T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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62.1 | Prisoners, Andersonville, Davis and Lincoln | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Thu Feb 13 1992 09:52 | 65 |
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Here is Wes' earlier note:
[ some stuff removed, not relevant here......]
.......................... Andersonville saw a higher
percentage of fatality than any other war, but two Federal prisons
killed a greater number of men. Elmira, New York was one. The
other was either Camp Douglas or Point Lookout. (Good grief! I
don't believe the brain fade today. Sorry for the vagueness. I
am absolutely certian of Elmira. You see, Andersonville was only
open a part of a year.
Now let me set something straight right now: Andersonville was
a ghastly place - a place where good men died needlessly and
helplessly. By condemning the Federal prisons I make no effort
to excuse Andersonville; it was a horror. It's just that I get
so blasted sick and tired of people trying to shove it in my face
as proof of the innate depravity of Southerners! (I know y'all
weren't trying to do that; I'm just real sensitive.)
The treatment of prisoners on both sides was, in my opinion, the
sorriest chapter of the war. The catch is that the South really
didn't have the resources to do much better than they did. The
North, on the other hand, had plenty of stuff, but deliberately
starved and murdered Southern men. For example, Johnson's Island
in in the Great Lakes. It's pretty far north. The Federal government
took boys from the deep South and sent them up there. They had
very little shelter from the weather - leaky, open huts - and almost
no uniforms or blankets. They died by the hundreds of exposure
and starvation. Yet close by Johnson's Island was a warehouse filled
with rejected Federal Army uniforms, sent there by the quartermaster
expressly for the use of the prisoners. The commandant of the camp
refused to issue the goods. That, in my opinion, is cold blooded
murder. Another Federal camp commandant, I believe of Point Lookout,
was given a medal for saving money. He saved the money by cutting
prisoner's rations and starving them to death.
In his memoirs, Jeff Davis tells of two communiques sent to the
Lincoln government after the cessation of the exhange of prisoners.
In the first, Davis explained in detail the conditions at Andersonville
and begged Lincoln to reinstate the exchange so those good men would
not die like animals. Lincoln never answered the letter. A few
months later, working through a neutral emmissary, Davis sent another
letter to Washington. In this letter, he offered to buy, in gold,
medicines for the Federal prisoners. He also offered safe passage
through the lines for Federal doctors to adminsiter the medicine
to their own men. Linclon refused to answer the letter.
Toward the end of the war, Davis offered to just RELEASE Federal
prisoners, with NO EXCHANGE, if the Yankees would come pick them
up. Lincoln never answered the letter. In my opinion, most of
the blood and waste of Andersonville is on Abraham Lincoln's hands.
When I held, in my own hands, a list of the Confederates who died
at Elmira, I vowed that I would never again apologize for
Andersonville, nor back up one inch from charges of inhumanity.
The statistics on the prisons are readily available, but Burns chose
to not use them. I have an interview Burns granted before the series
went on the air. If I can dig it out, I will enter it in this forum.
Wess
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62.2 | Re: -1 | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Thu Feb 13 1992 09:55 | 79 |
|
Re: -1
First of all, no side in the American Civil War could be proud of its
treatment of prisoners. However, Wes has clearly gone over the top by
allocating all the blame to the Northern side, o.k. so he reacting
to allegations about Andersonville but one should not react to mistaken
or false allegations by ignoring some of the salient facts about
the prisoner-of-war issue.
The major quantity of prisoner-of-war deaths took place in the 1863-64
period, after the exchange system had broken down. It broke down for two
reasons:
- The South declared that any black found in arms would be enslaved. In
practice, some black prisoners were slain out of hand, free blacks
captured were put doing labouring tasks and ex-slaves were handed over
to their masters if claimed. In response, the North felt morally bound
to stand by ALL men who had taken arms in defence of the Union and
refused to exchange white prisoners only. The man who was mainly
responsible for this policy was not Lincoln or Grant (though both are
usually credited with it) but Secretary-of-War Stanton.
- The South returned to the army many men paroled after Vicksburg. This
particularly angered Grant, who had given generous terms when Pemberton
surrendered.
It is for this reason that the exchange system broke down and the prisons,
not healthy places at the best of times, became overcrowded. However, the
South resolutely refused to include captured blacks in the exchange system
- their commissioner said they would "die in the last ditch" rather than
give up the right to re-enslave blacks. There were two reasons for their
policy:
- It was politically expedient. The slaveowners were a powerful bloc
in the Confederacy - they were its very backbone. Any dimunition of the
Confederacy's commitment to slavery would have provoked an outcry.
This is why Davis in late 1863 also suppressed Patrick Cleburne's proposal
to enlist slaves in the army in return for their freedom.
- The prisoner-of-war issue damaged the Lincoln administration's chances
of re-election. Stories about the camps in Northern newspapers backfired
when the Democrats heavily critised the administration for letting
Northern boys die for the sake of blacks taken prisoner. Appeals from
prisoners themselves were printed in the newspapers begging that the
exchange system be re-instituted. However, Stanton was adamant that
the South must change its policy before exchanges began.
