27 February 1864 A.D. Federal Prisoners Begin Arriving at Andersonville Prison
27 February 1864 A.D. Federal Prisoners Begin Arriving at Andersonville Prison
Editors. “Federal prisoners
begin arriving at Andersonville.” History
Channel. N.d. http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/federal-prisoners-begin-arriving-at-andersonville. Accessed 26 Feb 2015.
Federal
prisoners begin arriving at Andersonville
On this day in 1864, the first
Union inmates begin arriving at Andersonville prison, which was still
under construction in southern Georgia. Andersonville became synonymous with
death as nearly a quarter of its inmates died in captivity. Henry Wirz, who ran
Andersonville, was executed after the war for the brutality and mistreatment
committed under his command.
The prison, officially called Camp
Sumter, became necessary after the prisoner exchange system between North and
South collapsed in 1863 over disagreements about the handling of black
soldiers. The stockade at Andersonville was hastily constructed using slave
labor, and was located in the Georgia woods near a railroad but safely away
from the front lines. Enclosing 16 acres of land, the prison was supposed to
include wooden barracks but the inflated price of lumber delayed construction,
and the Yankee soldiers imprisoned there lived under open skies, protected only
by makeshift shanties called "shebangs," constructed from scraps of
wood and blankets. A stream initially provided fresh water, but within a few
months human waste had contaminated the creek.
Andersonville was built to hold
10,000 men, but within six months more than three times that number were
incarcerated there. The creek banks eroded to create a swamp, which occupied a
significant portion of the compound. Rations were inadequate, and at times half
of the population was reported ill. Some guards brutalized the inmates and
there was violence between factions of prisoners.
Andersonville was the worst among
many terrible Civil War prisons, both Union and Confederate. Wirz paid the
price for the inhumanity of Andersonville; he was executed in the aftermath of
the Civil War.
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