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Yanks, Rebels, Rats, & Rations: Scratching For Food In Civil War Prison Camps (1997) By Patricia B. Mitchell

 

Gritty first-person descriptions of Northern and Southern Civil War prisons, with emphasis on food. Published 1993. 11 recipes demonstrate what a prisoner might have received from a relative or relief organization. 50 prison sites identified. 113 research notes, 13,342 words.

Yanks, Rebels, Rats & Rations by Patricia B. Mitchell, gives graphic descriptions of life in Civil War prison camps, North and South. From Johnson's Island to Andersonville, and points between, actual accounts written by Civil War soldiers paint the grim picture of imprisonment. Bad sanitation and bad food were two of the worst indignations (and killers). As a detainee at Morris Island wrote,

“Our rations consisted of ten ounces of hard tack, full of worms, two ounces of salt beef, half a pint of beef soup, and half a pint of bottled rice. At one time our bread ration was cut off, and half a pint of mush, made of spoiled corn-meal, substituted. One of the men on one occasion picked one hundred and fifty worms out of three rations of this meal.”

All was not glum, though. Some soldiers received food from the outside world, and some learned to cook their captors' pets.

This and other books by Patricia B. Mitchell were first written for museums and their patrons, and are now available as Kindle editions. Each of her books summarizes a food history topic, using quotations and anecdotes from early sources to both entertain and inform. She carefully lists her references to make it easy for others to launch their own research.

Since the 1980's Patricia Mitchell's work is a proven staple of American museum culture.

 

  • Soft Cover
  • 38 pages 
  • In Good condition

Yanks, Rebels, Rats, & Rations: Scratching For.. (1997) By Patricia B. Mitchell

AU$19.99価格
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