Thus we come to Jefferson Davis' letters - the ones he claimed he wrote
to Lincoln offering to release or buy medicine for the Andersonville
prisoners. I have found no record of these in any work I have consulted
but if they were indeed sent to Mr. Lincoln, Jeff Davis was being almost
incredibly obtuse. He must have known that Lincoln scrupulously ignored
any communications emanating from a person styling himself as "President
of the Confederate States of America". All communications dealing with
prisoners taken in the field were made between the generals of the
armies, so that if Davis was seriously making this offer, he should have
made his initiative through Lee or another commander. Both armies had
nominated commissioners to deal with prisoner-of-war issues, so why did
Davis ignore the process normally used by both sides to make his offer?
I frankly doubt the existence of these letters until someone comes up with
some corroboration, otherwise we are allowing Mr. Davis to be prosecutor,
chief witness and judge in his own case.
If Davis meant well, then he should have changed his policy sooner. For
all the bombast about dying in the last ditch, the South DID change its
policy. In January 1865, with Lincoln re-elected and about to enlist
blacks itself, the Confederacy quietly began exchanging black prisoners.
Tragically, this was a year too late for the dead in the camps and
prisons, North and South.
To re-iterate, neither side can take much pride (and take a high degree
of blame) in the treatment of prisoners. There were Henry Wirzs on both
sides. However, on some of the impassioned pleas I have read exculpating
the South of ANY responsibility,"methinks, they protest too much."
A neutral reader can judge for themselves.
Toby
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62.3 | Prisoner-of-War statistics | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Thu Feb 13 1992 12:26 | 20 |
|
I seriously doubt Wes' assertion that more men died in total in two
Northern prisons than in Andersonville.
Based on my recollection, 13000 men died in Andersonville. This
suggests that something like 14000 men died in each of two Northern
prisons, making 28000 in all.
Now Wes himself in note 38.0 gives 31000 as the maximum estimate
of Confederate prisoners who died in the North, and about 26000 as
the minimum. This suggests that at least 90% of the fatalities were
in only two prisons - which is surely incorrect!
These statistics warrant further investigation.
BTW, 45000 men passed through Andersonville, and 29% of them died
there. It also looks as if 43% of all Federal prisoner fatalities
occurred in that dreadful place.
Toby
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62.4 | Infamous Andersonville.... | OGOMTS::RICKER | Lest We Forget, 1861 - 1865 | Fri Feb 14 1992 03:21 | 37 |
|
Some other stats that I recall on Andersonville that differ a
little;
The infamous commander Henry Wirz was assigned to head the newly
formed military prison in Georgia in January 1864, it came to be known
as Andersonville (although its formal name was Camp Sumter). It was a
log stockade enclosing some 17 acres (later growing to 26 acres).
Andersonville quickly grew to take in some 33,000 Federal
prisoners - all enlisted men - by the summer of 1864. Although they
were given the basic rations of the Confederate troops, there was such
overcrowding and poor sanitation that the diet plus exposure to the
elements soon led to diseases spreading.
As I recall there would be some 13,000 identified graves there, but
it was estimated that many others died. I don't think there has been an
actual count.
As General Sherman drew near in September 1864, the Confederates
transferred the healthy prisoners to Charleston. Wirz was taken
prisoner later, and then charged with committing specific crimes, even
conspiring to kill prisoners, and in November 1865, after being found
guilty by a special courtmartial, he was executed. He was, in fact,
the only individual executed after the war for any crime committed
during the war. Scapegoat? Or was he a pawn sacrificied to ease the
minds of the nation?
I'm sure the conditions weighed heavy on Wirz's mind. I think he
emigrated to the United States in 1849 -1850? I'm not sure, I'd have to
check, from Switzerland. When he came to America, I believe he took up
practicing medicine in Louisiana. Strange way to make a living for a
man so connected to such an infamous prison camp.
My $.02 worth....
The Alabama Slammer
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62.5 | Fort Warren, Boston Harbor | OGOMTS::RICKER | Lest We Forget, 1861 - 1865 | Fri Feb 14 1992 04:28 | 40 |
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Not to go off the track from the subject to much....but,...
in the backwaters of Boston Harbor there stands a fort that housed
Confederate prisoners during the war, Fort Warren. Its most famous
claim to fame it once housed the two Confederate commisioners Slidell
and Mason of the TRENT affair for a short period. Also the Vice
President of the Confederacy.
Being an Civil War Reenactor, I have had the pleasure of visiting
the island fort on several occasions. There is held on the Island an
reenactment of sorts every year in the beginning of August. Basically,
after the John Q. Public goes home on the last ferry, we pretty much
have run of the Fort. We have had the pleasure of investigating various
catacombs of the Fort, including the morgue.
Enough rambling, back to subject. The history of Fort Warren was
fortunate. As stated it held Confederate prisoners during the war. It
was getting to the point of overcrowding, poor sanitary conditions,
lack of supplies for the prisoners, etc. But, before conditions were
out of control, people of Boston got together abd shipped supplies out
to the Fort to help with the poor conditions.
Now could the same happen at Fort Warren that happened at
Andersonville? What if the people of Boston didn't supply the prisoners
with necessary supplies. It seemed that the Union jailers weren't going
out of their way to help. It was just the reverse conditions, cold
weather instead of heat, stuck out in the harbour exposed to the ocean
in the winter. How many of those Southern boys would have survived?
Now don't take me wrong. I'm not saying Andersonville was a picnic.
But it would seem to me, that both sides had an equal hand in the
treatment of prisoners. I honestly believe at the beginning of the war,
both sides never estimated the total count of prisoners that they would
have to take care of.
