From the Richmond Whig, 12/16/1863
THE LIBBY PRISON AND THE YANKEES THEREIN. – The Richmond correspondent of the Atlanta
Appeal, describes a recent visit to the Hotel d’Libby, in this city. He
says that he found the passages and ante-rooms of the prison piled up with boxes
and bales of clothing and provisions which had just bee received from the North
by flag of truce. Upon ascending to the upper stories of the building occupied
by the prisoners, he saw the greatest profusion of comforts and luxuries in the
way of prouant that even a riotous imagination could conceive. Hams,
smoked beef, Bologna sausages hung from the rafters; tin cans of potted meat,
oysters, sardines, green peas, etc., etc., were arranged on shelving against the
walls; while the finest pippins rolled along the floors. Immense packages of new
publications, sets of chessmen, backgammon boxes, etc., which had apparently
just been opened for distribution, proved that the Yankees did not intend their
unhappy brethren should die of ennui. The prisoners themselves were
variously occupied, some lying at full length on the floor, deeply involved in
the tragic incidents of Miss Braddon’s novels, others playing whist and
euchre, or deeply pondering the gambits, others asleep, others again eating
their dinners. Brigadier General Neal Dow was lapping up the soup furnished by
the prison cook with evident satisfaction. One man only was reading the Bible.
All looked in fine health and seemed remarkably cheerful. The receipt of boxes
from home had no doubt something to do with their good spirits, but before these
creature comforts had begun to arrive, they were contented and hearty. Major
Turner informed the writer that several of the officers of the highest rank had
handed him a statement which they had voluntarily drawn up for publication in
the New York Herald and Tribune, denying in the fullest and
strongest manner the infamous lies about Confederate cruelty which have recently
been circulated at the North.
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