Wednesday, February 26, 2014

February 27, 1864---Andersonville Prison



FEBRUARY 27, 1864:          

The first Union prisoners of war arrived at Camp Sumter, better known as Andersonville Prison, near Andersonville, Georgia. 



Built by slave labor, the camp took only a month to construct. Planned for 10,000 men, the camp covered an area of 17 acres. Surrounded by an outer stockade fence that kept anyone from seeing out (or in), there was also an inner “fence” 25 feet within the walls, consisting of a length of staked wire. Any prisoner who crossed the wire against orders was immediately shot by the guards, giving the wire the name of the “deadline.”  This term made its way into colloquial American English as a synonym for any completion or termination date




Due to the discontinuation of prisoner exchanges in April 1864, the camp’s population eventually reached a high of 33,000, three times its intended population. Given the acute shortages faced by the Confederate civilian and military populations in 1864, it is no surprise that Union POWs received virtually nothing from their captors.




The ratty and worn out Confederate army tents used by the prisoners provided almost no shelter from the elements. What clothes the men had quickly became filthy rags. What food there was consisted of a nutrient-poor watery broth with a few roots or grasses thrown in, served intermittently. Sanitary conditions were execrable. The camp’s one water supply, a creek running through the midst of the compound, became polluted and then clogged with human waste and camp trash. Lice became endemic, and the weakened, starving men had no ability to fight off maladies such as scurvy, typhus, typhoid, the childhood diseases, dysentery, and other epidemics. Andersonville’s death rate skyrocketed to 3,000 per month.  




In the midst of this living hell, Union loyalties were tested and often broken. Some men swore allegiance to the Confederacy just to escape the hellish conditions of their confinement. Other men became an ad hoc group called the “Raiders” who stole food and supplies from those weaker than they. The Raiders were challenged by the “Regulators,” who would fight the “Raiders” with whatever weapons might be available --- fists, feet, teeth, rocks, improvised clubs, and the like. Many of the “Raiders” were hanged after the war.

 



The images that came out of Andersonville are all eerily reminiscent of the Nazi Concentration Camps still 80 years in the future; such things had never been captured on film before, and the public, North and South, and around the world, was ---and remains to this day --- horrified.




The Confederate guards became brutish, often beating or killing the prisoners on a whim. Attempting to restore some order, the Camp Commandant, Major Henry Wirz, imposed hanging as a punishment for even minor prisoner offenses.




Beyond gratuitous disciplinary hangings, Wirz did essentially nothing to improve the lot of the prisoners, not even fully advising Richmond of the horrific conditions of his command. He did put the sick and starving men to work building a series of pointless defensive earthworks for the camp as the Union seized more and more Georgia territory. How many died from exhaustion due to overwork will never be known.

Of the more than 45,000 POWs who passed through Andersonville, 13,000 died within the stockade. This represents 40% of all Union POW deaths during the Civil War.

At the war’s end Wirz was arrested by the Union, tried for “Impairment of the Prisoners” and was hanged. Despite the awful conditions of all Civil War POW camps --- including Camp Salisbury in North Carolina, Camp Douglas in Chicago and Elmira Prison in upstate New York --- Andersonville was arguably the worst, and Wirz was the only Civil War-era Prisoner of War Camp Commandant hanged for war crimes.  
 


1 comment:

  1. That isn't the entire truth. Wirtz tried his best. Might want to take a look at some of the more modern historical versions with a clearer view than those directly after the war.

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