Reports of the Committee on the Conduct of the War Part 3
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Answer. That was the next day after the capture.
Question. Did all who were paroled in this way come under your charge, or did any of them go to other hospitals?
Answer. None went to other hospitals that I am aware of.
Question. Please state their condition.
Answer. They were the worst butchered men I have ever seen. I have been in several hard battles, but I have never seen men so mangled as they were; and nearly all of them concur in stating that they received all their wounds after they had thrown down their arms, surrendered, and asked for quarters. They state that they ran out of the fort, threw down their arms, and ran down the bank to the edge of the river, and were pursued to the top of the bank and fired on from above.
Question. Were there any females there?
Answer. I have one wounded woman from there.
Question. Were there any children or young persons there?
Answer. I have no wounded children or young persons from there.
Question. Those you have received were mostly combatants, or had been?
Answer. Yes, sir, soldiers, white or colored.
Question. Were any of the wounded here in the hospital in the fort, and wounded while in the hospital?
Answer. I so understand them.
Question. How many in that condition did you understand?
Answer. I learned from those who came here that nearly all who were in the hospital were killed. I received a young negro boy, probably sixteen years old, who was in the hospital there sick with fever, and unable to get away. The rebels entered the hospital, and with a sabre hacked his head, no doubt with the intention of splitting it open. The boy put up his hand to protect his head, and they cut off one or two of his fingers. He was brought here insensible, and died yesterday. I made a post-mortem examination, and found that the outer table of the skull was incised, the inner table was fractured, and a piece driven into the brain.
Question. This was done while he was sick in the hospital?
Answer. Yes, sir, unable to get off his bed.
Question. Have you any means of knowing how many were murdered in that way?
Answer. No positive means, except the statement of the men.
Question. How many do you suppose from the information you have received?
Answer. I suppose there were about four hundred ma.s.sacred--murdered there.
Question. What proportion white, and what proportion colored, as near as you could ascertain?
Answer. The impression I have, from what I can learn, is, that all the negroes were ma.s.sacred except about eighty, and all the white soldiers were killed except about one hundred or one hundred and ten.
Question. We have heard rumors that some of these persons were buried alive; did you hear anything about that?
Answer. I have two in the hospital here who were buried alive.
Question. Both colored men?
Answer. Yes, sir.
Question. How did they escape?
Answer. One of them I have not conversed with personally, the other I have. He was thrown into a pit, as he states, with a great many others, white and black, several of whom were alive; they were all buried up together. He lay on the outer edge, but his head was nearer the surface; he had one well hand, and with that hand he was able to work a place through which he could breathe, and in that way he got his head out; he lay there for some twenty-four hours, and was finally taken out by somebody. The others, next to him, were buried so deep that they could not get out, and died.
Question. Did you hear anything about any of them having been thrown into the flames and burned?
Answer. I do not know anything about that myself. These men did not say much, and in fact I did not myself have time to question them very closely.
Question. What is the general condition now of the wounded men from Fort Pillow under your charge?
Answer. They are in as good condition as they can be, probably about one-third of them must die.
Question. Is your hospital divided into wards, and can we go through and take the testimony of these men, ward by ward?
Answer. It is divided into wards. The men from Fort Pillow are scattered through the hospital, and isolated to prevent erysipelas. If I should crowd too many badly wounded men in one ward I would be likely to get the erysipelas among them, and lose a great many of them.
By Mr. Gooch:
Question. Are the wounds of these men such as men usually receive in battle?
Answer. The gunshot wounds are; the sabre cuts are the first I have ever seen in the war yet. They seem to have been shot with the intention of hitting the body. There are more body wounds than in an ordinary battle.
Question. Just as if they were close enough to select the parts of the body to be hit?
Answer. Yes, sir; some of them were shot with pistols by the rebels standing from one foot to ten feet of them.
The committee then proceeded to the various wards and took the testimony of such of the wounded as were able to bear the examination.
The testimony of the colored men is written out exactly as given, except that it is rendered in a grammatical form, instead of the broken language some of them used.
MOUND CITY HOSPITAL, _Illinois_, _April 22, 1864_.
Elias Falls, (colored,) private, company A, 6th United States heavy artillery, or 1st Alabama artillery, sworn and examined.
By Mr. Gooch:
Question. Were you at Fort Pillow when the battle took place there, and it was captured by the rebels?
Answer. I was there; I was a cook, and was waiting on the captain and major.
Reports of the Committee on the Conduct of the War Part 3
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