Thursday, March 21, 2013

The Prisoners in Chicago

From the Nashville Patriot, April 1.

The following letter was received at this office yesterday, with a request to publish:

CAMP DOUGLAS,
CHICAGO, ILL., Thursday, March 6.

MR. EDITOR: In behalf of the prisoners captured at Fort Donelson, composing the two companies from Dixon County, I ask permission, through your columns, to say to their friends that they are generally well and properly cared for. Only one (A.L. CUNNINGHAM) has died since we have been here. W.E. WINFREY and M.L. BAKER, of Capt. GRIGSBY's Company, were killed in the fight at the fort. Capt. CORDING lost none. We want to say to our wives, fathers, mothers, and children, not to run away from homes and firesides, as others have done, even if the Federal forces should come in their midst; nor grieve themselves unnecessarily on our account. We know not (if we are detained long) how our wives and children will live; but we are prisoners of hope, and have formed a better opinion of the Northern people and the army than we were accustomed to hear. We are short of clothing, and particularly of money.

JACOB LEECH.

– Published in The New York Times, New York, New York, Friday, April 11, 1862

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