Among the 684 known prisoners marched to Sedalia and carried by rail to St. Louis were several other notables: Ebenezer Magoffin, William Goff Caples, and Bartholomew W. Keown. All three would die before the close of the war. Of national interest a Missouri military tribunal convicted Ebenezer Magoffin of violating his parole and sentenced him to be executed. Lincoln, sensitive to Kentucky politics (Being a native of that state), intervened on his behalf requesting a review. Before any final disposition could be made, Magoffin and several dozen inmates tunneled out of
Alton Prison and escaped. He was killed near the end of the war while intervening in a bar fight in southern Arkansas. The other two were of more interest to Missourians. William Goff Caples was a fiery secessionist minister and president of the Missouri Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church South. After six weeks confinement he gave his oath and eventually moderated his politics. He even became supervisor of the telegraph guard for a stretch near
Glasgow. In an ironic twist he was killed there by an artillery shell from
Jo Shelby's bombardment on October 15, of 1864. Bartholomew W. Keown (also referred to as Keon or McKeown) was a South Carolinian who had become sheriff of
Benton County, Missouri. It was alleged that in this capacity he obtained detailed information about the Benton County Home Guard (Unionist) regiment and relayed it to secessionist militia in
Warsaw who launched a successful attack, the
Battle of Cole Camp (1861). He died of disease in Alton Prison before he could be tried. ==Notes==