. History of the Twenty-fourth Michigan of the Iron brigade, known as the Detroit and Wayne county regiment .. . within seven miles of thispost, open upon the stockade -Mith grapeshot, without reference to the situation beyondthese lines of defense. JOHN H. WINDER,Brig. Gen. Conimanding. Thus twenty-five cannon were to be opened upon the 35,000 sickand dying Union prisoners, rather than suffer them to be rescued ! It waslike savages who tomahawk their captives when re-capture is probable. $And now come forward the apologists of such murderers and declarethat these facts had better never been w


. History of the Twenty-fourth Michigan of the Iron brigade, known as the Detroit and Wayne county regiment .. . within seven miles of thispost, open upon the stockade -Mith grapeshot, without reference to the situation beyondthese lines of defense. JOHN H. WINDER,Brig. Gen. Conimanding. Thus twenty-five cannon were to be opened upon the 35,000 sickand dying Union prisoners, rather than suffer them to be rescued ! It waslike savages who tomahawk their captives when re-capture is probable. $And now come forward the apologists of such murderers and declarethat these facts had better never been written. Then expurgate theaccount of the crucifixion from the testament, burn all history andleave but oblivion. Let these truths stand prominently out as beaconlights to the civilized world what demons the system of human slaverywill make. They show pointedly, also, the sacrifices and cost topreserve this nation. Confederate testimony is ample in substantiating the universalnarratives of the Union survivors of those prison pens. The archivesof the Confederate War Department furnish conclusive confirmations. A SECTION OF ANDERSONVILLE PUISON. KROM A REBEL PHOTOGRAPH. 444 HISTORY OF THE TWENTY-FOURTH MICHIGAN. of their horrible accounts. When Winder was laying out theAndersonville pen, he told Mr. Ambrose Spencer, a resident of Americus, Ga., near by, The Yankees who would be put in the pen would need no barracks. When asked why he was cuttingdown all the trees, Winder replied : I am going to build a pen here that will kill more Yankees than can be destroyed at the front. The Confederate records show that the attention of JeffersonDavis was repeatedly called to these enormities, by the Andersonvillesurgeons. The receipts of such letters and reports were acknowledgedand confessed by indorsement on their back in Jefferson Davis ownhandwriting! In August, 1864, when the pen contained 35,000 menLieutenant-Colonel D. T. Chandler, C. S. A., after officiallyinspecting the Andersonville


Size: 1793px × 1394px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidhistoryoftwentyf00curti