[Questioning a Prisoner]
[The Locomotive Chase]
[General John H. Morgan]
[Map of the Morgan Raid]
[The Farmer from Calfkiller Creek]
[General Duke Tests the Pies]
[Hospitalities of the Farm]
[Looking for the Footprints of the Van]
[Corridor and Cells in the Ohio State Penitentiary—Captain Hines's Cell]
[Exterior of the Prison—Exit from Tunnel]
[Within the Wooden Gate]
[Over the Prison Wall]
[Hurry Up, Major!]
[Captain Hines Objects]
[Colonel Thomas E. Rose]
[A Corner of Libby Prison]
[Libby Prison in 1865]
[Major A.G. Hamilton]
[Libby Prison in 1884]
[Liberty!]
[Fighting the Rats]
[Section of Interior of Libby Prison and Tunnel]
[Ground-plan of Libby Prison and Surroundings]
[Lieutenants E.E. Sill and A.T. Lamson]
[We Arrive at Headen's]
[The Escape of Headen]
[Greenville Jail]
[Pink Bishop at the Still]
[Arrival Home of the Baptist Minister]
[Surprised at Mrs. Kitchen's]
[The Meeting with the Second Ohio Heavy Artillery]
[Sand as a Defense against Mosquitos]
[Searching for Turtles' Eggs]
[Through a Shallow Lagoon]
[Exchanging the Boat for the Sloop]
[Over a Coral-reef]
[A Rough Night in the Gulf Stream]

FAMOUS ADVENTURES AND PRISON
ESCAPES OF THE CIVIL WAR


FAMOUS ADVENTURES AND PRISON ESCAPES OF THE CIVIL WAR

WAR DIARY OF A UNION WOMAN IN THE SOUTH

EDITED BY G.W. CABLE

The following diary was originally written in lead-pencil and in a book the leaves of which were too soft to take ink legibly. I have it direct from the hands of its writer, a lady whom I have had the honor to know for nearly thirty years. For good reasons the author's name is omitted, and the initials of people and the names of places are sometimes fictitiously given. Many of the persons mentioned were my own acquaintances and friends. When, some twenty years afterward, she first resolved to publish it, she brought me a clear, complete copy in ink. It had cost much trouble, she said; for much of the pencil writing had been made under such disadvantages and was so faint that at times she could decipher it only under direct sunlight. She had succeeded, however, in making a copy, verbatim except for occasional improvement in the grammatical form of a sentence, or now and then the omission, for brevity's sake, of something unessential. The narrative has since been severely abridged to bring it within magazine limits.

In reading this diary one is much charmed with its constant understatement of romantic and perilous incidents and conditions. But the original penciled pages show that, even in copying, the strong bent of the writer to be brief has often led to the exclusion of facts that enhance the interest of exciting situations, and sometimes the omission robs her own heroism of due emphasis. I have restored one example of this in a foot-note following the perilous voyage down the Mississippi.

G.W. Cable.