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Libby Prison

Libby Prison was a Confederate prison at Richmond, Virginia, during the American Civil War. In 1862 it was designated to hold officer prisoners from the Union Army, taking in numbers from the nearby Seven Days battles (in which nearly 16,000 Union men and officers had been killed, wounded, or captured between June 25 and July 1 alone) and other conflicts of the Union's Peninsular campaign to take Richmond and end the war only a year after it had begun. As the conflict wore on the prison gained an infamous reputation for the overcrowded and harsh conditions. Prisoners suffered high mortality from disease and malnutrition. By 1863, one thousand prisoners were crowded into large open rooms on two floors, with open, barred windows leaving them exposed to weather and temperature extremes.

1865 photograph of Libby Prison

The building was built before the war as a tobacco warehouse and then used for food and groceries before being converted to a prison. In 1889, Charles F. Gunther moved the structure to Chicago and renovated it as a war museum. A decade later, the Coliseum Company dismantled the building and sold its pieces as souvenirs.[1]

History Edit

 
Bracelets carved from beef bones in Libby Prison

The prison was located in a three-story brick tobacco warehouse on two levels on Tobacco Row at the waterfront of the James River. In 1861 was leased by Capt. Luther Libby and his son George W. Libby. They operated a ship's chandlery and grocery business.[2]

The Confederate government started to use the facility as a hospital and prison in late 1861. In 1862 they reserved it to hold Union officers because of the influx of prisoners.[3] It contained eight low-ceilinged rooms, each 103 by 42 feet (31.4 by 12.5 metres). The second and third floors were used to house prisoners. Windows were barred and open to the elements, increasing the discomfort of occupants.[2] Lack of sanitation and overcrowding caused diseases. From holding 700 prisoners in 1862, by 1863 the facility far exceeded the maximum capacity of 1,000.[2] Mortality rates were high in 1863 and 1864, aggravated by Confederate shortages of food and supplies. Because of the high death toll, Libby Prison is generally regarded as second only in notoriety to Andersonville Prison in Georgia.

In 1863, The New York Times published a description of "the Libby" from a purported prisoner diary entry.[4] The next year, Kentucky Volunteer Infantry Captain I.N. Johnston, who escaped from Libby Prison, attempted to corroborate the article. (He testified that "...an African slave...did all in his power to restore us to freedom and home."[5]

He wrote

"...the building is of brick, with a front of near one hundred and forty feet, and one hundred feet deep. It is divided into nine rooms; the ceilings are low, and ventilation imperfect; the windows are barred, through which the windings of James River and the tents of Belle Isle may be seen. Its immediate surroundings are far from being agreeable; the sentinels pacing the streets constantly are unpleasant reminders that your stay is not a matter of choice; and were it so, few would choose it long as a boarding-house."[5]

In March 1864, Union worries about the safety of Richmond and related security of the prisons, and the scarcity of resources peaked. The next month, Union officer Harland Richardson pleaded "once more" for a "Mr. Reilly," presumably on behalf of the U.S. War Department, to send provisions to Libby.[6] Such requests were either delayed by Libby commandants or ignored, as the U.S. War Department funneled supplies into active Union lines.

Confederates permitted a one-time Union shipment as their own provisions dwindled. During the late spring and summer, they evacuated most prisoners-of-war from Richmond to Macon, Georgia. Enlisted men were transferred to Andersonville while the officers housed at Libby would transfer to a new prison in Macon. From April to August 1864, Libby continued to be used, mostly as a place for temporary confinement of Union officers and a small number of Confederate military criminals. On September 18, The New York Times reported that approximately 230 Union officers remained in Libby Prison.[7]

Due to the Siege of Petersburg and the transfer of more prisoners-of-war, the number of inmates (officers and non-officers alike) surged. In autumn 1864, as the New York Times published President Lincoln's endorsement of the U.S. Sanitary Commission's "inquiry" into Confederate prison conditions and Union officer "martyrdom," Richmond dailies continued to report a resurgence of incarcerated numbers at Libby Prison.[8] On October 10, 1864, the Richmond Sentinel reported on the arrival of "one thousand five hundred and fifty two Yankee prisoners" at Libby, 1114 of which "were sent to Salisbury, North Carolina, yesterday, in order to make room for other prisoners expected to arrive here" (438 of these prisoners remained in Libby).[9]

On October 14, Confederate officers corresponded on the fate of 82 out of 148 "Colored Troops" recently arrived at Libby Prison, bringing the total number of Union inmates to almost one thousand. A "Lieutenant-General Ewell" ordered "all negroes on hand not employed about the prison" turned over to "Brigadier-General Barton for work on the fortifications." The commandant believed that the troops "seemed pleased at being released from prison to be put to work," joining an additional "sixty-eight negro soldiers [who] were sent to the works on the 2d instant. These negroes were captured at Petersburg July 30, 1864. Eleven of them are free; the rest are slaves." The remainder of the "U.S. Colored Troops," 66 in total, had either perished or could not physically depart from Libby Prison due to ailments and wounds. Any wages for black prisoners "employed about the prison" and additional wages for fortification construction, aside from "a day's rations," remain subjects of scholarly inquiry.[10]

Union officer petitions for assistance, written prior to prisoner exchanges or before the officers died, indicated mass suffering and deteriorating conditions within the already deplorable Libby.[11] Newspapers on both sides of the war denounced atrocities ostensibly committed against prisoners by oppositional governments and prison commandants.[12] Impulses and goals for these Richmond dailies' Union prisoner-of-war tallies remain subjects of scholarly inquiry.[13] On March 30, 1865, The New York Times published a summation of Union captive numbers in Libby Prison, as well as the conditions of confinement, less than two weeks before the Battle of Appomattox Court House. The New York newspaper based its findings on the foregoing Richmond dailies and additional testimony.[14]

After the occupation of Richmond in 1865, Union authorities used Libby Prison for detention of former Confederate officers. They reportedly improved conditions over those that had been common for Union officers, or prisoners of war on both sides generally during the war.

In April 1865, U.S. President Abraham Lincoln visited Richmond, Virginia and toured the city on foot. When he came across Libby Prison, a crowd of onlookers stated "We will tear it down", to which Lincoln replied, "No, leave it as a monument."[15]

In 1880, the building was purchased by Southern Fertilizer Company. Nine years later, it was bought by Charles F. Gunther, a candymaker. He had the building disassembled, and moved to Chicago, Illinois. There it was rebuilt and renovated to serve as a war museum (1889-1899).[16] After the museum failed to draw enough crowds, the building was dismantled and was sold in pieces as souvenirs.

