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Libby Prison Breakout: The Daring Escape from the Notorious Civil War Prison
 
 
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Libby Prison Breakout: The Daring Escape from the Notorious Civil War Prison [Hardcover]

Joseph Wheelan (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Book Description

February 9, 2010
While many books have been inspired by the horrors of Andersonville prison, none have chronicled with any depth or detail the amazing tunnel escape from Libby Prison in Richmond. Now Joseph Wheelan examines what became the most important escape of the Civil War from a Confederate prison, one that ultimately increased the North’s and South’s willingness to use prisoners in waging “total war.”

In a converted tobacco warehouse, Libby’s 1,200 Union officers survived on cornbread and bug-infested soup, and slept without blankets on the bare floor. With prisoner exchanges suspended, escape and death were the only ways out.

Libby Prison Breakout recounts the largely unknown story of the escape of 109 steel-nerved officers through a 55-foot tunnel, and their flight in winter through the heart of the enemy homeland, amid an all-out Rebel manhunt. The officers’ later testimony in Washington spurred two far-reaching investigations and a new cycle of retaliation against Rebel captives.


Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with Southern Lady, Yankee Spy: The True Story of Elizabeth Van Lew, a Union Agent in the Heart of the Confederacy $15.06

Libby Prison Breakout: The Daring Escape from the Notorious Civil War Prison + Southern Lady, Yankee Spy: The True Story of Elizabeth Van Lew, a Union Agent in the Heart of the Confederacy


Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Author of popular American histories (Jefferson’s Vendetta, 2005), Wheelan takes up the Confederacy in this work. Focusing on the Civil War history of Richmond’s Libby Prison, Wheelan notes the building’s pre-war existence as a warehouse and, in the course of his narrative, details its configuration and location in Richmond, essential preliminaries to the author’s central scene: an ingenious escape through a tunnel by 109 Union prisoners in 1864. The culmination of previously thwarted attempts to escape the overcrowded, fetid misery of Libby Prison, the successful one naturally provoked Confederate manhunts that Wheelan follows to their denouements. That some fugitives were harbored by Richmond resident and Union spy Elizabeth Van Lew permits Wheelan to relate her heroic story; that a subsequent attempt by the North to liberate Libby Prison, a cavalry raid by Ulric Dahlgren, gives the author the same opportunity: both Van Lew and Dahlgren are recognizable to the Civil War readership. The Union escapees, however, are not, so buffs will be intrigued by Wheelan’s thorough research into their biographies and wartime exploits. --Gilbert Taylor

Review

Kirkus Reviews
“The harrowing, little-known story of the 109 Union officers who escaped from a Richmond prison in 1864—an episode that deserves a higher place in Civil War lore….A true-adventure story that also documents how prisoner abuse and recriminations spurred the federal commitment to the “total war” that ravaged the South”

Library Journal
“Civil War buffs especially will want to read about this mass prison break that riveted North and South in the late winter of 1864”

Booklist
“Buffs will be intrigued by Wheelan’s thorough research”

Newark Star Ledger
“It’s not very often that a solid and scholarly history book is a page-turner to rival a John Grisham potboiler… Joseph Wheelan’s book is crammed with the kind of detail that has slipped away the last 150 years.”

Civil War News, June 2010
“Joseph Wheelan has written a winner of a book… No detail is missed, and the pages turn quickly. Perhaps most importantly these men are given identities as Wheelan brings to life the protagonists by craftily resurrecting their lives before the war and what they endured inside the converted tobacco barn. In doing so Wheelan provides pathos, excitement and insight into the yearning of all POWs for freedom.”

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: PublicAffairs; 1 edition (February 9, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1586487167
  • ISBN-13: 978-1586487164
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.1 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #196,088 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I always wanted to write books and I finally got the opportunity after many years as a journalist. I have tried to make the most of it. I love to write, and primary research is pure pleasure, particularly reading the original documents and the actual handwritten letters and journals. I would recommend this to anyone who has an inquisitive mind and enjoys hanging around libraries.

When I am not writing and doing research, my wife Pat and I like to hike, bird-watch, and sample North Carolina's unique barbecue restaurants. We both enjoy reading American history from all eras.

Of special interest to me is the early national era, when everything was new and undergoing severe trials. We were fortunate to have leaders during these perilous early decades who put the American people and the nation's needs before political parties and sometimes even personal ambition. And they also happened to be terrific writers, thinkers, and warriors.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Vivid account of the Civil War's "Great Escape", March 14, 2010
By 
Bruce Trinque (Amston, CT United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Libby Prison Breakout: The Daring Escape from the Notorious Civil War Prison (Hardcover)
By 1864 arrangements between the Union and Confederacy for exchanging prisoners-of-war had broken down, resulting in horrendously over-crowded conditions at Richmond's Libby Prison where Union officers were held. Finally, over a hundred of them escaped in a single mass break out through a tunnel secretly dug beyond the prison walls; half of escapees succeeded in reaching Union Army lines and safety. "Libby Prison Break Out" is a vivid, detailed account of that break out, including the background of prisoner exchanges, Union raids against Richmond, and the activities of secret Union sympathizers such as Elizabeth Van Lew who aided the escapees.

