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"Prisons of the Civil War: An Enduring Controversy" Topic


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Tango0125 Dec 2019 9:32 p.m. PST

"The June 19, 1861, editorial in the Charleston Mercury newspaper warned: "War is bloody reality, not butterfly sporting. The sooner men understand this the better." During the four-year course of the Civil War, the entire country—North and South—would come to the same grim realization. There were seemingly endless lists of thousands of soldiers killed or wounded in battle or dead of disease. Thousands more, both Union and Confederate, languished in prisoner of war camps, enduring hardships that previously it had been inconceivable for civilized people to inflict upon one another.

From 1861 to 1865, more than 150 prison camps were established by the Union and Confederate governments. Estimates of the total numbers of prisoners taken and deaths that occurred in captivity vary widely, and Confederate records are incomplete. However, the Official Records of the war cites a total of 347,000 men—220,000 Confederate and 127,000 Union—who endured the privations of being prisoners of war. These privations ranged from inadequate shelter and clothing, poor hygiene, and the monotonous passage of time to outright starvation, intentional cruelty, harsh summary justice, swarming vermin, and rampaging disease. More than 49,000 prisoners died in captivity, at least 26,440 Confederate and 22,580 Union, an overall mortality rate of 14 percent. Twelve percent of Confederate prisoners and 18 percent of Union captives never returned from incarceration…"
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Rudysnelson26 Dec 2019 12:42 p.m. PST

It was the Union who caused the conditions that lead to the deaths. They instituted the policy of no prisoner exchanges.

My store partner still has letters from a great uncle who died in a Union POW camp in NY state.
You rarely read about the lynchings of released Confederate POWs as they traveled home to the South or to the west for a new start.

There is no doubt that conditions were horrible in the camps.
So how do they compare to the Crimean War camps of a few years earlier?

donlowry26 Dec 2019 5:07 p.m. PST

It was the Confederates who caused the problem by refusing to exchange captured black soldiers or their officers -- this led to the Union authorities refusing to exchange anyone (except for exceptional one-for-one cases) until the Confederates agreed to treat all prisoners alike!

Tango0127 Dec 2019 11:56 a.m. PST

War is hell….

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doc mcb28 Dec 2019 12:03 p.m. PST

Camp Ford outside of Tyler Texas has been restored and is an excellent walk-through-and-read-all-the-signs stop, for an hour or two.

Both sides' camps were horrible, but the North had less excuse, as they had ample resources.

doc mcb28 Dec 2019 12:04 p.m. PST

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