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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 3. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 1 1 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: August 31, 1863., [Electronic resource] 1 1 Browse Search
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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 3. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), The Nation on our discussion of the prison question. (search)
as absent from the post (Andersonville) some four weeks on surgeon's certificate. (In his trial certain Federal witnesses swore to his killing certain prisoners in August, 1864, when he (Wirz) was actually at that time absent on sick leave in Angusta, Georgia.) General Winder had gangrene of the face, and was forbidden by his surgeon (I. H. White) to go inside the stockade. Colonel G. C. Gibbs, commandant of the post, had gangrene of the face, and was furloughed under the certificate of Surgeons Wible and Gore, of Americus, Georgia. The writer of this can fully attest to effects of gangrene and scurvy contracted whilst on duty there; their marks will follow him to his grave. The Confederate graveyard at Andersonville will fully prove that the mortality among the guards was almost as great in proportion to the number of men as among the Federals. The paper of General Imboden, which we published, fully corroborates the above statements. But we gave the testimony of Mr. John M.
hey represent the South as having many warm friends at the North, and say that the supporters of the Federal Administration are very despondent over the slow progress of the draft, and begin to think it impossible to conquer the Confederacy. Prison Record.--The following commitments have been made at Castle Thunder since our last report: H. Curt, company C. Ringgold Battery, captured near Winchester on Thursday last; Capt. Bishop and three others, captured on the schooner Golden Rod; Capt. Wible and two others, from the schooner Coquette; Capt. Wm. Boothby and three men, from the schooner Two Brothers; Lewis A. Miller, attempting to cross our lines on the Black water. The arrivals at the Libby Prison were three Yankees brought down from Staunton; one recently captured at Bottom's Bridge; two from Gordonsville; five from Hartwell's Church, and one from Guyandotte, Va.--all captured within the last two or three days. At the Cage we found recorded the names of Mary, slave