Fort Warren was fortunate, only sixteen prisoners died while
imprisoned there. There is a monument to them on the Island. We also
have a short ceremony every year in tribute to them.
The Alabama Slammer
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62.6 | More Statistics, Andersonville compared to Elmira | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Mon Feb 17 1992 10:37 | 66 |
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While I accept that the North has as shameful record as the South
in the matter of prisoners of war, I am not one of those who
accept statements like "Elmira was as bad as Andersonville".
For a start, Elmira was almost twice as large as Andersonville
(46 acres against 26), but held at maximum capacity one third
as many men (10000 against 33000).
Just looking at the statistics, one sees that in Andersonville
28% of inmates died, in Elmira 24% died. BUT Andersonville was
only open for approximately one year, Elmira was open for 4.5
years. Using these statistics, and figures of 13000 dead in total
for Andersonville, 14000 for Elmira, I can up with the following
probabilities. For comparison, chances of surviving a year in the
army without dying of illness in are also included:
Chances of surviving a year in the army = 97.7%
Chances of surviving a year in Elmira = 94.7%
Chances of surviving a year in Andersonville = 74.7%
The conclusion is that whereas Elmira was no doubt a brutal and
unhealthy place, it does not rate the deadly reputation of
Andersonville. Recalling that one year was probably the longest
one had to spend as a prisoner without exchange (roughly 1864)
puts the figures into context.
Bruce Catton points out that figures for prisoner of war camp
deaths should be compared with the death rate in camp for a true
comparison. A Civil War camp was not the healthiest of places,
even in the Army of the Potomac, the best looked-after army on
either side. Something like 10% of men involved in the Civil
War died of illness (compared to 5% from battle wounds), so that
some camps like the one mentioned (in Boston) were possibly
reasonable enough in the circumstances.
In context I must point out that James McPherson gives the death
rate at Johnson's Island as 2%. This is the camp where Wes (and
Jefferson Davis) alleges that Southern prisoners were murdered
by the commandant. Again, corroboration must be asked for.
Those Southern boys didn't do too badly in the Northern cold
(though I'm sure it wasn't exactly a Holiday Inn, either).
One must also point out that the prisoners in Andersonville
were not provided with any cover whatsoever from the hot Georgia
sun, nor were they allowed go to the surrounding woods to obain
any. Their only water for drinking and sanitation came from a
stream that ran through the camp.
The worst camp in terms of straightforward deathrate was a Southern
one at Salisbury, North Carolina, where 34% of men died in a camp
holding about 10000 men.
The one major reason for the higher death rate of prisoners in
Southern camps is their inefficiency in maintaining the system -
but they were also less efficient in supplying their army in the
field. Altogether 15.5% of Northern prisoners died in Confederate
camps (thought by many to be an underestimate) and 12% of Southern
prisoners died in Northern camps.
To conclude, we must again recognise that both sides must be allocated
a fair portion of blame and shame for the treatment of prisoners, but
to allege that one side "did its best" while the other deliberately
let prisoners die is stretching the issue way beyond what the
statistics and facts tell us.
Toby
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62.7 | More relative statistics | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Tue Feb 18 1992 05:15 | 31 |
|
The above note on "Deaths by Disease" gives some good statistics:
Deaths from illness in Union Army = 9%
Northerners who died as prisoners of war = 15.5% *
Deaths from illness in Confed Army = 13%
Southerners who died as prisoners of war = 12%
* Almost all authorities think this is an underestimate. The South
did not keep good records.
Except for the result that Southerners who got captured saw a marginal
incease in survival chances (probably not significant statistically),
the figures tell us what we expected: Both sides treated their
prisoners less well than they treated their own soldiers.
Given the death rate in some camps (like Salisbury, Elmira and
Andersonville) was as high as 34%, 24% and 28%, and in others like
Johnson's Island, or the one in Boston, it was as low as 2%,
survival as a prisoner probably depended on the luck of being sent
to a relatively humane camp. Attitude of the guards and camp commander
was probably critical.
Length of time before you were exchanged was another major factor.
I would guess that the breakdown of the exchange system probably
contributed up to half the fatalaties.
Toby
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62.8 | The POWs Lot | CST23::DONNELLY | | Tue Feb 18 1992 14:21 | 20 |
| I don't think you can point the finger at anyone for the pitiful
condition of prisoners. First, I don't think there was a precedent in
American History for taking care of POWs in such large numbers. There
was the parole honor system in the Revolution and the Mexican War was
very quick and localized. Who could have foreseen the problem prior to
the Civil War? And who had time to resolve it once the war was on? With
communications deficiencies (no T.V.), lack of management expertise (no
Red Cross), and no highly visible activists (i.e. Amnesty Int'l) how
could anyone expect anything different in the midst of the greatest war
in the history of the continent?
Besides, POWs have never been treated well by anyone. At the end of
World War II thousands of German prisoners died because there was no
way to feed and cloth such massive numbers of soldiers already suffering
from poor health. Supplies were needed to end the war and that's where
the priority was. (Never mind the treatment of POWs by the Nazis, the
Japanese, North Koreans, Russians, etc.) I imagine the CW was the same,
the jailers were not necesarily brutal, the system just couldn't handle
the overload. Sad, but can't see how it could have been any different.
|
62.9 | Responsibility | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Wed Feb 19 1992 11:13 | 14 |
|
I can't accept the previous note. The soldiers of both sides also
suffered from the inexperience of their support organisations,
yet the figures clearly show that neither sides treated prisoners
the same as they treated their own soldiers, as they were morally
bound to do.