Prisoner conditions Edit

 
Depiction by David Gilmour Blythe, 1863

Upon their release from Libby a group of Union surgeons published an account in 1863 of their experiences treating Libby inmates in the attached hospital:

Thus we have over ten per cent of the whole number of prisoners held classed as sick men, who need the most assiduous and skilful attention; yet, in the essential matter of rations, they are receiving nothing but corn bread and sweet potatoes. Meat is no longer furnished to any class of our prisoners except to the few officers in Libby hospital, and all sick or well officers or privates are now furnished with a very poor article of corn bread in place of wheat bread, unsuitable diet for hospital patients prostrated with diarrhea, dysentery and fever, to say nothing of the balance of startling instances of individual suffering and horrid pictures of death from protracted sickness and semi-starvation we have had thrust upon our observation.[17]

They said that prisoners were always asking for more food and that many were only half clad. Newly arriving prisoners who were already ill often died quickly, even in one night. Due to the "systematic abuse, neglect and semi-starvation," the surgeons believed that thousands of men would be left "permanently broken down in their [bodily] constitutions" if they survived. In one story they noted that 200 wounded prisoners brought in from the Battle of Chickamauga had been given only a few hard crackers during their three days' journey, but suffered two more days in the prison without medical attention or food.[17]

An article in the Daily Richmond Enquirer vividly described prison conditions in 1864:

Libby takes in the captured Federals by scores, but lets none out; they are huddled up and jammed into every nook and corner; at the bathing troughs, around the cooking stoves, everywhere there is a wrangling, jostling crowd; at night the floor of every room they occupy in the building is covered, every square inch of it, by uneasy slumberers, lying side by side, and heel to head, as tightly packed as if the prison were a huge, improbable box of nocturnal sardines.[18]

 
"LIBBY LIFE" by Lieut. Col. Federico Fernández Cavada

Lieut. Colonel Federico Fernández Cavada, who belonged to the Hot Air Balloon Unit of the Union Army, was captured during the Battle of Gettysburg and sent to Libby. Released in 1864, Fernandez Cavada later that year published a book titled LIBBY LIFE: Experiences of A Prisoner of War in Richmond, VA, 1863-64, in which he told of the cruel treatment in the Confederate prison.[19]

In the introduction, Cavada wrote:

It was a beautiful country through which we had just passed, but it had presented no charms to weary eyes that were compelled to view it through a line of hostile bayonets; we felt but little sympathy for the beautiful; on our haggard countenances only this was written: "Give us rest, and food."[20]

Cavada published his narrative before 1865. Former Union prisoners also published memoirs after the surrender at Appomattox in April 1865. According to a Southern source printed after the war:

Such [post-1865] memoirs should be read in context, however. After the war, former Union prisoners were not granted pensions unless they had also sustained injuries or suffered from disease during their service. To muster support for their plight, the veterans mounted a public-relations campaign that included wildly sensationalistic "recollections" owing much to the dime novels of the "Wild West." When the United States government granted universal pensions beginning in 1890, these memoirs virtually disappeared.[21]

The Libby Chronicle Edit

(The Libby Chronicle, edited by Louis Beaudry, Albany, NY)

The Libby Chronicle was a newsletter written by the inmates of Libby during the summer of 1863; it was read aloud by the editor every Friday morning. Composed in the midst of hardship and brutality, the newsletter expressed irreverent humor.

Issue number two included a poem entitled "Castle Thunder," with a "dryly witty perspective" on prison life:[citation needed]

We have eighteen kinds of food, though 'twill stagger your belief,
Because we have bread, beef and soup, then bread, soup and beef;
Then we sep'rate around with'bout twenty in a group,
And thus we get beef, soup and bread, and beef, bread and soup;
For dessert we obtain, though it costs us nary red,
Soup, bread and beef, (count it well) and beef and soup and bread.

Such poems helped keep up morale among the prisoners. The following week's issue begins with a segment called "Encore," which reads, "Yielding to pressing demand from those who heard and from many who did not hear the poem entitled 'Castle Thunder,' we reproduce it this week. We are certain that the uproarious laughter caused by this facetious article . . . has done more good in Libby than cartloads of Confederate medicine."[citation needed]

Commonly expressed was hostility toward President Abraham Lincoln, whom they considered responsible for their being held so long in prison. The editors of The Chronicle rebuked such sentiments, saying, "these officers evince more the spirit of spoiled children than that of manly courage and intelligence which should characterize the actions of the American soldier."[citation needed]

Men made independent efforts to secure their release. For instance, one young surgeon wrote a letter to the editor of the Richmond Sentinel, promising that if he were released he would find the editor's "Rebel son" and look after him until he could be returned home. Chronicle editors reported that "this same officer was poltroon enough to offer to leave the Federal army if the Confederates would do something for him. But the Rebels didn't want the poor Judas, and he finds he has eaten dirt without advantage."[citation needed]

Escape from Libby Edit

 
Libby Prison, 1865, from the collection of the National Archives and Records Administration.

During the second week of February 1864, 109 Union officers took part in what was later dubbed by the press as the Libby Prison escape. Captain Morton Tower of Company B, 13th Mass. Infantry, wrote in his published memoirs about his successful escape: "On the night of February 9th, as soon as it was sufficiently dark, the exodus from the prison commenced. Major Hamilton, Col. Thomas E. Rose, and some of the projectors were the first to pass through. Col. Davis of the 4th Maine and myself had passed through the tunnel to the yard just as the clocks of Richmond were striking twelve. Near daybreak we reached a thicket of woods where we stopped to rest." Capt. Tower and Col. Davis eluded recapture and soon joined 57 other escapees who also made it to the Union lines.("Army Experience of Morton Tower- his escape from Libby Prison", "Memoirs of Capt. Morton Tower", June 1870)

The Charleston Mercury carried the story:

