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Benson J. Lossing, Pictorial Field Book of the Civil War. Volume 2., Chapter 1: effect of the battle of Bull's Run.--reorganization of the Army of the Potomac.--Congress, and the council of the conspirators.--East Tennessee. (search)
icers, spent the night in an old barn, from which they were marched to the railway station and sent to Richmond. and Calvin Huson, his rival candidate for the same office, accompanied by Colonel Michael Corcoran and forty other officers, and a large number of private soldiers. It was at about ten o'clock, on a moonlit evening, when they reached the city, where an immense crowd had assembled. Amid the scoffs and sometimes curses of the populace, they were marched three-fourths of a mile to Harwood's large tobacco factory, on Main Street, near Twenty-fifth Street. It was a brick building, hastily prepared for the Tobacco Warehouse prison. occasion. Into it officers and men were thrust, to the numb er of more than six hundred; In the Appendix to Mr. Elys Journal, kept during his imprisongresment, may be found acomplete list of all the Bull's Run prisoners who were confined with him. and they were so closely huddled that it was difficult for any one to lie down. No doubt this was