboro, N. C.: II., 326; III., 248. Goldsborough, L. M.: VI., 118, 120, 125, 152, 263, 268, 312. Golgotha, Ga., III., 322. Goode's bridge, Va., V., 266. Goodman, a quartermaster, VII., 90. Good's Battery, Confederate, I., 358. Goodwin, A. G., X., 157. Goodwin, H. E., VII., 63. Gordon, G. H.: III., 64, 141, 152, 155, 158, 162, 164, 278, 282, 283, 308, 311, 346; X., 213. Gordon, G. W., X., 299. Gordon, James B. III., 320; IV., 43, 242; IX., 32; X., 155. Gordon, John B. I., 16; quoted, II., 294; III., 50, 52, 90, 162, 203, 280, 285, 286, 326, 342, 344; IV., 268; VIII.; 110; quoted, IX., 18, 34, 195; X., 247, 248, 250, 298. Gordon, Ga., III., 232. Gordon Hospital, Nashville, Tenn. , VII., 286. Gordon's Landing,