It All Started With A Photograph

Four weeks before publication of Captured Freedom, new discoveries surfaced.
An original 157-year-old photograph. A handwritten diary. Both changed the story.


Captured Freedom
available through retailers nationwide.

In Captured Freedom is the epic true story of nine Union prisoners-of-war who escaped from a Confederate Prison known as Camp Sorghum in Columbia, South Carolina in November 1864. They scrambled north on foot in rags that had once been uniforms of blue. Traveling in brutal winter conditions more than 300 miles with search parties and bloodhounds hot on their trail. On the difficult journey they relied on the help of enslaved men and women, as well as Southerners who sympathized with the North, before finally reaching Union lines on New Years Day 1865.

After arriving in Knoxville, Tennessee, and checking in with Union authorities, one of the men had a wonderful idea. The nine officers and their three mountain guides found a local photographer, hoping to commemorate what they had accomplished by posing together for a photograph. The instant, frozen in time, showed twelve ragged men with determination strong on their faces. It was a Civil War selfie. A moment that Captured Freedom.

Author Steve Procko, an Emmy-award winning documentarian, received a copy of the more than 150-year-old photograph from a descendant of one of the mountain guides. Upon identifying and researching the men in the photograph, he realized their remarkable story had never been told.

They say every picture tells a story. This one tells many.

 

Similar Posts

  • Rebel Correspondent

    We’d like to introduce Rebel Correspondent. Our first book in the There’s History Around Every Bend Book Series. Rebel Correspondent by Steve Procko is the true story about a young man who joined the Confederate army seven days after his eighteenth birthday and served bravely for more than two and a half years until the…

  • The McCaysville ‘Magical Mystery’ Steel Bridge

    There’s a cool-looking, old steel bridge in McCaysville, Georgia that a lot of people take selfies in front of. For years, local folks have talked about it, posted comments about it, heard the different stories, admired it, laughed at the tall tales, listened to the rumors, speculated about the truth, read about in the newspaper,…

  • Do you see it?

    The upside down army private’s single stripe in the middle of the Toccoa River?It looks like a ‘Big V’. Kinda like the ‘Big W’ from the movie ‘It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad World’ – and with that I think I just really dated myself. In Dial, Georgia just upstream from the old Dial Bridge in…

  • Time You Can Touch.

    Think back to the past – who was a person you knew personally and touched during your life who was born the furthest back in time. For this exercise, assume the people you know have the genetic disposition and will be fortunate to live a long and happy lives of 85, 90, 95 or even…

  • Pandemic

    The city began to suffer from the pandemic and people were asked to stay home. Initially, it was recommended that people wear masks, and an estimated 80% of the population obliged. Fines were instituted for those who chose to not to wear masks.  The city was effectively shut down. Businesses suffered. People got sick. Some…

  • Incident on the Toccoa

    This story is part of an upcoming “History Around Every Bend” episode to be titled “1864: Chaos in the Mountains” which will explore a series of events that started at the beginning of that year and proceeded through November 1864, each of which was a cause-and-effect incident related to the next. Friday, September 2nd, 1864…