At the base of the east wall, and about twenty feet from the Cary street front, was discovered a tunnel, the entrance to which was hidden by a large rock, which fitted the aperture exactly. This stone, rolled away from the mouth of the sepulcher, revealed an avenue, which it was at once conjectured led to the outer world beyond. A small negro boy was sent into the tunnel on a tour of exploration, and by the time Major Turner and Lieutenant LaTouche gained the outside of the building, a shout from the negro announced his arrival at the terminus of the subterranean route. Its passage lay directly beneath the tread of three sentinels, who walked the breadth of the east end of the prison, across a paved alley way, a distance of more than fifty feet, breaking up inside of the enclosure in the rear of Carr warehouse. So nicely was the distance gauged, that the inside of the enclosure was struck precisely, which hints strongly of outside measurement and assistance. Through connection once opened, the prisoners were enabled to worm themselves through the tunnel, one by one, and emerging at least sixty feet distant from any sentinel post, to retake themselves off, singly, through an arched gateway, to some appointed rendezvous. To reach the entrance of the tunnel it was necessary for the prisoners to cut through the hospital room and the closed stairway leading into the basement. All the labor must have been performed at night, and all traces of the work accomplished at night was closed up or cleared away before the morning light. The tunnel itself is a work of several months, being about three feet in diameter and at least sixty feet in length, with curvatures worked around rock.

("Particulars of the Escape of the Yankee Officers from the Libby Prison", The Charleston Mercury, February 16, 1864)

Three tunnels were built: the first ran into water and was abandoned. The second hit the building's log foundation. The third reached a small carriage shed 15 m (50 ft) away.[22] Escapes were regular occurrences at both Federal and Confederate prisons.

Letters from Libby Edit

The Christian Recorder and other papers, from both Republican and divided states, sometimes included letters from prisoners prior to the fall of Richmond in early April 1865. The rules of Libby Prison limited men to six lines for their letters to family and friends. Here is an example:

"My Dear Wife. - Yours received - no hopes of exchange - send corn starch - want socks - no money - rheumatism in left shoulder - pickles very good - send sausages - God bless you - kiss the baby - Hail Columbia! - Your devoted husband."[23]

After the war Edit

In 1907, nails from Libby prison were melted down and used to cast the Pokahuntas Bell for the Jamestown Exposition.[24] The front door of Libby Prison is displayed in the American Civil War Museum, located at the former Tredegar Iron Works in Richmond. 37°31′51.14″N 77°25′34.11″W / 37.5308722°N 77.4261417°W / 37.5308722; -77.4261417 For post-wartime contexts, Union and Confederate veterans alike had commemorated the "War Between the States" and a racialized Americanism that spurred both reunion and overseas American imperialism, particularly during Spanish–American War recruitment drives.[25] Chattel slaves, black prisoners-of-war, and the horrors of Libby Prison were increasingly absent from scholarly discussions on the causes and conduct of the American Civil War, as the process of cultural forgetting became a cornerstone of U.S. social imperialism.[26] Woodrow Wilson later supported this strain of imperium, but by a "great Federal Union which governs individuals, not States",[27] thereby casting state Jim Crow laws and Jim Crow economy as offshoots of state-level progressive labor "uplift", devoid of federal oversight. These ideas underscored The New Freedom's " 'quarrel forgotten.' "[28] During his transition to Preparedness, Wilson again rested advocacy for "internationalist duties", including degrees of self-determination later subject to ethno-racial stratification by the League of Nations mandate, on the United States as “ 'a great united, indivisible, indestructible instrument.' ” Wilson's partisan opponent, Theodore Roosevelt, publicly supported "race and reunion" for American imperialism, but favored quotes from Civil War "Union" figures to depict overseas military excursions as advancing federal aims.[29] Neoconservatives, before and after 1995, frequently cited these arguments.[30] In addition, during his own vociferous campaign for Preparedness, Roosevelt exhorted audiences to situate " 'righteousness above peace...Abraham Lincoln and his supporters were right.' "[31]

Theodore Roosevelt's impulses for supporting, and helping to convene, the Republican and then Progressive (Bull Moose) Parties' national conventions at the Chicago Coliseum, the former Libby Prison museum site that continued to feature the prison façade, requires further scholarly inquiry.[32] Despite his "race and reunion" public statements before 1912, in both personal correspondence and select speeches on domestic policy, Roosevelt periodically compared the " 'special interests of cotton and slavery' " to the " 'special business interests' " that had " 'corrupted' " the Gilded Age. In 1912, the Progressive Party platform extolled federal administration of political economy and juridical matters during the Civil War and Radical Reconstruction. Roosevelt claimed that popular memory of Radical Republican precepts, such as "judicial recall" (invoked in the name of "the people"), shaped tenets of his New Nationalism. Then, three months after losing the Election of 1912, Roosevelt quoted from Abraham Lincoln's Peoria speech to demonstrate “ 'how fundamentally and basically alike the Progressive movement of to-day and the [antebellum] Republican movement of 1854 are.' "[33]

In the context of what historian Benjamin Wetzel referred to as "a growing body of scholarship that questions the reconciliationist narrative",[34] scholars have further explored how Union widows, sisters, and cousins, in both correspondence and verse, lamented the deaths and "changes" in survivor psychology and physiology that resulted from Libby Prison confinement.[35] Eric Foner likewise pointed out that postbellum churches divided between "North" and "South" religiosity---Methodist churches have since reconciled, but a number of Baptist churches have not.[36] Women in memorial services played key roles in demarcating the latter's "limits of reconciliation."[37]

In popular culture Edit

  • In the television miniseries North and South, General George Hazard (James Read) was taken prisoner and sent to Libby Prison, then under temporary command of Captain Turner (Wayne Newton). He is rescued by his best friend, General Orry Main (Patrick Swayze), and Main's cousin, Confederate officer Charles Main (Lewis Smith).

