Just say the word Andersonville and most people know the place, or they think they do. When many hear the word Andersonville, many have an image in their mind, a harsh thought perhaps, and some even have a rather vocal opinion. Now what do you see or envision when you hear the word Andersonville? What are your thoughts? Care to share your opinion? I admit, when I hear Andersonville, as well as other POW camps such as Camp Douglas, Camp Morton, Libby Prison, etc., I think of the concentration camps of the Second War, to be exact. I also think, ironically, the one who marched to the sea and through the exact state, Georgia, that was host to Andersonville, explained it best. He explained all things Civil War in the following letter - and war, by the way, includes POWs and the prisons that detained them. General William Sherman said of war:
"You cannot qualify war in harsher terms than I will. War is cruelty, and you cannot refine it; and those who brought war into our country deserve all the curses and maledictions a people can pour out. I know I had no hand in making this war, and I know I will make more sacrifices to-day than any of you to secure peace. But you cannot have peace and a division of our country. If the United States submits to a division now, it will not stop, but will go on until we reap the fate of Mexico, which is eternal war. The United States does and must assert its authority, wherever it once had power; for, if it relaxes one bit to pressure, it is gone, and I believe that such is the national feeling." Gen. William T. Sherman in a letter to the City Council of Atlanta (12 September 1864)
Andersonville Prison
In
1864, the Confederate government relocated Union prisoners-of-war from Richmond,
Virginia, to the town of Andersonville, in remote southwest Georgia. It proved a
death camp because of severe lack of supplies, food, water, and medicine. During
the 15 months the Andersonville prison camp existed, it detained 45,000 Union
soldiers, and at least 13,000 died from disease, malnutrition, starvation, or
exposure. At its height, the death rate surpassed 100 persons daily. After the
war, the camp's commanding officer, Captain Henry Wirz, became the only
Confederate to be tried and executed as a war criminal; a fate that had evaded
Confederate President Jefferson Davis.
Andersonville, or Camp Sumter
as it was officially known, was the largest of several military prisons
established during the Civil War. It was built in 1864 after Confederate leaders
decided to move the many Union prisoners in Richmond, Virginia, to a location
away from the war. A site was needed where the prisoners could be guarded by
fewer men, there would be less chance of military raids to free them, and food
would be more abundant. The town of Andersonville was located on a railroad line
approximately 65 miles southwest of Macon, Georgia. The village, near a small
stream and in a remote agricultural area, seemed ideal. Construction of the 16
1/2 acre prison camp began in January 1864. Pine logs, 20 feet in length, were
placed five feet deep in the ground to create a wooden stockade. In June 1864,
the prison was enlarged to 26 1/2 acres. The prison proper was in the shape of a
rectangle 1,620 feet long and 779 feet wide. Sentry boxes, or "pigeon roosts,"
were placed at 30 yard intervals along the top of the stockade. Along the
interior of the stockade, 19 feet from the stockade wall, was a line of small
wooden posts with a wood rail on top. This was the "deadline." Any prisoner who
crossed the deadline could be shot by guards stationed in the sentry boxes.
Small earthen forts around the exterior of the prison were equipped with
artillery to put down disturbances within the compound and to defend against
Union cavalry attacks.
The first prisoners arrived on
February 25, 1864, while the stockade wall was still under construction. Small
earthworks, equipped with artillery, overlooked the compound. Designed to hold
10,000 prisoners, the prison was soon overcrowded, holding 22,000 by June.
Although the prison was enlarged, the number of prisoners continued to swell. By
August 1864, more than 32,000 prisoners were confined at
Andersonville.
Hindered by deteriorating economic conditions, an inadequate transportation system, and the need to concentrate all available resources on its own army, the Confederate government was unable to provide adequate housing, food, clothing, shelter, and medical care for its captives. These conditions, along with a breakdown of the prisoner exchange system, created much suffering and a high mortality rate. More than 45,000 Union soldiers were sent to Andersonville during the 14 months of the prison's existence. Of these, 12,912 died from disease, malnutrition, overcrowding, or exposure. They were buried in shallow trenches, shoulder to shoulder, in a crude cemetery near the prison.
Hindered by deteriorating economic conditions, an inadequate transportation system, and the need to concentrate all available resources on its own army, the Confederate government was unable to provide adequate housing, food, clothing, shelter, and medical care for its captives. These conditions, along with a breakdown of the prisoner exchange system, created much suffering and a high mortality rate. More than 45,000 Union soldiers were sent to Andersonville during the 14 months of the prison's existence. Of these, 12,912 died from disease, malnutrition, overcrowding, or exposure. They were buried in shallow trenches, shoulder to shoulder, in a crude cemetery near the prison.
In September 1864, when
General William T. Sherman's forces occupied Atlanta, and a Union cavalry column
threatened Andersonville's security, most of the prisoners were moved to other
camps in Georgia and South Carolina. The prison operated on a much smaller scale
for the remaining six months of the war.
Following the Confederate
surrender in April 1865, Clara Barton, later founder of the American Red Cross,
and Dorence Atwater, a former prisoner assigned as a parolee to keep burial
records for prison officials, visited the cemetery at Andersonville to identify
and mark the graves of the Union dead. During the war Atwater had labeled the
soldiers by name and number after their deaths. Through Barton and Atwater's
efforts, the cemetery was dedicated as Andersonville National Cemetery in August
1865.
Another important event that
occurred after the war was the arrest and trial of Captain Henry Wirz, the
commandant of the prison. Wirz was arrested and charged with conspiring to
"impair and injure the health and destroy the lives of federal prisoners" and
with "murder in violation of the laws of war." At his trial in Washington D.C.,
many former prisoners testified against him, vividly describing conditions at
the prison. The former prisoners (and one who testified but was never actually a
prisoner) blamed Wirz as the cause of their suffering. Historical documents,
however, attest to the fact that prison officials attempted to acquire supplies
for the prisoners but were severely hampered by the need to use supplies for the
military and war effort. The question of whether or not Wirz could have done
more to make life more bearable for the prisoners is still debated today. Was he
simply a convenient scapegoat? Because of public outrage and indignation in the
North over conditions at Andersonville, Captain Henry Wirz was found guilty of
war crimes and was hanged on November 10, 1865. It has been said that Wirz was
the last casualty of Andersonville. Continue to Union and Confederate Civil
War Prisoner of War and Prison History.
No comments:
Post a Comment