<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXXIX">CHAPTER XXXIX.</SPAN></h3>
<div class="chapquot">
<div>
<p>"A good wit will make use of any thing: I will turn
diseases to commodity."</p>
<p class="citation">King Henry IV.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div class="sidenote">Fifteen Months of Fruitless Endeavor.</div>
<p>We were constantly trying to escape. During the last fifteen
months of our imprisonment, I think there was no day when we had not
some plan which we hoped soon to put in execution. We were always
talking and theorizing about the subject.</p>
<p>Indeed, we theorized too much. We magnified obstacles. We gave
our keepers credit for greater shrewdness and closer observation
than they were capable of. We would not start until all things
combined to promise success. Therefore, as the slow months wore away,
again and again we saw men of less capacity, but greater daring,
escape by modes which had appeared to us utterly chimerical and
impracticable.</p>
<p>Fortune, too, persistently baffled us. At the vital moment when
freedom seemed just within our grasp, some unforeseen obstacle always
intervened to foil our plans. Still, assuming a confidence we did not
feel, we daily promised each other to persist until we gained our
liberty or lost our lives. After the malignity which the Richmond
authorities had manifested toward us, escape seemed a thousand-fold
preferable to release by exchange.</p>
<p>I should hardly dare to estimate the combined length of tunnels
in which we were concerned; they were
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_428" id="Page_428">[Pg 428]</SPAN></span>
always discovered, usually on the eve of completion. My associate was
wont to declare that we should never escape in that way, unless we
constructed an underground road to Knoxville—two hundred miles
as the bird flies!</p>
<p>Even if we passed the prison walls, the chance of reaching
our lines seemed almost hopeless. We were in the heart of the
Confederacy. During the ten months we spent in Salisbury, at least
seventy persons escaped; but nearly all were brought back, though a
few were shot in the mountains. We knew of only five who had reached
the North.</p>
<div class="sidenote">A Fearful Journey in Prospect.</div>
<p>"Junius," certain to see the gloomy side of every picture,
frequently said: "To walk the same distance in Ohio or Massachusetts,
where we could travel by daylight upon public thoroughfares, stop at
each village for rest and refreshments, and sleep in warm beds every
night, we should consider a severe hardship. Think of this terrible
tramp of two hundred miles, by night, in mid-winter, over two ranges
of mountains, creeping stealthily through the enemy's country, weak,
hungry, shelterless! Can any of us live to accomplish it?"</p>
<p>When at last we did essay it, the journey proved nearly twice as
long and infinitely severer than even he had conceived.</p>
<p>Among the officers of the prison, were three stanch Union
men—a lieutenant, a surgeon, and Lieutenant John R. Welborn.
They were our devoted friends. Their homes, families, and interests,
were in the South. Attempting to escape, they were likely to be
captured and imprisoned. Remaining, they must enter the army in some
capacity, and they preferred wearing swords to carrying muskets.
Hundreds of Loyalists were in the same predicament, and adopted the
same course. </p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_429" id="Page_429">[Pg 429]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="sidenote">A Friendly Confederate Officer.</div>
<p>These gentlemen were of service to us in a thousand ways. They
supplied us with money, books, and provisions; bore messages between
us and other friends in the village; and kept us constantly advised
of military and political events known to the officials, but
concealed from the public.</p>
<p>Lieutenant Welborn came to the garrison only about a month before
our departure. He belonged to a secret organization known as the
Sons of America, instituted expressly to assist Union men, whether
prisoners or refugees, in escaping to the North. Its members were
bound, by solemn oath, to aid brothers in distress. They recognized
each other by the signs, grips, and passwords, common to all secret
societies.</p>
<p>We soon discovered that Welborn was not only of the Order, but a
very earnest and self-sacrificing member. He was singularly daring.