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ David Heidler; et al., eds. (2002). . W.W. Norton. p. 1180. ISBN 9780393047585. Archived from the original on 2013-12-31. Retrieved 2016-10-25.
  2. ^ a b c "Libby Prison", Encyclopedia Virginia, accessed 21 April 2012
  3. ^ Byrne, Frank L., "Libby Prison: A Study in Emotions", Journal of Southern History 1958 24(4): 430-444 JSTOR, accessed 21 April 2012
  4. ^ "OUR PRISONERS IN THE SOUTH.; Complete Official List of Union Officers Held by the Rebels. AN IMPORTANT DOCUMENT. Inhuman Treatment of Prisoners of War in Richmond. WHERE THE BLAME RESTS. Names and Description of the Rebel Officers Commanding at the Libby Prison". The New York Times. 6 November 1863. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
  5. ^ a b Johnston, Isaac N. (1864). Four Months In Libby, and the Campaign against Atlanta. Methodist Book Concern. p. 48 and 112.
  6. ^ Brockman, Paul (15 May 2020). "A Civil War Letter from Libby Prison". Indiana Historical Society. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
  7. ^ "THE REBEL PRISONS.; Names of Union Officers in Libby Prison". The New York Times. 21 September 1864. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
  8. ^ "THE SOUTHERN MILITARY PRISONS.; Inquiry by the United States Sanitary Commission Confirmatory Account of the Martyrdom of our Soldiers in the South. THE RETURNED PRISONERS. LIBBY PRISON. BELLE ISLE. THE HOSPITALS. PHYSICAL CONDITION OF THE REBELS THE PRISONS IN THE NORTH". The New York Times. 25 September 1864. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
  9. ^ "1500 Yankee POWs (including 58 officers) arrive at Libby; 1114 POWs sent to Salisbury yesterday". Richmond Sentinel. 4 October 1864. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
  10. ^ "Union & Confederate Correspondence, Orders, Etc., Relating to Prisoners of War and State from April 1, 1864, to December 31, 1864 (#40)".
  11. ^ "Libby Prison Inmate U.S. Civil War letter". Libby Prison Inmate U.S. Civil War Letter, 1864, Ms 113, Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University. (Preferred Citation) Woodson@Rice.edu. 1864. hdl:1911/21726. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
  12. ^ https://scholarworks.wm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5278&context=etd[bare URL PDF]
  13. ^ https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5787&context=etd[bare URL PDF]
  14. ^ "SOUTHERN NEWS.; The Libby Prison Attempted Justification of the Barbarous Treatment of Prisoners of War at the South Confession that the Libby was Mined. THE LIBBY PRISON. CONFESSION THAT THE PRISON WAS MINED. DEPARTURE OF GEN. SINGLETON. ILLNESS OF MR. DANIEL". The New York Times. 30 March 1865.
  15. ^ Porter, David Dixon (1885). Incidents and Anecdotes of the Civil War (PDF). p. 299. Retrieved January 26, 2014.
  16. ^ Bridge, Jennifer R. (2003). "A Shrine of Patriotic Memories". Chicago History. 32 (1): 4–23.
  17. ^ a b "The Richmond Prisoners," The New York Herald, November 28, 1863
  18. ^ "City Intelligence. The Libby Prison and its Contents", Richmond Enquirer, February 2, 1864
  19. ^ Lieut. Col. Federico Fernández Cavada, LIBBY LIFE: Experiences of A Prisoner of War in Richmond, VA, 1863-64, Philadelphia: Roger & Baird, 1864
  20. ^ Fernandez Cavada, Libby Life, pp. 19-20
  21. ^ "Libby Prison", Encyclopedia Virginia, accessed 21 April 2012
  22. ^ Swanson, Diane (2003). "Escape from Libby". Tunnels!. True Stories from the Edge. Annick Press. p. 76. ISBN 1-55037-780-9.
  23. ^ "A Prisoner's Letter", The Christian Recorder11 February 1865, Philadelphia, PA
  24. ^ Richmond Times-Dispatch, "Pokahuntas Bell for Exposition", April 13, 1907
  25. ^ Blight, David (2001). Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 345–47. ISBN 9780674022096.
  26. ^ Foner, Eric (2022). Give Me Liberty!: An American History. New York, NY: W.W. Norton and Company. pp. 672–73. ISBN 9781324041573.
  27. ^ Wilson, Woodrow. "The New Freedom (1912-13)". National Constitution Center.
  28. ^ Blight, David (2001). Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 10–11. ISBN 9780674022096.
  29. ^ Wetzel, Benjamin J. (April 2023). "Theodore Roosevelt and the Unionist Memory of the Civil War: Experience, History, and Politics, 1861–1918". The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. 22 (2): 184–203.
  30. ^ Kolozi, Peter (March 2013). "The Neoconservative Critiques of and Reconciliation with Capitalism". New Political Science. 35 (1): 44–64.
  31. ^ Wetzel, Benjamin J. (April 2023). "Theodore Roosevelt and the Unionist Memory of the Civil War: Experience, History, and Politics, 1861–1918". The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. 22 (2): 184–203.
  32. ^ Helferich, Gerard (2013). Theodore Roosevelt and the Assassin: Madness, Vengeance, and the Campaign of 1912. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 158–159. ISBN 978-1-4930-0077-7.
  33. ^ Wetzel, Benjamin J. (April 2023). "Theodore Roosevelt and the Unionist Memory of the Civil War: Experience, History, and Politics, 1861–1918". The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. 22 (2): 184–203.
  34. ^ Wetzel, Benjamin J. (April 2023). "Theodore Roosevelt and the Unionist Memory of the Civil War: Experience, History, and Politics, 1861–1918". The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. 22 (2): 184–203.
  35. ^ Springer, Paul (2015). Transforming Civil War Prisons: Lincoln, Lieber, and the Politics of Captivity. New York, NY: Taylor & Francis. pp. 64–65. ISBN 9781135053307.
  36. ^ Foner, Eric (2022). Give Me Liberty!: An American History. New York, NY: W.W. Norton and Company. pp. 672–73. ISBN 9781324041573.
  37. ^ Janney, Caroline E. (2013). Remembering the Civil War: Reunion and the Limits of Reconciliation. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press. pp. 94–104, 202–207, 232–265. ISBN 9781469607061.