It should not be shrugged off as unavoidable: Lincoln, Davis, Grant,
Lee are all culpable in equal measure, even allowing for the
limitations of the period.
Toby
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62.10 | Wirz | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Wed Feb 19 1992 11:24 | 34 |
|
Can anyone illuminate further the character of Henry Wirz?
I did see a dramatization of his trial, with William Shatner as
prosecutor (guess who was the good guys!), and it gave a reasonably
credible picture, not all bad.
Wirz came across as a type who unfortumately often turn up in war as
commanders among the rear echelons: He had the breeding and social
class to be considered officer material, but obvious lacked the
physical and emotional strength required for service in the field.
Product of a childhood without love or affection, a cold
bureaucrat who cared more for his rules and regulatons that for
people (though I think he had a family). He could not be considered
cruel or sadistic, but was given to outbursts of rage when crossed.
He was alleged to have physically assaulted prisoners.
The parallel to Nuremberg/ death camps was rather heavily drawn.
However, the court (chaired by Lew Wallace, author of "Ben Hur")
were seemingly very wary of the precedent they were setting, of
trying a man for wartime acts.
In my Catholic education, we learned about sins of ommission,
and sins of commission. Sins of commission are acts of evil,
sins of ommission consist of allowing evil to happen through
inaction. Wirz's sins were sins of ommission, and the Court
seemed to find that he could and should have done more to save
the lives of men in his charge.
I hope someone had more knowledge of Wirz and Andersonville.
Or about other Wirzs who got away scot-free.
Toby
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62.11 | Morality, in a war? | CST23::DONNELLY | | Wed Feb 19 1992 15:04 | 36 |
| Re .9
I haven't done a lot of research on this subject, as you obviously
have, but I don't see how anybody was morally bound to treat prisoners
as they did their own soldiers. There was no Geneva Convention as
a basis of law governing the treatment of prisoners of which I am
aware. It might be interesting to know if either side violated any
agreement on the treatment of POWs. I believe one of the reasons the
Red Cross was created in 1864 was because the treatment of POWs was so
horrible worldwide.
As for the moral issue, we are talking war. Cities were burned down,
civilians starved, POWs massacred (e.g. Fort Pillow) and in general all
the nasty inhumane things that people do during war occurred. Some
prisons appear to have been well run. Others appear to have been
atrocious. But I don't see a systematic policy to mistreat prisoners as
was evident by the Japanese, Russians, and Germans in WWII. I see a
neglect based more on ignorance and incompetence than malice on the
part of both North and South.
There was a book written recently which tries to accuse Eisenhower of
war crimes for the deaths of thousands of German POWs at the end of
WW II. Though many deaths regrettably did occur, it is obvious that it
was only because of the inability of the Allies to support upwards of a
million POWs while still engaged in a war. Accusing the leaders of the
North and the Confederacy of war crimes would be like accusing FDR, and
Churchill, and Eisenhower of the same. Not very realistic.
I'd like to think that if R.E. Lee commanded Andersonville and Lincoln
commanded Elmira (directly) a lot fewer prisoners would have died. They
would have found a way to improve things. As it was, they had a war to
fight and were too removed. No shrug, just MHO.
Tom
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62.12 | "War Crimes" etc. | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Thu Feb 20 1992 03:40 | 31 |
|
I mean "morally bound" in the highest sense, for example, I'm sure
both countries had laws against murdering defenceless people, starving
them, depriving them of adequate shelter etc. The is also a
natural, humane feeling that to do these things is wrong. Both
sides also regarded themselves as Christians - it was a very religious
age. Do you think in the matter of prisoners-of-war, the behaviour
of the Union and Confederacy could be described as "Christian"?
Both sides failed the prisoners, that is what I am saying: they
could have done more, but didn't.
However, I am not accusing Lee, Lincoln etc. of "war crimes", that
is not a concept that is generally applicable to the American Civil
War, where a lot of the abuses (like that of the prisoners) were
due to the primitive nature of the services available for soldiers
in the field. There was a general failure of charity and humanity
to prisoners on both sides, but except in certain cases I would
not go along with the "war crimes" concept.
You are right in that Wirz might have been hard done by to have
been the only one tried - Forrest was never tried for Fort
Pillow. Whatever the rights and wrongs were, he surely had a
case to answer. There were other documented cases of the murder
of black prisoners by Southern soldiers. On the other hand,
after Fort Pillow, black regiments were none to careful to save
the lives of Southern prisoners, and the depredations of Sherman's
troops in the South are well known.
Perhaps "war crimes" trials would only have added to the bitterness.
Toby
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62.13 | Elmira Prison | OGOMTS::RICKER | Lest We Forget, 1861 - 1865 | Thu Feb 20 1992 06:09 | 46 |
|
"If there was a hell on earth," wrote a Texan, "Elmira prison was
that hell." No compound struck a deeper chill into the hearts of
Confederate soldiers.
Opened in July 1864, it occupied 30 acres along New York's
Chemung River. Flooding of the river soon left a stagnant pool 40 feet
wide and three to five feet deep in the center of the compound. Into
the muck went garbage and thousands of gallons of camp sewage. The pond
rapidly became a cesspool, a "festering mass of corruption" whose
"pestilential odors" caused men who breathed them to vomit. Despite the
health hazard that the pond presented, several months elapsed before
William Hoffman gave the prisoners permission to build their own
drainage ditch.
