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Prisons Civil War Wars
Prisons Civil War Wars
  @Intermall |
Standard Listings
See Also:
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- The only Confederate Prison that was located in North Carolina was in the town of Salisbury. The prison was established on November 2, 1861. Includes property plats, guard photos, paintings and descriptive text.
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- Explicit details of the trial of Captain Henry Wirz, Commandant of one of the most infamous Civil War prison camps - Andersonville.
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- Detailing conditions and treatment of Confederate soldiers in this Northern prison of war camp.
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- The first prisoners arrived at the Alton Federal Military Prison on February 9, 1862. During the next three years, over 11,764 Confederate prisoners would pass through its gates.
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- Complete listing of Confederate prisoners who died in the Union prison camp at Rock Island, Illinois.
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- On September 3rd, 1862 at the age of 25, Bernard McKnight enlisted in the Union Army (Massachusetts 3rd Cavalry) and would go to fight in America's Civil War, a conflict of which he probably had little understanding.
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- An electronic edition of "Prison Life and Other Incidents in the War of 1861-'65," by Miles O. Sherrill of Catawba County, North Carolina.
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- History and modern photographs from the prison site.
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- The society for the preservation of this Civil War prison stockade site, and the memory of the prisoners and those who guarded them.
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- This site is dedicated to those men, women, and children who suffered while imprisoned at Point Lookout Prison Camp for Confederates from 1863 to 1865 in the state of Maryland during the War for Southern Independence.
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- Civil War prison information including Civil War prisoner lists, links, photos, more including Andersonville, Elmira, Danville, Camp Ford, Point Lookout, Salisbury Civil War prisons and others.
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- Dedicated to the 11,000 lives were lost at Point Lookout yet not accounted for.
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- Names and locations of prisons in Illinois used during the Civil War. One is Rock Island, constructed 1863, which is one of the largest and most notorious prison camps in the North. Almost 2000 Confederate soldiers were buried here.
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- An alternate look at a notorious Confederate prison.
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- On August 20, 1864, a chosen group of 600 Confederate officers left Fort Delaware as prisoners of war, bound for the Union Army base at Hilton Head, S.C. Their purpose - to be placed in a stockade in front of the Union batteries at the siege of Charleston
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- History of the Camp Chase prison camp, its Confederate pow's, as well as of the men in Camp Chase Cemetery.
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- Site contains prison camp descriptions and prisoner recorded experiences. Includes a prisoner database project for listing of prison camp prisoners.
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- Searchable directory and categorized lists of registered prisoners taken during this conflict.
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- Compilation of 221 Confederate officer autographs from Johnson's Island prison.
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- Once the site of the largest Union prison for Confederate POW's. Built after the Battle of Gettysburg, the prison held 52,000 Confederate unfortunates at one time or another during the waning days of the Civil War.
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- Now known as Fort Delaware State Park, the fort not only still exists, it is very much as it was when it held over 40,000 Confederate, Federal and civilian political prisoners. Will conduct search for individual prisoners upon request.
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- Andersonville National Historic Site was designated by the U.S. Congress as a memorial to all POWs in American history. Park programs interpret the accounts of other Civil War POW camps, both North and South.
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- Located in St. Louis, Missouri, the main Union prison for the Civil War in the West. Includes transcribed prisoner lists from Gratiot ledgers.
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- One of the darker sides of the Civil War was the fate of those people, men and some women, captured and taken prisoner in the line of duty. This site is dedicated to the memories of all our ancestors whose lives were touched by these dark places.
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- Description and park information about this Confederate prison in Georgia.
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- In the two years during which the camp was in operation, August, 1863, to June, 1865, Point Lookout overflowed with inmates, surpassing its intended capacity of 10,000 to a population numbering between 12,500 and 20,000. In all, over 50,000 men, both mili
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- Deals with the infamous Civil War Prison camp located in Elmira, NY.
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- The history of the Camp in Indianapolis, Indiana. First used as a recruitment camp then as a prison during the Civil War, site includes photographs, monuments, and links.
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- Union Civil War soldiers who died in Charleston, SC, were reinterred after the war in either the Florence or Beaufort National Cemeteries in South Carolina.
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- Photos taken in both northern and southern prisons in the US Civil War.
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- From April of 1862 until September of 1865, over 9,000 Confederates passed through Island's Military Prison, leaving behind an extensive historical and archaeological record.
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