Further reading Edit

  • Byrne, Frank L. "Libby Prison: A Study in Emotions," Journal of Southern History (1958) 24#4 pp 430–444. in JSTOR
  • Byrne, Frank L., ed. "A General Behind Bars: Neal Dow in Libby Prison," Civil War History 1962 8(2): pp. 164–183.
  • Chesson, Michael B. "Prison Camps and Prisoners of War," in Steven E. Woodworth, ed. The American Civil War: A Handbook of Literature and Research, Hartford, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1996, 466-78
  • Pickenpaugh, Roger. Captives in Blue: The Civil War Prisons of the Confederacy (2013) pp 74–90
  • Silkenat, David. Raising the White Flag: How Surrender Defined the American Civil War. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2019. ISBN 978-1-4696-4972-6.
  • Miller, Douglas. "The Greatest Escape: A True American Civil War Adventure" (2021) ISBN 978-1-4930-5182-3

External links Edit

  • "Libby Prison", Encyclopedia Virginia
  • "Guide to Civil War Prisons" (2004)
  • "Libby Prison" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.
  • John Bray, "Escape from Libby Prison", CivilWarSources Blog, January 2008
  • "Libby Prison", Reprint of Official Publication #12, Richmond Civil War Centennial Committee, 1961- 1965, no copyright claimed, Census Diggins Blog
  • [1], Major S.H.M.Byers Fifth Iowa Volunteer Infantry, "Letters from Libby", transcribed from the December 29, 1891 issue of the National Tribune

