364 



PRISON DISCIPLINE. 



PROTEST. 



PRISON DISCIPLINE. XII. Prison Congress, 

 the results to be attained, 688 ; modes of pun- 

 ishment in former times, 688 ; efforts for prison 

 reform, 688; the prison discipline of Great 

 Britain and Ireland, 688 ; in the United States, 

 689 ; organization of a National Prison Asso- 

 ciation, 690 ; International Prison Congress in 

 London, 689 ; Gaylord B. Hubbell's idea of a 

 model prison, 690. 



PRISONERS, EXCHANGE OF. I. Difficulty of 

 the question, 582 ; how solved, 582 ; letter of 

 General Pillow, 582 ; reply of General Grant, 

 582 ; manner in which an exchange was made at 

 Cairo, 583 ; details, 583 ; treaty between Gener- 

 als Fremont and Price, 584. 



II. Position at the close of 1861, 710 ; com- 

 missioners to Richmond appointed, 710; ad- 

 mission to Richmond refused, 710; arrange- 

 ments for an exchange, 711 ,' recommendation 

 to release Confederate prisoners from the ob- 

 ligations of parole, 711 ; exchange suspended, 

 711 ; privateersmen, 711 ; held as prisoners of 

 war, 711; exchange proposed, 712; corre- 

 spondence, 712; instructions of Confederate 

 Secretary, 712 ; exchange suspended, 713 ; Fed- 

 eral Government yields, 713 ; terms of ex- 

 change established, 713, 714 ; new complica- 

 tions, 714; correspondence of Generals Lee 

 and Halleck, 714; orders to military com- 



PRISONERS, OR PERSONS ARRESTED, A LIST 

 OF. I. 361. 



PRIVATEERING. I. The law on the subject, 

 584 ; proclamation of President Lincoln, 585 ; 

 action of the Confederate States, 585 ; num- 

 bers, 586 ; the Petrel, 586 ; the Calhoun, 586 ; 

 Ivey, 586 ; William H. Webb, 586 ; the Dixie, 

 586; the Jeff. Davis, 587; her prizes, 587; 

 the Bonita, 587 ; the Sallie, 587 ; the James 

 Gray, 587 ; prizes at New Orleans, 587 ; reve- 

 nue cutters made privateers, 588 ; the Gordon, 

 588; the Coffee, 588; the McRae, 588; the 

 Lady Davis, 588 ; the Nina, 588 ; the Jackson, 

 688; the Incarora, 588; the Yorktown, 688; 

 the Everglade, 588; the Savannah, 588; dis- 

 cussion on the subject in the British House of 

 Lords, 589 ; action of foreign Governments, 

 690 ; one of the crew of the Jeff. Davis, 590 ; 

 his trial for piracy, 690; opinion of Judge 

 Sprague, 690 ; trial of the crew of the Savan- 

 nah, 691 ; letter of Secretary Welles as to let- 

 ters of marque, 592 ; transfer of ships, 592 ; 

 the Nashville, 593 ; the Sumter, 693 ; procla- 

 mation of President Davis granting letters to, 

 137 ; instructions to, 138 ; steamer Nashville, 

 693; her cruise, 593; the Sumter, 693; her 

 cruises, 693 ; escapes, 593. 



PRIZE. III. Definition, 765 ; questions of 

 blockade and contraband of war, 765 ; points 



manders in Virginia, 715 ; letter of President ^decided by the Supreme Court, 765 ; applica- 



Davis to General Lee, 716 ; letter of General 

 Lee to General Halleck, 716 ; Confederate order 

 relative to Generals Hunter and Phelps, 717 ; 

 do. relative to General Neil, 717. 

 III. First indication of complications, 760 ; 



tion of the principles thus settled, 766 ; case 

 of the Stephen Hart, 766; facts, 766; prin- 

 ciples decided, 766 ; application to the case, 

 767 ; case of the Springbok, 767 ; facts, 767 ; 

 grounds upon which vessel and cargo were 



letter of General Hunter, 760; resolutions of condemned, 768; case of the Peterhoff, 768; 



Confederate Congress, 760 ; cartel of 1862, 761 ; 

 order of the Secretary of War, 761 ; prisoners 

 at Gettysburg and Vicksburg, 762 ; execution 

 at Johnson's Island, 762; retaliation, 762; 

 order of the President relative to colored pris- 

 oners, 762 ; negroes captured at Fort Wagner, 

 763 ; correspondence of Messrs. Meredith and 

 Ould, 763; letter of General Hitchcock, 764; 

 General Butler in command, 764 ; number 

 of Confederate prisoners, 764; treatment of 

 prisoners, 764; plot at Johnson's Island, 

 765. 



IV. Numbers, 684; points of dispute, 684; 

 correspondence, 685 ; principles involved, 685 ; 

 suspension of exchange, 685 ; appeal of pris- 



facts, 768; material points of the evidence, 

 769 ; steamers Dolphin and Pearl, 769 ; case 

 of the steamer Chesapeake at Halifax, 769. 



PROCOPIOS, Archbishop. XIV. Chosen head 

 of the Church in Greece, 381, 382. 



PROCTER, BRYAN WALLER. XIV. Birth, 

 697; career as a poet, 697; writings, 698; 

 death, 698. 



PROJECTILES. II. Destructive power of, 

 617. 



PRONIER, Rv. CESAR, Swiss theological pro- 

 fessor. XIII. Obituary of, 604. 



PROTEST. I. Of Southern Senators on the 

 admission of California, 193. 



III. Of 'members of the House of Repre- 



oners to President Lincoln, 685 ; exposure of sentatives against the bill to indemnify the 



officers to artillery-fire, 686. 



President and others for making arrests, 243. 



