9. Libby Prison 1864
It would be an understatement to say that the Civil War was a pretty horrible time for all those involved. It would be an even bigger understatement to say that soldiers captured and imprisoned during that conflict faced a terrible time in the POW facilities. A Civil War military prison was a dirty and dangerous place to be on the best of days. Lack of food, rampant disease and uncertain treatment at the hand of your captors all made the ordeal rather challenging. That’s why, in 1864, the Union soldiers being held in Libby Prison, a Confederate facility in Richmond Virginia, decided it was time to escape. In order to keep their escape tunnel a secret, the escapees dug in a rat infested part of the facility which Confederate guards did not keep watch over as tightly. Over 12 hours, 109 prisoners escaped while the guards had no clue what was going on. In the end, half of those who escaped made it back to Union lines.
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