libby, prison, confederate, prison, richmond, virginia, during, american, civil, 1862, designated, hold, officer, prisoners, from, union, army, taking, numbers, from, nearby, seven, days, battles, which, nearly, union, officers, been, killed, wounded, captured. Libby Prison was a Confederate prison at Richmond Virginia during the American Civil War In 1862 it was designated to hold officer prisoners from the Union Army taking in numbers from the nearby Seven Days battles in which nearly 16 000 Union men and officers had been killed wounded or captured between June 25 and July 1 alone and other conflicts of the Union s Peninsular campaign to take Richmond and end the war only a year after it had begun As the conflict wore on the prison gained an infamous reputation for the overcrowded and harsh conditions Prisoners suffered high mortality from disease and malnutrition By 1863 one thousand prisoners were crowded into large open rooms on two floors with open barred windows leaving them exposed to weather and temperature extremes 1865 photograph of Libby PrisonThe building was built before the war as a tobacco warehouse and then used for food and groceries before being converted to a prison In 1889 Charles F Gunther moved the structure to Chicago and renovated it as a war museum A decade later the Coliseum Company dismantled the building and sold its pieces as souvenirs 1 Contents 1 History 2 Prisoner conditions 3 The Libby Chronicle 4 Escape from Libby 5 Letters from Libby 6 After the war 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory Edit nbsp Bracelets carved from beef bones in Libby PrisonThe prison was located in a three story brick tobacco warehouse on two levels on Tobacco Row at the waterfront of the James River In 1861 was leased by Capt Luther Libby and his son George W Libby They operated a ship s chandlery and grocery business 2 The Confederate government started to use the facility as a hospital and prison in late 1861 In 1862 they reserved it to hold Union officers because of the influx of prisoners 3 It contained eight low ceilinged rooms each 103 by 42 feet 31 4 by 12 5 metres The second and third floors were used to house prisoners Windows were barred and open to the elements increasing the discomfort of occupants 2 Lack of sanitation and overcrowding caused diseases From holding 700 prisoners in 1862 by 1863 the facility far exceeded the maximum capacity of 1 000 2 Mortality rates were high in 1863 and 1864 aggravated by Confederate shortages of food and supplies Because of the high death toll Libby Prison is generally regarded as second only in notoriety to Andersonville Prison in Georgia In 1863 The New York Times published a description of the Libby from a purported prisoner diary entry 4 The next year Kentucky Volunteer Infantry Captain I N Johnston who escaped from Libby Prison attempted to corroborate the article He testified that an African slave did all in his power to restore us to freedom and home 5 He wrote the building is of brick with a front of near one hundred and forty feet and one hundred feet deep It is divided into nine rooms the ceilings are low and ventilation imperfect the windows are barred through which the windings of James River and the tents of Belle Isle may be seen Its immediate surroundings are far from being agreeable the sentinels pacing the streets constantly are unpleasant reminders that your stay is not a matter of choice and were it so few would choose it long as a boarding house 5 In March 1864 Union worries about the safety of Richmond and related security of the prisons and the scarcity of resources peaked The next month Union officer Harland Richardson pleaded once more for a Mr Reilly presumably on behalf of the U S War Department to send provisions to Libby 6 Such requests were either delayed by Libby commandants or ignored as the U S War Department funneled supplies into active Union lines Confederates permitted a one time Union shipment as their own provisions dwindled During the late spring and summer they evacuated most prisoners of war from Richmond to Macon Georgia Enlisted men were transferred to Andersonville while the officers housed at Libby would transfer to a new prison in Macon From April to August 1864 Libby continued to be used mostly as a place for temporary confinement of Union officers and a small number of Confederate military criminals On September 18 The New York Times reported that approximately 230 Union officers remained in Libby Prison 7 Due to the Siege of Petersburg and the transfer of more prisoners of war the number of inmates officers and non officers alike surged In autumn 1864 as the New York Times published President Lincoln s endorsement of the U S Sanitary Commission s inquiry into Confederate prison conditions and Union officer martyrdom Richmond dailies continued to report a resurgence of incarcerated numbers at Libby Prison 8 On October 10 1864 the Richmond Sentinel reported on the arrival of one thousand five hundred and fifty two Yankee prisoners at Libby 1114 of which were sent to Salisbury North Carolina yesterday in order to make room for other prisoners expected to arrive here 438 of these prisoners remained in Libby 9 On October 14 Confederate officers corresponded on the fate of 82 out of 148 Colored Troops recently arrived at Libby Prison bringing the total number of Union inmates to almost one thousand A Lieutenant General Ewell ordered all negroes on hand not employed about the prison turned over to Brigadier General Barton for work on the fortifications The commandant believed that the troops seemed pleased at being released from prison to be put to work joining an additional sixty eight negro soldiers who were sent to the works on the 2d instant These negroes were captured at Petersburg July 30 1864 Eleven of them are free the rest are slaves The remainder of the U S Colored Troops 66 in total had either perished or could not physically depart from Libby Prison due to ailments and wounds Any wages for black prisoners employed about the prison and additional wages for fortification construction aside from a day s rations remain subjects of scholarly inquiry 10 Union officer petitions for assistance written prior to prisoner exchanges or before the officers died indicated mass suffering and deteriorating conditions within the already deplorable Libby 11 Newspapers on both sides of the war denounced atrocities ostensibly committed against prisoners by oppositional governments and prison commandants 12 Impulses and goals for these Richmond dailies Union prisoner of war tallies remain subjects of scholarly inquiry 13 On March 30 1865 The New York Times published a summation of Union captive numbers in Libby Prison as well as the conditions of confinement less than two weeks before the Battle of Appomattox Court House The New York newspaper based its findings on the foregoing Richmond dailies and additional testimony 14 After the occupation of Richmond in 1865 Union authorities used Libby Prison for detention of former Confederate officers They reportedly improved conditions over those that had been common for Union officers or prisoners of war on both sides generally during the war In April 1865 U S President Abraham Lincoln visited Richmond Virginia and toured the city on foot When he came across Libby Prison a crowd of onlookers stated We will tear it down to which Lincoln replied No leave it as a monument 15 In 1880 the building was purchased by Southern Fertilizer Company Nine years later it was bought by Charles F Gunther a candymaker He had the building disassembled and moved to Chicago Illinois There it was rebuilt and renovated to serve as a war museum 1889 1899 16 After the museum failed to draw enough crowds the building was dismantled and was sold in pieces as souvenirs Prisoner conditions Edit nbsp Depiction by David Gilmour Blythe 1863Upon their release from Libby a group of Union surgeons published an account in 1863 of their experiences treating Libby inmates in the attached hospital Thus we have over ten per cent of the whole number of prisoners held classed as sick men who need the most assiduous and skilful attention yet in the essential matter of rations they are receiving nothing but corn bread and sweet potatoes Meat is no longer furnished to any class of our prisoners except to the few officers in Libby hospital and all sick or well officers or privates are now furnished with a very poor article of corn bread in place of wheat bread unsuitable diet for hospital patients prostrated with diarrhea dysentery and fever to say nothing of the balance of startling instances of individual suffering and horrid pictures of death from protracted sickness and semi starvation we have had thrust upon our observation 17 They said that prisoners were always asking for more food and that many were only half clad Newly arriving prisoners who were already ill often died quickly even in one night Due to the systematic abuse neglect and semi starvation the surgeons believed that thousands of men would be left permanently broken down in their bodily constitutions if they survived In one story they noted that 200 wounded prisoners brought in from the Battle of Chickamauga had been given only a few hard crackers during their three days journey but suffered two more days in the prison without medical attention or food 17 An article in the Daily