At our first stolen interview he said: "You shall be out very soon,
at all hazards." Had he been detected in aiding us, it would have
cost him his life; but he was quite ready to peril it.</p>
<p>Beyond the inner line of sentinels, which was much the more
difficult one to pass, stood a Rebel hospital, where all medicines
for the garrison were stored. When we were placed in charge of the
Union hospitals, Mr. Davis was furnished with a pass to go out for
medical supplies. It was the inflexible rule of the prison that all
persons having such passes should give paroles not to escape. Davis
would have assumed no such obligation. But in the confusion incident
to the great influx of prisoners of war, and because it was the
business of several Rebel officers—the Commandant, the Medical
Director, and the Post-Adjutant—instead of the duty of one man
to see it done, he was never asked for the parole.</p>
<p>A few days later, the prison authorities gave similar
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_430" id="Page_430">[Pg 430]</SPAN></span>
passes to "Junius" and to Captain Thomas E. Wolfe, of Connecticut,
master of a merchant-vessel, who had been a prisoner nearly as long as
we. We attempted to convince them, through several deluded Rebel <span
lang="fr">attachés</span>, that it was essential to the proper
conduct of the medical department that I too should be supplied with a
pass. Doubtless we should have succeeded in time, had not an incident
occurred to hasten our movements.</p>
<p>On Sunday, December 18th, we learned that General Bradley T.
Johnson, of Maryland, had arrived, and on the following day would
supersede Major Gee as Commandant of the prison. Johnson was a
soldier who knew how business should be done, and would doubtless put
a stop to this loose arrangement about passes. Not a moment was to be
lost, and we determined to escape that very night.</p>
<p>I engaged several prisoners, without informing them for what
purpose, in copying from my hospital books the names of the dead. I
felt that, to relieve friends at home, we ought to make an effort to
carry through this information, as long as there was the slightest
possibility of success.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Effects of Hunger and Cold.</div>
<p>My own books only contained the names of prisoners who died in
the hospitals. "Out-door patients"—those deceased in their own
quarters, or in no quarters whatever, were recorded in a separate
book, by the Rebel clerk in the outside hospital. I dared not send to
him for their names on Sunday, lest it should excite his suspicion.
But the list from my own records was appalling. It comprised over
fourteen hundred prisoners deceased within sixty days, and showed
that they were now dying at the rate of thirteen per cent. a month on
the entire number—a rate of mortality which would depopulate
any city in the world in forty-eight hours, and send the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_431" id="Page_431">[Pg 431]</SPAN></span>
people flying in all directions, as from a pestilence! Yet when
those prisoners came there, they were young and vigorous, like our
soldiers generally in the field. There was not a sick or wounded man
among them. It was a fearful revelation of the work which cold and
starvation had done.</p>
<p>When I put on extra under-clothing for the possible journey, it
was without conscious expectation—almost without any hope
whatever—of success. I had assumed the same garments for the
same purpose, at the very least, thirty times before, within fifteen
months, only to be disappointed; and that was enough to dampen the
most sanguine temperament.</p>
<p>We believed that our attempt, if detected, would be made the
excuse for treating us with peculiar rigor. But, in the event of
discovery, we were likely to be sent back to our own quarters for
the night, and not ironed or confined in a cell until the next
morning.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Another Plan in Reserve.</div>
<p>Lieutenant Welborn was on duty that day. We made him privy to our
plan. He agreed, if it proved unsuccessful, to smuggle in muskets for
us; and we proposed to wrap ourselves in gray blankets, slouch our
hats down over our eyes, and pass out at midnight, as Rebel soldiers,
when he relieved the guard. Once in the camp, he could conduct us
outside.</p>
<p>On that Sunday evening, half an hour before dark (the latest
moment at which the guards could be passed, even by authorized
persons, without the countersign), Messrs. Browne, Wolfe, and Davis,
went outside, as if to order their medical supplies for the sick
prisoners. As they passed in and out a dozen times a day, and their
faces were quite familiar to the sentinels, they were not compelled
to show their passes, and "Junius" left his behind with me. </p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_432" id="Page_432">[Pg 432]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="sidenote">Stopped by the Sentinel.</div>
<p>A few minutes later, taking a long box filled with bottles in
which the medicines were usually brought, and giving it to a little
lad who assisted me in my hospital duties, I started to follow
them.</p>
<p>As if in great haste, we walked rapidly toward the fence, while,
leaning against trees or standing in the hospital doors, half a dozen
friends looked on to see how the plan worked. When we reached the
gate, I took the box from the boy, and said to him, of course for the
