Prisoners of war were an inconvenient reality of the war
years. When the first batches arrived in Richmond following the battle of first
Manassas, no one really knew what to do with them. Almost 1,300 Federal
soldiers were brought to the Confederate capital. Brig. Gen. John H. Winder
quickly impressed the John L. Ligon and Sons Tobacco Factory building and converted
it into a prison. That was the beginning of the system of military prisons across
the South.
There were at least
118 military prisons in the South. Many of them were opened for only a short
amount of time. For example, the prisons in Alexandria, VA; Boerne, TN; Camp
Groce, TX; Camp VanDorn, TX; Charlotte, NC; Dalton, GA; Galveston, TX;
Greensboro, NC; Houston, TX; Huntsville, TX; Jackson, MS; Marietta, GA; Millen,
GA; St. Augustine, FL; San Antonio Springs, TX; San Pedro Springs, TX; and, Savannah,
GA were all open for a year or less, sometimes much less.
No one is sure how many Union and Confederate
soldiers were taken prisoner during the war. Numbers range from 400,000 to
674,000 men. One historian believes that 409,000 of these prisoners were
captured Federal soldiers.
Major prisons of
the South included Camp Sumter in Andersonville, Georgia, with 39,899 prisoners;
Camp Lawton in Millen, Georgia, with 10,000 prisoners, many of them transfers
from Camp Sumter; Belle Island, Virginia, with 10,000 prisoners; 15,000 in other
various Richmond establishments; Danville, Virginia, with 4,000 prisoners;
Salisbury, NC, with 10,321 prisoners, Savannah, Georgia, with 6,000 prisoners.
Camp Sumter |
While there are
books on various prisons, I feel the best overview to date is Lonnie R. Speer’s
Portals to Hell: Military Prisons of the Civil War (1997). Over the
course of the next few months, my plan is to try and explore many of the topics
listed above. I actually have already started with this post a couple of weeks
ago. Check out that post here.
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