Other discomforts at Elmira went unremedied. After six months, the
cheap, green lumber Hoffman had authorized for the barracks began to
split and crack. Lacking foundations, the barracks' floors were
constantly cold and damp. And despite indications that the camp could
expect 10,000 or more prisoners, preparations were made for barely half
that. Only six weeks after Elmira opened, the barracks housed 9,600
Rebels. As new prisoners arrived, they were crammed into hastily
erected tents. And when tents ran out, some prisoners had to sleep out
in the open.
Winter came early that year. The one stove allotted per barracks
was woefully inadequate to warm the 200 inhabitants. Every morning,
recalled a Confederate cavarlyman, "the men crawled out of their bunks
shivering and half frozen, when a scuffle, and frequently a fight, for
a place by the fire occurred. God help the sick or the weak, as they
were literally left out in the cold."
In December 1864, it was reported that more than 1,600 of the
prisoners at Elmira had inadequate clothing and no blankets. The
inmates stood ankle-deep in snow that winter to answer morning roll
call. Small wonder that for six of its 12 months of existence, Elmira
led all Northern prisons in its death rate, an average of 10 a day.
Diarrhea and dysentery prostrated the men in droves. In September
1864 scurvy afflicated fully one fifth of the camp. An inspector found
the men "pale and emaciated, hollow-eyed and dispirited in every act
and movement."
The commandant himself warned his superiors that if the rate of
sickness continued at such levels, everyone in the camp would soon be
dead. His predictions was not borne out, but the final tally was grim
enough. By the time Elmira closed its gates in the summer of 1865, more
than 12,000 Confederates had dwelt within its stockade; almost 3,000
of them died there.
The Alabama Slammer
|
62.14 | Captain Henry Wirz | OGOMTS::RICKER | Lest We Forget, 1861 - 1865 | Thu Feb 20 1992 06:41 | 39 |
|
Re: 62.10
The commandant of Andersonville was Captain Henry Wirz.
A native of Switzerland, he had served nine years in various
European armies, absorbing their doctrines of rigid organization
and strict discipline, before becoming a physician in Louisiana.
After joining the Confederate Army, he was seriously
wounded at Seven Pines in 1862; the injury left one arm permanently
useless and Wirz himself in almost constant pain.
His accent was pronounced, and it grew thicker when he was
angered, which was often. The Federals who came under his command
after he became a prison commandant took an instant dislike to him.
One prisoner described him as "a most savage looking man, and who
was as brutal as his looks would seem to indicate."
Wirz was accused of every sort of atrocity. A Massachusetts
artilleryman asserted that when he arrived at Andersonville, Wirz
forced him and the other prisoners in his unit to stand in line
while he strolled back and forth in front of them waving a huge
pistol and shouting, "What'd you come down here for? First got-dam
man that falls out of line I blow him to hell. I make you wish you
stay at home!"
His accent, his foreign birth, his temper, and the
miserable conditions of his camp all combined to make Wirz a hated and
marked man. Many a prisoner under his rule vowed to take vengeance on
him if ever the War came to an end.
For all his faults, Wirz could hardly be held accountable
acute shortages at Andersonville. The remoteness of Andersonville
combined with the critical food, medicine, shelter and medical care
then plaguing the South, reduced rations to the point where the
men were on the brink of starvation. Both the guards and the
prisoners.
I'm not claiming he wasn't at fault. Andersonville was
dark cloud in American history, but the question I'm asking is,
was he made a scapegoat to ease the conscience of America?
Just my $.02 worth...
The Alabama Slammer
|
62.15 | What did they charge him with? | CST23::DONNELLY | | Thu Feb 20 1992 09:55 | 17 |
| My limited knowledge on Andersonville comes from reading Mckinley
Kantor's work many years ago and catching some of the Trial of Henry
Wirz a few years back. I got two different impressions of the man.
From the novel he came off as an aggressive bully but the trial
portrayed him as a broken man who believed he "was just doing his job"
and the misery of the prisoners was beyond his control. How close
either came to real life I don't know. I'm fairly sure that the sight
of suffering and dying Yanks did not bother him too much.
Does anyone recall what legal points the defense made in his defense?
I'm sure the conditions in Northern prisons must have been pointed out.
Also that the guards fared little better than the prisoners. I'd like
to know what statutes he was charged with violating. Not that it
matters a whole lot. He was measured for a hemp neck-tie before he ever
got to trial.
Tom
|
62.16 | Wirz's Trial | OGOMTS::RICKER | Lest We Forget, 1861 - 1865 | Mon Feb 24 1992 04:20 | 25 |
| Re: .15
In May 1865, Federal authorities arrested Wirz and took him to
Washington, where he appeared before a military tribunal.
The commandant of Andersonville was accused of conspiring "to
injure the health and destroy the lives of soldiers in the military
service of the United States." More serious than that, he was charged
with "murder in violation of the laws and customs of war."
Wirz's trial that summer was flawed. Witness after witness gave
testimony of the commandant's misdeeds, but some of it was blatanly
contrived. Prosecutors manipulated evidence to suit their case, and the
defense was denied motion after motion.
The press called Wirz "the Andersonville savage", "the inhuman
wretch", "the infamous Captain". Wirz repeatedly protested that he was
merely a soldier carrying out orders in a dire situation.
