Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 24, 1865., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Hatch or search for Hatch in all documents.

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es were brought off the steamer the same night. At least thirty died in one night after they were received." Surgeon Spence testifies: "I was at Savannah, and saw rather over three thousand prisoners received. The list showed that a large number had died on the passage from Baltimore to Savannah. The number sent from the Federal prisons was three thousand and five hundred, and out of that number they delivered only three thousand and twenty-eight, to the best of my recollection. Captain Hatch can give you the exact number. Thus, about four hundred and seventy-two died on the passage. I was told that sixty-seven dead bodies had been taken from one train of cars between Elmira and Baltimore. After being received at Savannah, they had the best attention possible, yet many died in a few days."--"In carrying out the exchange of disabled, sick and wounded men, we delivered at Savannah and Charleston about eleven thousand Federal prisoners; and their physical condition compared m