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gpthelastrebel
Sat Apr 30 2022, 04:34PM

Registered Member #1
Joined: Tue Jul 17 2007, 02:46PM
Posts: 4063
No Relieving the Andersonville Suffering

Failure met the 1863 humanitarian mission of Vice President Alexander H. Stephens, and the overtures of General Lee toward Grant for the exchange of prisoners which would relieve their suffering at Andersonville. President Jefferson Davis himself paroled a delegation of Andersonville prisoners in vain to personally ask Lincoln to intervene.

Bernhard Thuersam, www.Cicra1865.com


No Relieving the Andersonville Suffering

“I am certainly no admirer of Jefferson Davis or the late Confederacy, but in justice to him and that the truth may be known, I would state that I was a prisoner of war for twelve months, and was in Andersonville when the delegation of prisoners spoken of by Jefferson Davis left there to plead our cause to with the authorities at Washington; and nobody can tell, unless it be a shipwrecked and famished mariner, who sees a vessel approaching and then passing on without rendering aid, what fond hopes were raised, and how hope sickened into despair waiting for the answer that never came.

In my opinion, and that of a good many others, a good part of the responsibility for the horrors of Anderson rests with General U.S. Grant, who refused to make a fair exchange of prisoners.”

Henry M. Brennan, Late Private, Second Pennsylvania Cavalry”

(Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume I, page 318)
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gpthelastrebel
Wed Nov 01 2023, 11:18PM

Registered Member #1
Joined: Tue Jul 17 2007, 02:46PM
Posts: 4063
The misery in Anderson was not entirely the result of treatment of the South, but a good bit of the blame must be laid at the feet of the Union army



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