The outcome of Wirz's trial was never in doubt from the moment it
began. Found guilty on all charges, Wirz calmly mounted the gallows on
November 10, 1865, amid an almost carnival atmosphere.
Reporters flocked around the scaffold in the yard of the Old
Capitol Prison. Soldiers lining the walls chanted over and over again,
"Andersonville, Andersonville," until the trap dropped and Wirz was
dead.
The Alabama Slammer
|
62.17 | Northern Prisons | OGOMTS::RICKER | Lest We Forget, 1861 - 1865 | Mon Feb 24 1992 06:32 | 115 |
|
A study of conditions in both Northern and Southern prisons was
undertaken by the United States Sanitary Commission in 1864. The
commission's conclusion, summed up in a biased and inflammatory report,
was that Confederate prison authorities had endorsed outrageously cruel
practices and deprivations as part of " a predetermined plan for
destroying and disabling the soldiers of their enemy." The report
claimed that in Northern prisons, by contrast, Confederate soldiers had
plenty to eat; mess funds had been provided so generously that there
was even a surplus, which was being used to buy the prisoners luxuries.
The fact was, North or South, the inmates were never far from
starvation. A South Carolinian noted that his daily prison fare at
Point Lookout, Maryland, was a half a pint of "slop water" coffee for
breakfast and a half pint of "greasy water" soup for dinner, followed
by a small piece of meat. "The writer has known large, stout men to lay
in their tents at night and cry like babies from hunger," he said.
The meat and bacon available to men on both sides was described in
letters and journals as "rusty" and "slimey" and the other fare was no
better. A Confederate declared that the soup at Fort Delaware came
filled with "white worms, half an inch long." It was a standing joke,
he wrote, "that the soup was too weak to drown the rice worms and pea
bugs, which, however, came to death by starvation."
But, to near-starving men, any fare would do: "Ate it raw," reads
one entry in Private George Hegeman's dairy, presumably referring to
his meat ration. "Could not wait to cook it."
In the absence of adequate protein, prison rats were staple fare.
"We traped for Rats and the Prisoners Eat Every one they could get,"
wrote a soldier of the 4th Arkansas at Johnson's Island. "I taken a
mess of Fried Rats. They was all right to a hungry man, was like Fried
squirrels." And no matter what they ate, the prisoners learned to eat
their food quickly for fear it might be seized by their messmates.
Vicious and sometimes deadly brawls exploded over a few morsels of
spoiled meat.
More often than not, drinking water in the prisons was tainted.
One Confederate found Point Lookout's supply " so impregnated with some
mineral as to offend every nose, and induce diarrhea in almost every
alimentary canal. It colors every thing black in which it is allowed to
rest, and a scum rises on the top of a vessel if it is left standing
during the night, which reflects the prismatic colors as distinctly as
the surface of a stagnant pool."
The barracks in many prisons were primitive structures - wet, cold
and unsanitary. In a communication to William Hoffman, U.S. Secretary
of War Edwin Stanton made it clear that in the North primitive housing
should be the rule: 'The Secretary of War is not disposed, in view of
the treatment our prisoners of war are recieving, to erect fine
estabilsments for their prisoners." In keeping with this injunction,
the builder of the prison at Rock Island was told by Quartermaster
General Meigs that the barracks "should be put up in the roughest and
cheapest manner, mere shanties, with no fine work about them." At Camp
Morton in Indianapolis, the barracks had no floors and were so flimsy
that the snow and rain blew through them.
At most installations, filth built up inside and outside the
barracks, inviting swarms of pests. "The vermin was so plenty,"
observed a Rhode Islander, "that the boys said they have regimental
drills." A Confederate at Old Capitol Prison in Washington, D.C., good-
naturedly remarked how he and his mates would get together against the
insects and have "a promiscuous slaughter, regardless of age or sex.
But they must recruit from the other side, like the Yankee army, as we
can notice no diminution in the forces."
Noting the infestation of the Camp Douglas barracks in Chicago, the
president of the U.S. Sanitary Commission remarked that "nothing but
fire can cleanse them."
Infested garments could not be discarded, for there was little
other clothing available. Many prisoners, particularly the
Confederates, arrived in the camps with their uniforms in tatters. The
need for clothing was so acute that the living seized the garments of
those who died. Prisoners in much of the South experienced mild
winters. But in much of the Federal camps, inmates had to endure ice
and snow, and overcoats and blankets were scarce. At Johnston's Island,
ill-clad Confederate prisoners from the Gulf states suffered intensely
from the winter winds off Lake Erie that cut through their barracks
almost unimpeded. Survivors of the camp bore vivid memories of some of
their comrades freezing to death on the bitter New Year's Day of 1864.
"From the crowded conditions, filthy habits, bad diet and dejected
depressed condition of the prisoners, their systems had become so
disordered that the smallest abrasion of skin, from the rubbing of a
shoe, or from the effects of the sun, the prick of a splinter or the
scratching of a mosquito bite, in some cases took on a rapid and
frightful ulceration and gangrene."
Survivors of the camps remembered how men used to press a thumb
into their flesh to see if a discoloration was left in the indentation.
That meant scurvy. Victims of the disease would lose their teeth, along
with their hair. Then they could not walk. Finally they died. Sometimes
scurvy reached epidemic proportions. Just three months after a prison
camp opened at Elmira, New York, 1,870 cases of scurvy were counted.
