| Let us follow the preceding statements by the
following:
TESTIMONY OF THE PRISONERS THEMSELVES. In reference to the recent discussion in Congress, an editor in Mr. Blaine's own State (Maine) says: "in all the talk that is being made about Andersonville prison by agitators
and politicians who hope to profit by stirring up dead animosities, it
is noticeable that no evidence is produced
""I was orderly of Captain Fogler's company, Nineteenth Maine; was made prisoner at Petersburg in June, 1864, and was at Andersonville eleven months, or until the war ended. There was suffering among the men who were sick, from the lack of medicines and delicacies, but all had their rations as fully and regularly as did the Confederate guard. There were times of scarcity, when supply trains were cut off by the Federal forces; and at such times I have known the guard to offer to buy the prisoners' rations, being very short themselves. On these occasions the guards would take a portion of their scanty supplies from the people of the country to feed the prisoners. The Rebels were anxious to effect an exchange and get the prisoners off their hands, but it was reported and believed among the prisoners that the Federal authorities refused. At one time I was with a detail of three thousand prisoners who were marched two hundred miles to the coast to be exchanged, but it was declined by the Federal authorities, as was reported, and we marched back with no enviable feelings. I believe that the larger share of the responsibility for the suffering in that prison belonged to our own Government. Wirz was harsh and cruel to the prisoners, and deserved hanging. But I believe the Confederate authorities did as well as they could for the prisoners in the matter of clothing, provisions and medicines." "This, let it be remembered, is not the talk of a designing politician who stayed safely at home, but the testimony of a soldier of good record, from an actual experience of eleven months in Andersonville prison." The following resolutions were adopted by the prisoners: [Copy.] "Resolutions that were adopted by the Federal
prisoners who had been confined at Andersonville, and dated Savannah, September
23, 1864" (see United States Sanitary Commission Memoirs, by Professor
A. Flint, New York):
"Resolved, That ten thousand of our brave comrades
have descended into untimely graves, caused by difference in climate, food,
etc. And whereas these difficulties still remain, we
"Resolved, * * * We have suffered patiently, and
are still willing to suffer, if by so doing
(Signed)
in his manners, the latter harsh, though not without kindly feelings. "It is a melancholy and mortifying fact that some
of our trials came from our own men.
"Some few weeks before being released I was ordered
to act as clerk in the hospital. This consists simply of a few scattered
trees and fly tents, and is in charge of Dr. White, an
"The proportion of deaths from starvation, not including those consequent on the diseases originating in the character and limited quantity of food - such as diarrhoea, dysentery and scurvy - I cannot state; but, to the best of my knowledge, information and belief, there were scores every month. We could at any time point out many for whom such a fate was inevitable, as they lay or feebly walked, mere skeletons, whose emaciation exceeded the examples givenin Leslie's Illustrated for June 18, 1864. For example: in some cases the inner edges of the two bones of the arms, between the elbow and the wrist, with the intermediate blood vessels, were plainly visible when held toward the light. The rations, in quantity, was perhaps barely sufficient to sustain life, and the cases of starvation were generally those whose stomachs could not etain what had become entirely indigestible. "For a man to find, on waking, that his comrade by his side was dead, was an occurrence too common to be noted. I have seen death in almost all the forms of the hospital and battle-field, but the daily scenes in Camp Sumter exceeded in the extremity of misery all my previous experience. "The work of burial is performed by our own men,
under guards and orders, twenty-five
"Dr. White is able to give the patients a diet
but little better than the prison rations - a little
We beg leave to call special attention to the passages in the above extract which we have italicised, and which are very significant in testimony which was gotten up to prove "Rebel barbarity." Another Andersonville prisoner testifies as follows before the United States Congressional Committee: "We never had any difficulty in getting vegetables;
we used to buy almost anything that we wanted of the sergeant who called
the roll mornings and nights. His name was Smith, I think;
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