INDEX.

Page
[BOOK FIRST.]
Introduction. Description of Andersonville: Locality, Arrangement, and Construction of the Camp.[7-28]
[BOOK SECOND.]
Descriptive: the Number of Prisoners compared with the Armies ofAlexander and Napoleon. The Dead compared with the Losses of the British Soldiers at Waterloo, Crimea, Spain, Mexican War, &c.[28-40]
[BOOK THIRD.]
Describes at length the Stockade, with all the Arrangements, with Comparisons, Ratio of Density, &c.[40-68]
[BOOK FOURTH.]
Relates to the Alimentation of the Prisoners, with Comparisons withthe Dietaries of Foreign Armies, Hospitals, Prisons, Scarcity of Food in the Prison, Abundance of Food in the Country, &c.[68-99]
[BOOK FIFTH.]
Review of the Hospital—its Arrangement and Results.[99-113]
[BOOK SIXTH.]
Relates to the Mortality as compared with that of our Armies and Prisons, also with Foreign Armies, Prisons, and Hospitals, &c.[113-142]
[BOOK SEVENTH.]
Relates to the Legal Right of Death over the Captive, with the Views of the Ablest Writers of Past Times, Rousseau, Montesquieu, Mirabeau,&c. The Treatment of Prisoners of War by the Rebels contrasted with Usages of Civilized Nations. Regulations of theUnited States. Letter of General Butler on the Exchange of Prisoners. Complicity of Jeff Davis, &c., &c.[142-194]
[BOOK EIGHTH.]
Review of the Physical and Moral Causes,—Climatological, Ethnological, Social, &c.,—that have led to the Degeneration of theWhite Race in the South, and the consequent Degree of Perversity and Barbarity, &c.[194-242]
[APPENDIX.]
Notes. Statistical Tables. General Orders of the United States in Reference to Treatment of their Prisoners.[243-254]