At Fort Delaware between November 1863 and February 1864, at least 1 of
every 8 Confederate prisoners suffered from the disease.
Fresh vegetables could have cured the problem, and they were
available for purchase at Fort Delaware. But Colonel Hoffman insisted
that only absolute necessities be bought, and vegetables were
considered a luxury. Thus $23,000 remained in the Fort Delaware relief
fund, even as hundreds of men languished with scurvy.
Prison hospitals were feared almost more than the diseases they
were supposed to treat. At Chicago's Camp Douglas, sick Rebels lay in
the hospital on cots that did not have mattresses, sheets or any other
sort of bedding. In January and February of 1863, men died there at the
rate of six a day, while twice that number died in the barracks each
day, unable to find space in the hospital. Naive hospital attendants
who frequently were paroled prisoners, cleaned wounds by pouring dirty
water over them; the water then seeped into the earth, providing a
breeding ground for insects. Flies swarmed over the patients, laying
their eggs in open wounds.
The prisoners' conversations tended to gravitate to the same
tantalizing topic: the possibility of being exchanged or released
outright, the chances of making it home.
Prisoners were permitted to write letters, but these were heavily
censored and usually limited to one page. A surprising number of men
managed to keep intimate journals, using whatever scraps of paper they
could find and employing ink made from rust. Some found solace in
religious services or in prayer. "Often while walking the floor of the
prison, I repeat the Lord's Prayer," wrote a Confederate prisoner on
Johnston's Island, " and I find my whole mind absorbed upon the subject
of my future state of existence or my appearing before God."
The Alabama Slammer
|
62.18 | | TLE::SOULE | The elephant is wearing quiet clothes. | Tue Feb 25 1992 13:14 | 22 |
| I'd like to toss another parameter into this discussion. I ran across
some numbers the other night detailing Union casualties during the war.
They were broken down not only by cause of death, but by officers/private
soldiers. I remember them well enough to make my point:
Officers Privates
Died of wounds 6000+ 110,000+
Died of disease 2000+ 190,000+
Died in prison 80+ 23,000+
What these numbers suggest to me is that officers were treated better
(by far!) both by their own army and by their Confederate captors. My
point is that the greater distinction can be made between treatment of
Officers/Privates than between Union/Confederate prisoners.
Ben
|
62.19 | Can we get percentages | BROKE::LEE | Elvis is buried in Bryan's cube | Wed Feb 26 1992 09:26 | 7 |
| Does anyone know the number of officers that served and the number of privates
that served?
The percentages would interest me more than the raw numbers.
dave
|
62.20 | Prisoners | MACNAS::TJOYCE | | Wed Feb 26 1992 09:43 | 25 |
|
The above war statistics and accounts are worth some comment:
They certainly belie the assertion that there were two federal prison
camps where the death toll surpassed Andersonville. 3,000 dead at
Elmira is 23% of the Andersonville total of 13000.
It is also to be noted that Elmira was open mainly in the very year
that the prisoner exchange scheme broke down. Had that cartel
continued, many of the 3000 would have survived.
Elmira was certainly a savage place - 78% chance of surviving
a year. Wes and I had been under the impression that the camp had
been open for the entire war.
I have noticed that officers seemed to be exchanged more quickly than
privates - also, the Andersonville prisoners were composed entirely of
enlisted men.
Conditions were certainly grim for the troops of both sides. It
bears out that North and South failed even by their own standards
to properly care for, or be charitable to, prisoners.
Toby
|
62.21 | | TLE::SOULE | The elephant is wearing quiet clothes. | Wed Feb 26 1992 12:25 | 21 |
| re .-2
Dave,
The point I should have made more clearly in my -.3 is that for privates in
the Union army, disease was more deadly than enemy fire, while for Union
officers it was the reverse. This, to me, means that the Army treated its
officers much better than its private soldiers. No big surprise, I suppose.
Further, the miniscule number of Union officers who died in Southern
prison camps means that the South treated its enemy's officers better than
its enemy's enlisted men.
Overall, then, a case might be made to show that rank (and implicitly, social
class) had more of a bearing upon whether you survived the war than the
differences between Northern and Southern armies or prisons.
Hope this is clearer.
Ben
|
62.22 | Don't Need _Those_ Numbers To Know That! | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Wed Feb 26 1992 15:26 | 40 |
| RE .21:
As they stand, your data do not support your conclusions. For
instance, the small number of officers who died in prison _must_ be
compared to the total number of officers _held_ in prison in order to
draw any conclusion about relative treatment of officers and privates.
I _think_ that captured officers were usually, or at least quickly,
paroled - meaning they were released on a promise not to serve until
they were officially exchanged, so that they were not actually held
long in prison.
Also, officers were certainly treated differently in many other respects
from enlisted men. They got money to buy rations instead of rations "in
kind", and so might have suffered less from dietary deficiencies. They
did not sleep 4 or 12 to a tent, which might have reduced their
exposure to some diseases. It is possible, but not certain, that on
the average officers would have been more conscious of hygene than
enlisted men, which would also have cut down on disease - even in the
age before the germ theory.