Richmond Enquirer vividly described prison conditions in 1864 Libby takes in the captured Federals by scores but lets none out they are huddled up and jammed into every nook and corner at the bathing troughs around the cooking stoves everywhere there is a wrangling jostling crowd at night the floor of every room they occupy in the building is covered every square inch of it by uneasy slumberers lying side by side and heel to head as tightly packed as if the prison were a huge improbable box of nocturnal sardines 18 nbsp LIBBY LIFE by Lieut Col Federico Fernandez CavadaLieut Colonel Federico Fernandez Cavada who belonged to the Hot Air Balloon Unit of the Union Army was captured during the Battle of Gettysburg and sent to Libby Released in 1864 Fernandez Cavada later that year published a book titled LIBBY LIFE Experiences of A Prisoner of War in Richmond VA 1863 64 in which he told of the cruel treatment in the Confederate prison 19 In the introduction Cavada wrote It was a beautiful country through which we had just passed but it had presented no charms to weary eyes that were compelled to view it through a line of hostile bayonets we felt but little sympathy for the beautiful on our haggard countenances only this was written Give us rest and food 20 Cavada published his narrative before 1865 Former Union prisoners also published memoirs after the surrender at Appomattox in April 1865 According to a Southern source printed after the war Such post 1865 memoirs should be read in context however After the war former Union prisoners were not granted pensions unless they had also sustained injuries or suffered from disease during their service To muster support for their plight the veterans mounted a public relations campaign that included wildly sensationalistic recollections owing much to the dime novels of the Wild West When the United States government granted universal pensions beginning in 1890 these memoirs virtually disappeared 21 The Libby Chronicle Edit The Libby Chronicle edited by Louis Beaudry Albany NY The Libby Chronicle was a newsletter written by the inmates of Libby during the summer of 1863 it was read aloud by the editor every Friday morning Composed in the midst of hardship and brutality the newsletter expressed irreverent humor Issue number two included a poem entitled Castle Thunder with a dryly witty perspective on prison life citation needed We have eighteen kinds of food though twill stagger your belief Because we have bread beef and soup then bread soup and beef Then we sep rate around with bout twenty in a group And thus we get beef soup and bread and beef bread and soup For dessert we obtain though it costs us nary red Soup bread and beef count it well and beef and soup and bread Such poems helped keep up morale among the prisoners The following week s issue begins with a segment called Encore which reads Yielding to pressing demand from those who heard and from many who did not hear the poem entitled Castle Thunder we reproduce it this week We are certain that the uproarious laughter caused by this facetious article has done more good in Libby than cartloads of Confederate medicine citation needed Commonly expressed was hostility toward President Abraham Lincoln whom they considered responsible for their being held so long in prison The editors of The Chronicle rebuked such sentiments saying these officers evince more the spirit of spoiled children than that of manly courage and intelligence which should characterize the actions of the American soldier citation needed Men made independent efforts to secure their release For instance one young surgeon wrote a letter to the editor of the Richmond Sentinel promising that if he were released he would find the editor s Rebel son and look after him until he could be returned home Chronicle editors reported that this same officer was poltroon enough to offer to leave the Federal army if the Confederates would do something for him But the Rebels didn t want the poor Judas and he finds he has eaten dirt without advantage citation needed Escape from Libby Edit nbsp Libby Prison 1865 from the collection of the National Archives and Records Administration During the second week of February 1864 109 Union officers took part in what was later dubbed by the press as the Libby Prison escape Captain Morton Tower of Company B 13th Mass Infantry wrote in his published memoirs about his successful escape On the night of February 9th as soon as it was sufficiently dark the exodus from the prison commenced Major Hamilton Col Thomas E Rose and some of the projectors were the first to pass through Col Davis of the 4th Maine and myself had passed through the tunnel to the yard just as the clocks of Richmond were striking twelve Near daybreak we reached a thicket of woods where we stopped to rest Capt Tower and Col Davis eluded recapture and soon joined 57 other escapees who also made it to the Union lines Army Experience of Morton Tower his escape from Libby Prison Memoirs of Capt Morton Tower June 1870 The Charleston Mercury carried the story At the base of the east wall and about twenty feet from the Cary street front was discovered a tunnel the entrance to which was hidden by a large rock which fitted the aperture exactly This stone rolled away from the mouth of the sepulcher revealed an avenue which it was at once conjectured led to the outer world beyond A small negro boy was sent into the tunnel on a tour of exploration and by the time Major Turner and Lieutenant LaTouche gained the outside of the building a shout from the negro announced his arrival at the terminus of the subterranean route Its passage lay directly beneath the tread of three sentinels who walked the breadth of the east end of the prison across a paved alley way a distance of more than fifty feet breaking up inside of the enclosure in the rear of Carr warehouse So nicely was the distance gauged that the inside of the enclosure was struck precisely which hints strongly of outside measurement and assistance Through connection once opened the prisoners were enabled to worm themselves through the tunnel one by one and emerging at least sixty feet distant from any sentinel post to retake themselves off singly through an arched gateway to some appointed rendezvous To reach the entrance of the tunnel it was necessary for the prisoners to cut through the hospital room and the closed stairway leading into the basement All the labor must have been performed at night and all traces of the work accomplished at night was closed up or cleared away before the morning light The tunnel itself is a work of several months being about three feet in diameter and at least sixty feet in length with curvatures worked around rock Particulars of the Escape of the Yankee Officers from the Libby Prison The Charleston Mercury February 16 1864 Three tunnels were built the first ran into water and was abandoned The second hit the building s log foundation The third reached a small carriage shed 15 m 50 ft away 22 Escapes were regular occurrences at both Federal and Confederate prisons Letters from Libby EditThe Christian Recorder and other papers from both Republican and divided states sometimes included letters from prisoners prior to the fall of Richmond in early April 1865 The rules of Libby Prison limited men to six lines for their letters to family and friends Here is an example My Dear Wife Yours received no hopes of exchange send corn starch want socks no money rheumatism in left shoulder pickles very good send sausages God bless you kiss the baby Hail Columbia Your devoted husband 23 After the war EditIn 1907 nails from Libby prison were melted down and used to cast the Pokahuntas Bell for the Jamestown Exposition 24 The front door of Libby Prison is displayed in the American Civil War Museum located at the former Tredegar Iron Works in Richmond 37 31 51 14 N 77 25 34 11 W 37 5308722 N 77 4261417 W 37 5308722 77 4261417 For post wartime contexts Union and Confederate veterans alike had commemorated the War Between the States and a racialized Americanism that spurred both reunion and overseas American imperialism particularly during Spanish American War recruitment drives 25 Chattel slaves black prisoners of war and the horrors of Libby Prison were increasingly absent from scholarly discussions on the causes and conduct of the American Civil War as the process of cultural forgetting became a cornerstone of U S social imperialism 26 Woodrow Wilson later supported this strain of imperium but by a great Federal Union which governs individuals not States 27 thereby casting state Jim Crow laws and Jim Crow economy as offshoots of state level progressive labor uplift devoid of federal oversight These ideas underscored The New Freedom s quarrel forgotten 28 During his transition to Preparedness Wilson again rested advocacy for internationalist duties including degrees of self determination later subject to ethno racial stratification by the League of Nations mandate on the United States as a great united indivisible indestructible instrument Wilson s partisan opponent Theodore Roosevelt publicly supported race and reunion for American imperialism but favored quotes from Civil War Union figures to depict overseas military excursions as advancing federal aims 29 Neoconservatives before and after 1995 frequently cited these arguments 30 In addition during his own