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The following article is from the Confederate Veteran, Vol.
VI, No. 12 Nashville, Tenn., December, 1898.
TREATMENT OF PRISONERS AT CAMP MORTON
Elder J. K. Womack
That den of misery a little north of Indianapolis, known
as Camp Morton, was constructed as a fair ground. Temporary stables for
horses were erected in long rows. These were converted into barracks for
Confederate prisoners.
In the fall of 1863, soon after the battle of
Chickamauga, Gen. Joe Wheeler made a raid into Middle Tennessee, during
which event Joel Womack, Jim Hood, Pete Donald, Jeff Barlow, Josh Dillon,
Will Pickett, and I were captured, near Cainsville, Tenn. We were first
placed in jail at Murfreesboro, sent' from there to the penitentiary in
Nashville, thence to the barracks in Louisville, and finally to Camp
Morton. There was not a bunk in the division, so our bed during that
winter was an oilcloth spread upon the earth in the aisle of these
barracks. Those who had preceded us were in much want. They were dirty,
pale, emaciated, ragged, and lousy. Only a few had a change of clothing.
We slept in our clothing every night to keep from freezing. There were two
hundred and fifty prisoners in No. 7, and about four thousand in the
prison. Those who had occasion to be up at night walked upon us
unavoidably, as we slept in the only outlet. We were often spit upon at
night by comrades who had colds. Camp life as a Confederate soldier was
hard, but prison life in Camp Morton was harder. Daily rations were eaten
immediately upon being issued. We were supplied with one loaf of bread and
one small piece of beef, and nothing more. It happened occasionally that
we would draw this about eight o'clock in the morning, and then not get
any more until the following day, late in the evening. When this was the
case we became so hungry that we would stand and look for the wagons to
come through the gates with our bread. Sometimes, by stealth, we would
pick up potato peelings thrown out from the cook rooms, roll them into
balls, and cook and eat them with a relish. The beef bones were broken
into small pieces, boiled in clear water, the grease dipped off and poured
into a saucer, and sold as bone butter at ten cents a half cake. Crawfish
were caught in the ditches, boiled, their pinchers pulled off when hot,
and then converted into most excellent soup. A cutler's dog, killed and
barbecued, furnished food that we relished.
Every man who was able to walk was required to fall in
line for roll call about sunrise each morning. The Yankee sergeant who
called the roll for our division was named Fiffer. I never heard a kind
word fall from his lips. He was about grown and really a demon in human
flesh. I have seen him walk through our barracks with a heavy stick in his
hand, striking right and left on the heads, faces, backs, or stomachs of
the poor, starving prisoners, as though they were so many reptiles, crying
out: "This is the way you whip your Negroes." I dislike to write this, but
it ought to go down in history.
Our division was not the only one that suffered from
inhuman treatment. Division No. 12, near the center of the camps, had a
sergeant named Baker. One bitter cold morning while we were standing in
line stamping the earth to keep from freezing a pistol shot was heard, and
immediately the piteous cries of a prisoner were wafted to our ears. The
poor fellow had stepped a little out of line at roll call, and for this
crime(?) was shot down. I saw Fiffer strike prisoners over the head with a
loaded pistol.
Death had thinned our ranks so much during the first
winter that we had a bunk the next. We were packed in like sardines on our
sides in spoon fashion. When one became tired he would cry out, "Turn!"
when all would turn from right to left or left to right. We existed in
this condition, with the thermometer below zero, in open stables without
door shutters, hungry, and shivering with cold, having only one stove for
two hundred and fifty men. How good a piece of corn bread from home would
have been at that time! While memory lasts I can never forget the great
war and that cruel prison.
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