Another "skew" that your statistics might reflect is that veteran
regiments tended to have few sick; most of the soldiers who couldn't
stand the rough conditions of daily army life got sick early in the
career of a unit (or perhaps in exceptionally bad circumstances like
the winter of '62-'63 at Falmouth in the AoP). In that situation, more
new enlisted men would get sick than new officers (if for no other
reason than that there were lots more of them). However, officer
casualties in veteran units might stay high; especially as the war
dragged on, the best officers - those who were in the front of an
attack and the rear of a retreat - had more chances to get shot.
I would not disagree with your statement that officers were treated
"better" than privates in the Union Army - or in any army I have ever
heard of, for that matter! :^) But that conclusion could be reached
without even looking at death statistics, simply by comparing
differences in living conditions. I'd be interested to know, in
_percentage_ terms, whether it was more "dangereous" to be an officer
or an enlisted man in the Civil War...
MikeR
|
62.23 | Irish (Setter) Stew | JUPITR::ZAFFINO | | Thu Feb 27 1992 04:06 | 16 |
| I remember reading an excerpt from the diary of a yank who was captured
in the opening days of the Penninsula. He was sent to one of the
prisons just outside of Richmond (I don't remember which one, but it
was on an island in the James). This was early in the war, but he
still described the lack of food clothing and shelter in vivid terms.
At one point, he and some others enticed a dog belonging to one of the
guards into their lean-to and promptly made a stew out of it. The
guard later came around tearfully offering a $10 reward to any prisoner
who could find the family pet. The prisoner felt bad about what he'd
done, especially as the guard was one of the kinder ones, but he kept
his mouth shut: he was still hungry and there was stew left for another
meal or two. He wrote something to the effect that owing to the size
of the reward offered it was the most expensive stew he'd ever eaten,
but that no meal had ever tasted better given the circumstances.
Ziff
|
62.24 | Andersonvill | TAPS::DENCS | Les Dencs | Thu Feb 27 1992 15:49 | 5 |
| Soetimes ago I read "Andersonvill" By John McElroy. He was a survivor
of the prison. It is a very grim diary of his days in Andersonvill.
It is very similar to stories told by POWs coming back from the USSR in
the 50s and 60s. There is very little compassion in civil or religious
wars even today.
|
62.25 | | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | Nanotyrannus - the roadrunner from hell | Sat Feb 29 1992 17:56 | 13 |
| Re: .18
The comparatively better survival rate of officers was due to the fact
that the ACW was considered to be a war between gentlemen. Officers
were gentlemen - they were better educated and of higher social
standing than privates, who were often (but not always) poor and badly
educated. Gentlemen, obviously, deserved better treatment than trash -
this attitude had its antecedents in the chivalric traditions of the
Middle Ages. In many cases, officers were even allowed to roam freely
about (and even outside) their prisons after giving their parole not to
escape. Gentlemen, it seems, could be trusted to keep their word...
-dick
|
62.26 | Not Clear Class Distinctions | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Mon Mar 02 1992 08:13 | 35 |
| RE .25:
Your statement about officers being gentlemen, of a higher social
standing than the enlisted men, _might_ be an accurate "general"
statement about the Confederacy, but I don't think it holds for the
Union - not even in the upper echelons. Remember that many (maybe
most) volunteer regiments _elected_ their officers.
Grant, for instance, was no "gentleman". I think the lieutenant
colonel of the 24th Michigan was a county sherriff (admittedly someone
of local influence, but not exactly someone with "social standing").
McClellan and Burnside were successful businessmen. (These are just
some I happen to remember off the top of my head.)
It may well be true that officers were better educated than average,
but I haven't seen any data, so I don't know. Colonels tended to be
people with good political connections, since state governors appointed
almost all of them initially, so they would usually have been people
who were prominent in their locality - but that is _not_ the same thing
as being "gentlemen".
I'm also not sure how sharp the distinction was on parole. I seem to
recall that sometimes both officers and enlisted men were released on
parole rather than being held in prison camps until exchanged. Anyone
know more about that? I have read that some officers were kept in
prison (Libby Prison in Richmond was one, I think), but I don't know
enough about circumstances or timing to go further.
.25 may be right about historic patterns for treating officers &
enlisted differntly being a major factor, but I don't think that the
social distinctions which gave rise to those patterns applied during
the ACW, especially in the Union Army.
MikeR
|
62.27 | | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | Nanotyrannus - the roadrunner from hell | Mon Mar 02 1992 08:26 | 7 |
| Ah, Mike, but we're talking of perceptions here, aren't we? And, as
you point out, the perception of the gentleman officer was was quite
strong in the South. Southerners treated captured officers better
because that was their view of officers -- Northerners did it because
the captured officers were in fact gentlemen.
-dick
|
62.28 | Libby prison records? | SUBPAC::TRIMBY | | Thu Dec 21 1995 16:46 | 10 |
|
Is there a list of prisoners who were in Libby Prison? I was told that
Libby kept a very accurate listing, however, I don't know if the list is
available. My GGrandfather was supposedly a prisoner there, I have a poem
that he supposedly wrote while at Libby. I'd like to confirm if he was
indeed a prisoner. He mustered out as a Private. I thought Libby only
held higher ranking soldiers.
Gary
|
62.29 | | SMURF::BINDER | Eis qui nos doment vescimur. | Fri Dec 22 1995 09:58 | 6 |
| Re .28
I'd try contacting the National Archives to find if there is a list.
Another possibility might be the U. S. Army's records office in St.
Louis. Your easiest avenue is probably to go surfing on the Wide Workd
Web, I think. :-)
|