Andersonville: A Story of Rebel Military Prisons
John Mcelroy
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
A comprehensive four-volume history of one soldier's 15 months in Andersonville Prison during the Civil War. The book is divided into 83 chapters, each with a different event witnessed during the author's incarceration. Andersonville was a notoriously cruel Confederate prisoner camp, with many of the Union soldiers imprisoned dying due to the deplorable conditions within. All four volumes will be covered as a complete book. [Chapter 81 written by a Rev. Sheppard is omitted in this edition.] - Summary by Jeffery Smith (18 hr 34 min)
Chapters
Introduction and Preface | 26:04 | Read by Jeffery |
Chapter 1 | 10:35 | Read by Jeffery |
Chapter 2 | 18:59 | Read by Jeffery |
Chapter 3 | 14:18 | Read by Jeffery |
Chapter 4 | 14:45 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 5 | 6:26 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 6 | 17:28 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 7 | 13:40 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 8 | 9:58 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 9 | 9:41 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 10 | 14:38 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 11 | 14:50 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 12 | 10:32 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 13 | 6:09 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 14 | 7:43 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 15 | 8:35 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 16 | 11:02 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 17 | 5:28 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 18 | 7:11 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 19 | 7:55 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 20 | 8:40 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 21 | 9:16 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 22 | 7:15 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 23 | 7:39 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 24 | 8:04 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 25 | 9:20 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 26 | 12:19 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 27 | 6:51 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 28 | 9:09 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 29 | 8:23 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 30 | 10:05 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 31 | 11:07 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 32 | 11:28 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 33 | 8:49 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 34 | 8:07 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 35 | 15:37 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 36 | 12:03 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 37 | 16:15 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 38 | 9:50 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 39 | 9:45 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 40 | 37:34 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 41 | 14:57 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 42 | 48:03 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 43 | 11:17 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 44 | 14:29 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 45 | 14:04 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 46 | 18:15 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 47 | 15:33 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 48 | 16:10 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 49 | 9:20 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 50 | 26:04 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 51 | 16:01 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 52 | 11:43 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 53 | 12:57 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 54 | 21:24 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 55 | 9:30 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 56 | 20:14 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 57 | 6:19 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 58 | 8:11 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 59 | 7:46 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 60 | 10:30 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 61 | 8:11 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 62 | 24:37 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 63 | 9:18 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 64 | 12:47 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 65 | 15:25 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 66 | 12:52 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 67 | 17:42 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 68 | 14:16 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 69 | 10:22 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 70 | 7:38 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 71 | 15:12 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 72 | 15:37 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 73 | 9:17 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 74 | 12:13 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 75 | 19:08 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 76 | 17:53 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 77 | 12:59 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 78 | 11:37 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 79 | 24:29 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 80 | 23:25 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 82 | 11:27 | Read by Jim Locke |
Chapter 83 | 22:05 | Read by Jim Locke |
Reviews
Rand Nathan
I have heard (listened to) somewhere near 700 books on LibriVox. I rarely examine reviews posted by other LibriVox users; I try to keep an open mind and make up my own opinion. I have, however, seen negative reviews "poo pooed" by others, who suggest that all readers (narrators) deserve princely status by virtue if the fact that they have volunteered to be reading in the first place. I have encountered readers who are volunteering "to practice their English language proficiency" at the expense of ruining perfectly good books. I have heard some outstanding readings (Mel Nicholson and Ruth Golding reading Dickens come to mind as truly outstanding). I have encountered Jim Locke on numerous occasions in the past. He is one of two readers of this work. I consider myself to be somewhat of a "Civil War buff." I have visited all of the battlefield parks (5 times to Gettysburg including my honeymoon) and I have visited the site of the Andersonville prison in Georgia. Before any other reviewers slam me for this