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Subject: [INDIAN-CAPTIVES-L] Prison Activities
Date: Fri, 30 Jul 1999 12:02:51 EDT


Civil War prisoners tried all sorts of methods to stave off their greatest
enemy, boredom, including some activities that were intellectually and
morally stimulating. In Richmond, for instance, Northern officers formed the
Richmond Prison Association to regulate prison life. Those who had been
college professors offered courses in Greek, Latin, French, German, Spanish,
and Mathematics, and members of the debating society took up such issues as
the advisability of discouraging their fellow prisoners from trying to escape.

At the Johnson's Island Prison in Ohio, a Young Men's Christian Association
was created to help the sick and others in need. Members were required to
write and present at every meeting an address on a religious, social or
literary topic.

Elsewhere, local pastors were often brought into the prisons to "improve"
souls. Confederate prisoners at Camp Chase resented patriotic sermons
delivered over the prison wall by Col.Granville Moody, "The Antislavery
Republican."

While the most popular prison pastime was gambling, there were also baseball
teams, until overcrowding prohibited the games. Musical societies and
"thespian bands" sometimes offered entertainment as well

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