Although obviously this book has a particular appeal for students of the American Civil War, its story of dramatic, exciting events should be readily appreciated by a much broader audience of general readers.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Literally "The Great Escape" from the Infamous Libbey Prison, July 20, 2010
By 
Quite an amazing story of how two men, Colonel Thomas Rose and Major A. G. Hamilton, had the fortitude and incredible drive to find a way to tunnel out of Libby prison in spite of grotesque conditions and repeated failures due to physical obstacles, guards and minimal tools. The author provides an excellent capsule of how the prison exchange system broke down initially by the Confederates failure to exchange black union soldiers and their officers and other individuals such as raiders into the Deep South like Colonel Streight. As noted by the author, this played into the Unions grand plans of total war as well fed, healthy confederates were returning to action while underfed and sickly union prisoners were at least initially invalids, many succumbing to death. However, as the author also details, the south was ill equipped to maintain so many prisoners and care for them as well, which underlines the severely limited food and the poor conditions of the prison system. The enlisted are kept on Belle Island in Richmond in even more exposed conditions while the officers were kept in the large, long sectioned and multi-floored old warehouse that included a dungeon for punishment and a basement that reeks of kitchen remnants and privy excess and 100s of river rats. The poor conditions and the extreme measures by prison guards helped generate the desperation to escape. Great attention in the book is granted to union sympathizer and spy Elizabeth Van Lew who coordinated Richmond unionist activities, running an underground railroad for escaped union soldiers. Her organization capabilities were so astounding that she was even able to secretly recover the body of Eric Dahlgren, who was in charge of the wing that was to capture and release the prisoners of Libby Prison and raid Richmond, after Dahlgren's was 'buried like a dog' in a remote unmarked grave. Dahlgren's raid with Kilpatrick's failed diversion was inspired by the testimony of exchanged prisoners who told of the horrors of the prison and the fear that they would be soon be transferred deeper south to Andersonville. The failure to keep the prison exchange program created cruel circumstance for the south that underlined their limited resources, barely capable of feeding their army in the latter part of the war, they had virtually little resource to feed and care for thousands. In the epilogue, the author recognizes that a large number of confederate prisoners died as well in spite of better conditions; however, a true comparison cannot be made accurately since confederate prison records were limited in accuracy. This is quite a well-written story of a difficult period that the author notes ended the civilized dealing of prisoners for all wars.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Before Andersonville there was Libby Prison in Richmond., October 18, 2010
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This review is from: Libby Prison Breakout: The Daring Escape from the Notorious Civil War Prison (Hardcover)
It has been referred to as "The Bastille of the South". In March 1862 General John Winder informed a man named Luther Libby, a Maine native and Richmond businessman that the Confederate government was expropriating his three building tobacco warehouse complex for use as a prison for captured Union officers. Over the next three years thousands of Union officers would be incarcerated in a facility that would come to be known as Libby Prison. The place would prove to be a real hellhole. The prisoners were never allowed to go outside for fresh air and exercise. Food rations were limited to rock-hard corn bread, rancid meat and bug-infested soup. The men were not issued blankets and most were forced to sleep on the floor. This was a place filled with despair and many escape plots would be hatched. Most of these plans were unsuccessful until one fateful night in February 1864 when 109 men crawled to freedom through a narrow tunnel that teams of prisoners had been working on for weeks. Author Joseph Wheelan has chronicled these harrowing events for us in his terrific new 2010 book "Libby Prison Breakout: The Daring Escape from the Notorious Civil War Prison". It reads like a work of fiction but "Libby Prison Breakout" reveals in incredible detail this little known aspect of the Civil War that has largely been lost over the past 150 years. I simply could not put this one down.

Anyone who has even a casual interest in the Civil War knows about Andersonville prison in southwest Georgia. But oddly enough I had never even heard of Libby Prison. Evidently very little has been written about it. I only became interested when my 92 year old mother mentioned that her father had told her on several occasions that a member of the family had been imprisoned there. As it turns out I discovered that Libby Prison actually preceded Andersonville and was primarily used to incarcerate captured Union officers. Union soldiers were imprisoned a just short distance away in Richmond at a place called Belle Isle. History records that conditions in both places were absolutely atrocious. In "Libby Prison Breakout" Joseph Wheelan paints a rather vivid picture of the circumstances that led to this extremely unfortunate situation. Earlier in the Civil War prisoner exchanges were conducted on a fairly regular basis. However, for a variety of reasons these transactions were largely eliminated as the conflict wore on placing even greater stress on the South's already scarce resources. At the same time the success of the Union Army's strategy to cut off the supply lines to the South had the undesired effect of leaving Confederate officials with little choice but to cut the rations to their prisoners. When you understand that the Confederacy was having a very difficult time just feeding its own troops you begin to comprehend why conditions in these prisons were so deplorable. It simply was not nor could it be a priority for them.

The second half of the book focuses on the planning and execution of the actual breakout. Here you will meet the mastermind of the operation Colonel Thomas Ellwood Rose and a number of his co-conspirators. This was a tenacious group that overcame numerous obstacles and setbacks before they finally succeeded. Joseph Wheelan describes the entire operation in excruciating detail. You will also be introduced to some of the key Union sympathizers in Richmond during this time, most notably Elizabeth Van Lew, a Richmond socialite who risked everything and provided invaluable assistance to the Union cause. I found "Libby Prison Breakout: The Daring Escape from the Notorious Civil War Prison" to be an extremely well written and meticulously researched volume. I believe the book to be a very important addition to the literature on the American Civil War. Very highly recommended!
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