benefit of the sentinel:</p>
<p>"I am going outside to get these bottles filled. I shall be back
in about fifteen minutes, and want you to remain right here, to
take them and distribute them among the hospitals. Do not go away,
now."</p>
<p>The lad, understanding the matter perfectly, replied, "Yes, sir;"
and I attempted to pass the sentinel by mere assurance.</p>
<p>I had learned long before how far a man may go, even in captivity,
by sheer, native impudence—by moving straight on, without
hesitation, with a confident look, just as if he had a right to go,
and no one had any right to question him. Several times, as already
related, I saw captives, who had procured citizens' clothes, thus
walk past the guards in broad daylight, out of Rebel prisons.</p>
<p>I think I could have done it on this occasion, but for the
fact that it had been tried successfully twice or thrice, and the
guards severely punished. The sentinel stopped me with his musket,
demanding:</p>
<p>"Have you a pass, sir?"</p>
<p>"Certainly, I have a pass," I replied, with all the indignation
I could assume. "Have you not seen it often enough to know by this
time?"</p>
<p>Apparently a little confounded, he replied, modestly: </p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_433" id="Page_433">[Pg 433]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="sidenote">"Excuse Me for Detaining You."</div>
<p>"Probably I have; but they are very strict with us, and I was not
quite sure."</p>
<p>I gave to him this genuine pass belonging to my associate:</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p class="quotdate">
<span class="smcap">Head-quarters Confederate States Military Prison</span>, }<br/>
<span class="smcap">Salisbury</span>, N. C., <i>December 5, 1864</i>.}</p>
<p>Junius H. Browne, Citizen, has permission to pass the inner
gate of the Prison, to assist in carrying medicines to the
Military Prison Hospitals, until further orders.</p>
<p class="quotsig">J. A. Fuqua,<br/>
Captain and Assistant-Commandant of Post.</p>
</div>
<p>We had speculated for a long time about my using a spurious pass, and
my two comrades prepared several with a skill and exactness which
proved that, if their talents had been turned in that direction, they
might have made first-class forgers. But we finally decided that the
veritable pass was better, because, if the guard had any doubt about
it, I could tell him to send it into head-quarters for examination.
The answer returned would of course be that it was genuine.</p>
<p>But it was not submitted to any such inspection. The sentinel spelled
it out slowly, then folded and returned it to me, saying:</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>"That pass is all right. I know Captain Fuqua's
handwriting. Go on, sir; excuse me for detaining you."</p>
</div>
<p>I thought him excusable under the circumstances, and walked out.
My great fear was that, during the half hour which must elapse before
I could go outside the garrison, I might encounter some Rebel officer
or <span lang="fr">attaché</span> who knew me.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Encountering Rebel Acquaintances.</div>
<p>Before I had taken ten steps, I saw, sauntering to and fro on the
piazza of the head-quarters building, a deserter from our service,
named Davidson, who recognized and bowed to me. I thought he would
not betray me, but was still fearful of it. I went on, and a few
yards farther,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_434" id="Page_434">[Pg 434]</SPAN></span>
coming toward me in that narrow lane, where it was impossible to
avoid him, I saw the one Rebel officer who knew me better than any
other, and who frequently came into my quarters—Lieutenant
Stockton, the Post-Adjutant. Observing him in the distance, I thought
I recognized in him that old ill-fortune which had so long and
steadfastly baffled us. But I had the satisfaction of knowing that
my associates were on the look-out from a window and, if they saw
me involved in any trouble, would at once pass the outer gate, if
possible, and make good their own escape.</p>
<p>When we met, I bade Stockton good-evening, and talked for a few
minutes upon the weather, or some other subject in which I did not
feel any very profound interest. Then he passed into head-quarters,
and I went on. Yet a few yards farther, I encountered a third Rebel,
named Smith, who knew me well, and whose quarters, inside the
garrison, were within fifty feet of my own. There were not half a
dozen Confederates about the prison who were familiar with me; but
it seemed as if at this moment they were coming together in a grand
convention.</p>
<p>Not daring to enter the Rebel hospital, where I was certain to be
recognized, I laid down my box of medicines behind a door, and sought
shelter in a little outbuilding. While I remained there, waiting for
the blessed darkness, I constantly expected to see a sergeant, with a
file of soldiers, come to take me back into the yard; but none came.
It was rare good fortune. Stockton, Smith, and Davidson, all knew,
if they had their wits about them, that I had no more right there
than in the village itself. I suppose their thoughtlessness must have
been caused by the peculiarly honest and business-like look of that
medicine-box! </p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_435" id="Page_435">[Pg 435]</SPAN></span></p>
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