They were all physically laboring very hard, of course, and this was taxing, and they lacked some things that had brightened their prior existence: tobacco, for example; the feel of grass beneath their feet. But they took their pleasures in odd moments. Some played “ball” for fun.
[…]
Some found amusement in the game of leapfrog. Others, for something different to do, rowed Sumter’s rowboat around and around the fort. Some men went fishing and actually caught a few blackfish and eels.
Source:
Detzer, David. “Hostages.” Allegiance: Fort Sumter, Charleston, and the Beginning of the Civil War. New York: Harcourt, 2002. 173-74. Print.
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