Kellogg, R. H. (1865). Chapter VII. In R. H. Kellogg, Life and death in rebel prisons: Giving a complete history of the inhuman and barbarous treatment of our brave soldiers by rebel authorities, inflicting terrible suffering and frightful mortality, principally at Andersonville, GA., and Florence, S.C., describing plans of escape, arrival of prisoners, with numerous and varied incidents and anecdotes of prison life (pp. 247-282). Hartford, CT, US: L Stebbins.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/12210-007
This chapter continues the account of prisoner life during the civil war. It describes the hospital at Andersonville, the physicians at the hospital, the sick call, the rations at the hospital, the primary diseases seen at the hospital, rebel testimony, the dead house, and the firm devotion to the Union cause. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)