United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Prisoners and prisons
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United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Prisoners and prisons
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- Confederate heroines, 120 southern women convicted by Union military justice, Thomas P. Lowry
- Virginia diaspora, southern Bensons and related families : McCracken, Dickson, Scruggs, Clark, Foster, Davis, Youngblood, Patterson, Harwell, Hume, Fowler, many more : and Civil War memoirs of Lt. Peru Hardy Benson, C.S.A., and Dunkle's 1869 list of "The immortal six hundred" prisoners of war, compiled by Guida M. Jackson-Laufer
- Richmond's Civil War prisons, Sandra V. Parker
- To die in Chicago, Confederate prisoners at Camp Douglas, 1862-65, George Levy
- Adventures of Alf. Wilson;, a thrilling episode of the dark days of the rebellion., Washington, National Tribune, 1897
- Prison life among the Rebels, recollections of a Union chaplain, edited by Edward D. Jervey
- Tennessee C.S.A. deaths in Union prisons, Transcribed by Carolyn M. Bartels
- Prisoner of the Rebels in Texas, the Civil War narrative of Aaron T. Sutton, corporal, 83rd Ohio Volunteer Infantry, edited by David G. Maclean
- The Civil War diary of Amos E. Stearns, a prisoner at Andersonville, edited by Leon Basile
- Sufferings endured for a free government, or, A history of the cruelties and atrocities of the rebellion, by Thos. L. Wilson
- Baltimore [Maryland] city jail war docket, Jerry M. Hynson
- Prison life in Dixie., Giving a short history of the inhuman and barbarous treatment of our soldiers by Rebel authorities,, by Sergeant Oats [pseud.] ... To which is added the speech of Gen. J.A. Garfield, delivered at the Andersonville reunion, at Toledo, Ohio, Oct. 3, 1879
- Disaster on the Mississippi, the Sultana explosion, April 27, 1865, Gene Eric Salecker
- Confederate soldiers, sailors and civilians who died as prisoners of war at Camp Douglas, Chicago, Ill., 1862-1865
- Lights and shadows in Confederate prisons;, a personal experience, 1864-5,, by Homer B. Sprague ... with portraits,
- Military prisons of the Civil War, a comparative study, David L. Keller
- Civil War prisons
- Yankees in Dixie, a history of the military prisons of the Southern Confederacy, 1861-1865, by Robert Clayton Hall
- Richmond prisons 1861-1862, compiled from the original records kept by the Confederate government ; journals kept by Union prisoners of war, together with the name, rank, company, regiment and state of the four thousand who were confined there, by William H. Jeffrey
- Twenty months in captivity, memoirs of a Union officer in Confederate prisons, Bernhard Domschcke ; edited and translated by Frederic Trautmann
- The world's largest prison, the story of Camp Lawton, John K. Derden
- The tragedy of Libby and Andersonville prison camps, a study of mismanagement and inept logistical policies at two southern prisoner-of-war camps during the Civil War, by Daniel Patrick Brown ; [ill.: Mark Weller]
- Portals to hell, military prisons of the Civil War, Lonnie R. Speer
- "Don't tell father I have been shot at", the Civil War letters of Captain George N. Bliss, First Rhode Island Cavalry, George N. Bliss ; edited by William C. Emerson with Elizabeth C. Stevens
- Three hundred days in a Yankee prison;, reminiscenses of war life, captivity, imprisonment at Camp Chase, Ohio,, by John H. King. Atlanta, Ga., 1904
- The Confederate dead in Brooklyn, biographical sketches of 513 Confederate POWs, John F. Walter
- The immortal six hundred, a story of cruelty to Confederate prisoners of war, by J. Ogden Murray
- History of the 27th Regiment N.Y. Vols., being a record of its more than two years of service in the war for the Union, from May 21st, 1861 to May 31st, 1863 : with a complete roster, and short sketches of commanding officers : also, a record of experience and suffering of some of the comrades in Libby and other Rebel prisons, compiled by C. B. Fairchild, of Company "D" ; published under the direction of the following committee, H. W. Slocum, C. A. Wells
- Sinking the Sultana, a Civil War story of imprisonment, greed, and a doomed journey home, Sally M. Walker
- Eighteen months a prisoner under the Rebel flag;, a condensed pen-picture of Belle Isle, Danville, Andersonville, Charleston, Florence and Libby Prisons, from actual experience
- Berry Benson's Civil War book, memoirs of a Confederate scout and sharpshooter., Edited by Susan Williams Benson
- The abolitionist and the spy, a father, a son, and their battle for the Union, Ken Lizzio
- The Union dead of the Florence Stockade, compiled by Albert H. Ledoux
- Record of the Federal dead, buried from Libby, Bell Isle, Danville & Camp Lawton Prisons, and at City Point, and in the field before Petersburg and Richmond
- Libby Prison and beyond, a Union staff officer in the East, 1862-1865, [edited, with background information] by Thomas M. Boaz
- A prisoner of war in Virginia 1864-5,, by George Haven Putnam, adjt. and bvt.-major 176th N. Y. S. vols. Reprinted, with additions, from the report of an address presented to the N. Y. commandery of the U. S. loyal legion, December 7, 1910
- Missouri Confederate surrender, Shreveport and New Orleans, May 1865, by Carolyn M. Bartels
- Nineteen months a prisoner of war, narrative of Lieutenant G.E. Sabre, Second Rhode Island Cavalry, of his experience in the war prisons and stockades of Morton, Mobile, Atlanta, Libby, Belle Island, Andersonville, Macon, Charleston, and Columbia, and his escape to the union lines : to which is appended a list of officers confined at Columbia, during the winter of 1864 and 1865
- Captives in gray, the Civil War prisons of the Union, Roger Pickenpaugh
- Arkansas, CSA deaths, Union prisons and military hospitals, [from] National Archives source ; compiled by Carolyn M. Bartels
- The adventures of a prisoner of war, 1863-1864., Edited by R. Henderson Shuffler
- The Salisbury Prison, a case study of Confederate military prisons, 1861-1865, by Louis A. Brown
- Remember the Sultana, Summer Hill Entertainment and River Rock Entertainment in associaion with Lava Entertainment and Purple Ace Productions; written by Brendan Hedges ; produced and directed by Mike Marshall, Mark Marshall
- Libby life, experiences of a prisoner of war in Richmond, Va., 1863-64, by F.F. Cavada
- While in the hands of the enemy, military prisons of the Civil War, Charles W. Sanders, Jr
- Missouri prisoners of war from Gratiot Street Prison & Myrtle Street Prison, St. Louis, Mo. and Alton Prison, Alton, Illinois, including citizens, Confederates, bushwhackers and guerrillas, by Joanne Chiles Eakin
- John Ransom's diary., Introd. by Bruce Catton
- The secret service, the field, the dungeon, and the escape
- The story of Camp Chase, a history of the prison and its cemetery, together with other cemeteries where Confederate prisoners are buried, etc., by William H. Knauss ; with new introduction by David E. Roth
- Civil War prisons and their covers
Outgoing Resources
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