Recently, The Scuppernong
Press released a small book, edited by Donna Peeler Poteat, on Salisbury
Prison. It is actually a post-war reminiscence of Dr. Adolphus W. Mangum. Born
in 1834 in Orange (now Durham) County, North Carolina, Mangum was a graduate of
Randolph-Macon College, who was also in the ministry, riding circuit in
Hillsborough, and then pastoring a church in Chapel Hill. He was a minister in
the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. In 1860, he moved to a church in
Salisbury. When the war came, Magnum became chaplain of the 6th
North Carolina State Troops, but later in 1861, resigned due to poor health. Back
in Salisbury, he worked with prisoners at Salisbury.
Magnum wrote his reminiscences
in 1893, and they appeared as two separate articles in the Charlotte
Observer in May and June. He provides some interesting information
regarding the prison. The site, an old cotton factory, was conveyed to the
Confederate States on November 2, 1861, as a prison “for Confederates under
sentence of court martial, and those arrested for alleged disloyalty, for
deserters from the Federal army and for prisoners of war.” Those are four
different groups of men: court martialed Confederates; disloyal Southerners;
Federal deserters; and, Federal prisoners of war.[1]
Disloyal Southerners: While for generations writers
portrayed the South as one big happy family, there were many who objected to secession
and to the Confederate government. One conservative account places the number
of political prisoners, those arrested for being disloyal, at 4,108 civilians.[4]
In February 1863, at the bequest of the Confederate Congress, the commandant
prepared a list of political prisoners then confined at Salisbury. The list
contains 131 names. They included C.C. Sheets, a Winston County, Alabama, law
student, suspected of “treasonable conduct”; R.B. Elliott a overseer from
Tarboro, North Carolina, suspected of being a spy and “trading with the enemy”;
and, George Billingsly, a Claiborne County, Tennessee, blacksmith, charged with
“aiding and supplying stock for the enemy at Cumberland Gap.” [5]
It is unclear just how many political prisoners passed through the Salisbury
prison camp.
Federal deserters: There were roughly 2,000 Federal
deserters confined at the Salisbury prison. Many of them simply walked off picket
post and into the Confederate lines. An interesting case is that of Peter and
Jacques Sneyers, members of the 35th Massachusetts Infantry (substitutes).
They were captured on September 30, 1864, near Petersburg. Both of their Compiled
Service Records contain “Memorandum from Prisoner of War Records” and both
state that they “joined the Rebel army while a Pris of war at Salisbury, N.C.
date not given.” Mangum tells us that “A Col Tucker came there for the purpose
of getting recruits from their number for the Confederate army. Only foreigners
were allowed to enlist. Nearly eighteen hundred took the oath. . . Some may
have taken this step in good faith. . . but the greater number chose it as the
only means of escape from their terrible den. They were called ‘galvanized Yankees,”
and though most of them made scarcely a show of fighting when the test came, a
few stood their ground and fought with true courage.”[6]
Federal prisoners of war: Mangum tell us that the first
prisoners of war arrived on December 9, 1861, numbering 120. An additional 176
arrived on December 26, and 80 more on February 7. “These different
installments came from various points – some being captured in Virginia, some
on the coast of North Carolina and some by the Army of the west in Kentucky. By
the middle of March, 1862, their number aggregated nearly 1,500.” [7]
Over the course of the war, a little over 10,000 men were incarcerated. An
estimated 4,500 died.[8]
Mangum talked about many other issues, such as prison escapes,
the death of a Confederate surgeon, African-American prisoners brought in
during the last months of the war, along with the horrors of the prison itself.
He considered his story one of “dark history of this great reservoir of misery
and death.”[9] If
you would like to read more of Dr. Adolphus W. Mangum’s account, check out the
book through The Scuppernong Press:
[1] Poteat, Confederate States Military Prison
at Salisbury, NC, 3.
[2] Bunch,
Military Justice in the Confederate States Army, 8, 70.
[3] Brown,
The Salisbury Prison Camp, 259-260.
[4] Neely,
Southern Rights, 1.
[5] Brown,
The Salisbury Prison Camp, 233.
[6] Poteat,
Confederate States Military Prison at Salisbury, NC, 32.
[7] Poteat,
Confederate States Military Prison at Salisbury, NC, 5.
[8] Speer,
Portals to Hell, 339
[9] Poteat,
Confederate States Military Prison, 36.
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