My talks are always an adventure. Whether it's challenges that arise in getting to the site or dealing with haunted equipment, you can pretty much bank on something crazy happening.
Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of women disguised themselves as men and served in the Civil War. I present research, both previously published along with new discoveries, to document the lives and trials of these extraordinary women.
Monday, September 26, 2016
Saturday, September 3, 2016
Rising Tides and Fallen Heroines at Alton
What was to become the military prison at Alton, Illinois began as a state penitentiary in 1833. However, Dorthea Dix declared the facility unfit to house inmates due to its dirt floors and unsanitary conditions. It closed in 1860, and the prisoners were then transferred to a new facility located in Joliet outside Chicago. It reopened two years later as a military prison with the first Confederate prisoners arriving by steamer from the overcrowded Gratiot Street Military Prison in St. Louis, a little over 20 miles south of Alton.
http://madison.illinoisgenweb.org/prison.html |
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