vociferous campaign for Preparedness Roosevelt exhorted audiences to situate righteousness above peace Abraham Lincoln and his supporters were right 31 Theodore Roosevelt s impulses for supporting and helping to convene the Republican and then Progressive Bull Moose Parties national conventions at the Chicago Coliseum the former Libby Prison museum site that continued to feature the prison facade requires further scholarly inquiry 32 Despite his race and reunion public statements before 1912 in both personal correspondence and select speeches on domestic policy Roosevelt periodically compared the special interests of cotton and slavery to the special business interests that had corrupted the Gilded Age In 1912 the Progressive Party platform extolled federal administration of political economy and juridical matters during the Civil War and Radical Reconstruction Roosevelt claimed that popular memory of Radical Republican precepts such as judicial recall invoked in the name of the people shaped tenets of his New Nationalism Then three months after losing the Election of 1912 Roosevelt quoted from Abraham Lincoln s Peoria speech to demonstrate how fundamentally and basically alike the Progressive movement of to day and the antebellum Republican movement of 1854 are 33 In the context of what historian Benjamin Wetzel referred to as a growing body of scholarship that questions the reconciliationist narrative 34 scholars have further explored how Union widows sisters and cousins in both correspondence and verse lamented the deaths and changes in survivor psychology and physiology that resulted from Libby Prison confinement 35 Eric Foner likewise pointed out that postbellum churches divided between North and South religiosity Methodist churches have since reconciled but a number of Baptist churches have not 36 Women in memorial services played key roles in demarcating the latter s limits of reconciliation 37 In popular culture EditThe western film Virginia City 1940 stars Errol Flynn Alan Hale Sr and Guinn Big Boy Williams as officers who escape from Libby Prison after causing an explosion In Mysterious Island 1961 Union soldiers Cyrus Harding Michael Craig Herbert Brown Michael Callan and Neb Dan Jackson along with Union war correspondent Gideon Spillet Gary Merrill and Confederate sergeant Pencroft Percy Herbert escape from Libby Prison via an observation balloon In the television miniseries North and South General George Hazard James Read was taken prisoner and sent to Libby Prison then under temporary command of Captain Turner Wayne Newton He is rescued by his best friend General Orry Main Patrick Swayze and Main s cousin Confederate officer Charles Main Lewis Smith See also EditList of Civil War POW Prisons and CampsReferences Edit David Heidler et al eds 2002 Encyclopedia of the American Civil War A Political Social and Military History W W Norton p 1180 ISBN 9780393047585 Archived from the original on 2013 12 31 Retrieved 2016 10 25 a b c Libby Prison Encyclopedia Virginia accessed 21 April 2012 Byrne Frank L Libby Prison A Study in Emotions Journal of Southern History 1958 24 4 430 444 JSTOR accessed 21 April 2012 OUR PRISONERS IN THE SOUTH Complete Official List of Union Officers Held by the Rebels AN IMPORTANT DOCUMENT Inhuman Treatment of Prisoners of War in Richmond WHERE THE BLAME RESTS Names and Description of the Rebel Officers Commanding at the Libby Prison The New York Times 6 November 1863 Retrieved 8 June 2020 a b Johnston Isaac N 1864 Four Months In Libby and the Campaign against Atlanta Methodist Book Concern p 48 and 112 Brockman Paul 15 May 2020 A Civil War Letter from Libby Prison Indiana Historical Society Retrieved 8 June 2020 THE REBEL PRISONS Names of Union Officers in Libby Prison The New York Times 21 September 1864 Retrieved 8 June 2020 THE SOUTHERN MILITARY PRISONS Inquiry by the United States Sanitary Commission Confirmatory Account of the Martyrdom of our Soldiers in the South THE RETURNED PRISONERS LIBBY PRISON BELLE ISLE THE HOSPITALS PHYSICAL CONDITION OF THE REBELS THE PRISONS IN THE NORTH The New York Times 25 September 1864 Retrieved 8 June 2020 1500 Yankee POWs including 58 officers arrive at Libby 1114 POWs sent to Salisbury yesterday Richmond Sentinel 4 October 1864 Retrieved 8 June 2020 Union amp Confederate Correspondence Orders Etc Relating to Prisoners of War and State from April 1 1864 to December 31 1864 40 Libby Prison Inmate U S Civil War letter Libby Prison Inmate U S Civil War Letter 1864 Ms 113 Woodson Research Center Fondren Library Rice University Preferred Citation Woodson Rice edu 1864 hdl 1911 21726 Retrieved 8 June 2020 https scholarworks wm edu cgi viewcontent cgi article 5278 amp context etd bare URL PDF https scholarscompass vcu edu cgi viewcontent cgi article 5787 amp context etd bare URL PDF SOUTHERN NEWS The Libby Prison Attempted Justification of the Barbarous Treatment of Prisoners of War at the South Confession that the Libby was Mined THE LIBBY PRISON CONFESSION THAT THE PRISON WAS MINED DEPARTURE OF GEN SINGLETON ILLNESS OF MR DANIEL The New York Times 30 March 1865 Porter David Dixon 1885 Incidents and Anecdotes of the Civil War PDF p 299 Retrieved January 26 2014 Bridge Jennifer R 2003 A Shrine of Patriotic Memories Chicago History 32 1 4 23 a b The Richmond Prisoners The New York Herald November 28 1863 City Intelligence The Libby Prison and its Contents Richmond Enquirer February 2 1864 Lieut Col Federico Fernandez Cavada LIBBY LIFE Experiences of A Prisoner of War in Richmond VA 1863 64 Philadelphia Roger amp Baird 1864 Fernandez Cavada Libby Life pp 19 20 Libby Prison Encyclopedia Virginia accessed 21 April 2012 Swanson Diane 2003 Escape from Libby Tunnels True Stories from the Edge Annick Press p 76 ISBN 1 55037 780 9 A Prisoner s Letter The Christian Recorder11 February 1865 Philadelphia PA Richmond Times Dispatch Pokahuntas Bell for Exposition April 13 1907 Blight David 2001 Race and Reunion The Civil War in American Memory Cambridge MA Harvard University Press pp 345 47 ISBN 9780674022096 Foner Eric 2022 Give Me Liberty An American History New York NY W W Norton and Company pp 672 73 ISBN 9781324041573 Wilson Woodrow The New Freedom 1912 13 National Constitution Center Blight David 2001 Race and Reunion The Civil War in American Memory Cambridge MA Harvard University Press pp 10 11 ISBN 9780674022096 Wetzel Benjamin J April 2023 Theodore Roosevelt and the Unionist Memory of the Civil War Experience History and Politics 1861 1918 The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 22 2 184 203 Kolozi Peter March 2013 The Neoconservative Critiques of and Reconciliation with Capitalism New Political Science 35 1 44 64 Wetzel Benjamin J April 2023 Theodore Roosevelt and the Unionist Memory of the Civil War Experience History and Politics 1861 1918 The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 22 2 184 203 Helferich Gerard 2013 Theodore Roosevelt and the Assassin Madness Vengeance and the Campaign of 1912 Rowman amp Littlefield pp 158 159 ISBN 978 1 4930 0077 7 Wetzel Benjamin J April 2023 Theodore Roosevelt and the Unionist Memory of the Civil War Experience History and Politics 1861 1918 The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 22 2 184 203 Wetzel Benjamin J April 2023 Theodore Roosevelt and the Unionist Memory of the Civil War Experience History and Politics 1861 1918 The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 22 2 184 203 Springer Paul 2015 Transforming Civil War Prisons Lincoln Lieber and the Politics of Captivity New York NY Taylor amp Francis pp 64 65 ISBN 9781135053307 Foner Eric 2022 Give Me Liberty An American History New York NY W W Norton and Company pp 672 73 ISBN 9781324041573 Janney Caroline E 2013 Remembering the Civil War Reunion and the Limits of Reconciliation Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina Press pp 94 104 202 207 232 265 ISBN 9781469607061 Further reading EditByrne Frank L Libby Prison A Study in Emotions Journal of Southern History 1958 24 4 pp 430 444 in JSTOR Byrne Frank L ed A General Behind Bars Neal Dow in Libby Prison Civil War History 1962 8 2 pp 164 183 Chesson Michael B Prison Camps and Prisoners of War in Steven E Woodworth ed The American Civil War A Handbook of Literature and Research Hartford Connecticut Greenwood Press 1996 466 78 Pickenpaugh Roger Captives in Blue The Civil War Prisons of the Confederacy 2013 pp 74 90 Silkenat David Raising the White Flag How Surrender Defined the American Civil War Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2019 ISBN 978 1 4696 4972 6 Miller Douglas The Greatest Escape A True American Civil War Adventure 2021 ISBN 978 1 4930 5182 3External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Libby Prison Libby Prison Encyclopedia Virginia Guide to Civil War Prisons 2004 Libby Prison New International Encyclopedia 1905 John Bray Escape from Libby Prison CivilWarSources Blog January 2008 Libby Prison Reprint of Official Publication 12 Richmond Civil War Centennial Committee 1961 1965 no copyright claimed Census Diggins Blog 1 Major S H M Byers Fifth Iowa Volunteer Infantry Letters from Libby transcribed from the December 29 1891 issue of the National Tribune Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Libby Prison amp oldid 1178364060, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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