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    <mods:nonSort>A </mods:nonSort>
    <mods:title>history of George W. Murray, and his long confinement at Andersonville</mods:title>
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  <mods:name>
    <mods:namePart>Murray, George W. (George Washington), 1853-1926</mods:namePart>
    <mods:role>
      <mods:roleTerm authority='marcrelator' authorityURI='http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators' type='text' valueURI='http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/cre'>Creator</mods:roleTerm>
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  <mods:typeOfResource>Still image</mods:typeOfResource>
  <mods:originInfo>
    <mods:publisher>Trumbull &amp; Gere</mods:publisher>
    <mods:dateCreated encoding='w3cdtf' keyDate='yes' qualifier='questionable'>1865</mods:dateCreated>
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  <mods:language>
    <mods:languageTerm authority='iso639-2b' authorityURI='http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/iso639-2' type='text' valueURI='http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/iso639-2/eng'>English</mods:languageTerm>
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  <mods:physicalDescription>
    <mods:extent>excerpt (1 page)</mods:extent>
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  <mods:abstract>A pattern-maker in Springfield before the outbreak of the Civil War, George W. Murray was taken prisoner, along with his three elder brothers, after the battle of Spotsylvania and confined to the infamous Confederate prison at Andersonville. He survived the ordeal, although parts of his hand and foot were amputated, and he lost the use of his right limbs. Murray then printed and sold this account of his imprisonment to help his wife and children: "All the fingers on my right hand gone, and my arm, from my wrist to my elbow, partially paralyzed; nearly one-half of my right foot was in a similar condition, while the rest of it is drawn entirely out of shape, which obliges me to use a crutch … I returned home a mere wreck of my former self. Therefore, unable to work, and ashamed to beg, I have taken this method to raise a small capital to start some business, in order to enable me to support my family comfortably." In 2005, Harvard purchased a collection of over 130 books, pamphlets, poems, and broadsides, all examples of the genre of mendicant literature—items composed and printed to raise charitable funds for their disabled authors. These narratives and autobiographical accounts of the hardships and triumphs of the blind, deaf, lame, and war-wounded are all now primary resources for the emerging field of disability studies. Excerpt from the preface of George W. Murray's autobiographical account, A history of George W. Murray, and his long confinement at Andersonville, Ga., also the starvation and death of his three brothers, at the same place</mods:abstract>
  <mods:note>Purchased for the Harvard Medical Library, 2005</mods:note>
  <mods:subject>
    <mods:topic>Murray, George W. (George Washington), 1853-1926</mods:topic>
  </mods:subject>
  <mods:subject>
    <mods:topic>Excerpts</mods:topic>
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  <mods:subject>
    <mods:topic>Prefaces</mods:topic>
  </mods:subject>
  <mods:subject>
    <mods:topic>Andersonville Prison</mods:topic>
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      <mods:title>Harvard Medical Library</mods:title>
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      <mods:title>Harvard Medical Library</mods:title>
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  <mods:identifier type='uri'>http://collections.countway.harvard.edu/onview/items/show/13014</mods:identifier>
  <mods:location>
    <mods:physicalLocation>Center for the History of Medicine (Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine)</mods:physicalLocation>
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    <mods:url access='object in context' usage='primary'>http://collections.countway.harvard.edu/onview/items/show/13014</mods:url>
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  <mods:accessCondition displayLabel='license' type='use and reproduction'>Contact host institution for more information.</mods:accessCondition>
  <mods:accessCondition displayLabel='rights' type='use and reproduction'>The Harvard Medical Library does not hold copyright on all materials in this collection. For use information, consult Public Services at chm@hms.harvard.edu</mods:accessCondition>
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    <mods:recordContentSource>Center for the History of Medicine (Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine)</mods:recordContentSource>
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