
TO THE MEMORY OF THE SIX THOUSAND
SOUTHERN SOLDIERS HERE BURIED . . . WHO DIED IN CAMP DOUGLAS PRISON . . . 1862-1865
Researched and edited by C. B. Pritchett
Pritchett Ford
The South had Andersonville, an internationally known
reminder of prison camp hardships and deaths, immortalized in song, literature, film and
by many Union Monuments. The North had Camp Douglas, a little known civil war prison in
Chicago that set records for prison mortality, hidden in lost and incomplete records and
suppressed publicity. To the victor belongs the silence.
Andersonville is the National Prisoner of War Historical
Site, with white headstones for each of the 12, 912 Union prisoners who died there with a
475 acre park and monuments erected by every Union State and the National Government. All
of the main highways of South Georgia have directional signs to aid the tens of thousand
who visit there yearly.
Look North to Chicago and you will find at least 6000
Confederate soldiers buried in a mass grave on one acre of land. There is only one
monument to these prisoners who died, erected in 1895, 30 years after the war, by
Southerners and their friends in Chicago and the North.
According to Dorothy Wells Earlandson, writing in Chicago=s Heritage Guest, Afew
native Chicagoans knew of its existence, you see, Chicago has never publicized its one
time camp@ There are no highway directional
signs. We will never see a film about Camp douglas or any of the other notorious Northern
prisons. The winners write the history books, and for 130 years they have been silent
about their prison camps.
The Oak Wood Cemetery monument, erected ATO THE MEMORY OF THE SIX THOUSAND SOUTHERN SOLDIERS
HERE BURIED . . . WHO DIED IN CAMP DOUGLAS PRISON . . . 1862-65@ sustains interest in the camp located near the shore
of Lake Michigan. Before the camp closed, it has earned the dubious distinctions of Aundisputed first place in mortality among Northern
prisons.@
Prisoners from Fort Donelson arrived at Camp Douglas in
February, 1862, and within one year the monthly mortality rate was at ten percent, a rate
unsurpassed by any other prison in the North or South. Ultimately, one in five prisoners
died, establishing the camp=s reputation for Aextermination.@
The highest death rate at Andersonville was nine percent set for August, 1864.
Three traits distinguished Camp
Douglas from other Northern prison camps: high mortality rates, extreme acts of cruelty,
and a low official count of prisoners who died compared to documentation from other
sources Historical articles and research texts have publicized these facts, but somehow
Camp Douglas has escaped the notoriety of Andersonville. The most complete treatment of
the horrors of Camp Douglas is contained in George Levy=s
To Die in Chicago (1994) from which some of the information for this article has
been drawn. Levy was educated at the University of Chicago and he has served as Assistant
Attorney General for the state of Illinois.
The high mortality rate can be attributed to several
factors: overcrowding, unhealthy living conditions, ineffective medical treatment,
inadequate food supply, and brutality. The war lasted longer than expected, resulting in
more prisoners tan anticipated. By late 1862 there were 8,962 prisoners in the camp with
fewer than 900 guards. Over 200 prisoners were crowded in to barracks averaging 70 feet by
25 feet. As the number increased, tents were erected to house them, with little protection
against below zero winds. Huge latrines were left open, so rain washed raw sewage into the
drinking water supply. Wooden floors were removed to discourage tunneling, so vermin
infected the dirt floors. Rats and mice were commonplace. Some unnamed inmates
recollecting the camp 37 years later said that they raised the kitchen floor to catch Abig gray rats@
which were made into rat pies. When cholera and a smallpox epidemic erupted, free medicine
sent by the South was withheld as contraband of war. Food rations were restricted, partly
to cut costs and partly as retaliation for Southern victories. When control of the camp
was finally passed to the Chicago Police department, medical supplies were cut off and
food severely restricted.
On June 30, 1862, Commandant Colonel Tucker was warned by D.
V. McVickar, the Post Surgeon that Athe surface
of the ground is becoming saturated with the filth and slop from the privies, kitchens,
and quarters and must produce serious result to health as soon as the hot weather sets in.
AColonel Tucker was overwhelmed; there were 326
patients in the hospital and many more in the barracks.
Coincidentally, Henry W. Bellows of the Sanitary Commission
sent a negative report on the camp to Colonel Hoffman the same day: ASir, the amount of standing water, unpoliced grounds,
of foul sinks, of unventilated and crowded barracks, of general disorder, of soil reeking
miasmatic accretions, of rotten bones and emptying of camp kettles, is enough to drive a
sanitarium to despair. I hope that no thought will be entertained of mending matters.
The absolute abandonment of the spot seems to be the only
judicious course, I do not believe that any amount of drainage would purge that soil
loaded with accumulated filth or those barr4acks fetid with two stories of vermin and
animal exhalations. Nothin but fire can cleanse them.@
The Chicago Tribune wrote on September 22, 1862, AIt
is not wonder they died so rapidly. It is only a wonder that the whole eight-thousand of
the filthy hogs did not go home in pine boxes instead of on their feet.
Civilian doctors, who inspected Camp Douglas on April 5,
1863, called it an extermination camp. They drew an unrelenting picture of Awretched inmates without change of clothing, covered,
with vermin, in wards reeking with filth and foul air, and blankets in rags . . . it will
be seen that 260 out of 3,800 prisoners had died in twenty-one days, a rate of mortality
which, if continued would secure their total extermination in about 320 days.@
Prisoners were deprived of clothing to discourage escapes.
Many wore sacks with head and arm holes cut out; few had underwear. Blankets to offset the
bitter northern winter were confiscated from the few that had them. The weakest froze to
death. The Chicago winter of 1864 was devastating. The loss of 1,091 lives in only four
months was heavies for any like period in the camp=s
history, and equaled the deaths at the highest rate of Andersonville from February to May,
1864 (OR Ser-II-Vol. 8, 986-1003). Yet, it is the name of Andersonville that burns in
infamy, while there exists a northern counterpart of little shame.
Mortality rates increased as Colonel Sweet complained on
October 11, 1864, that mortality at the camp was up to 35% since June. In November 1864,
the death toll was 217; another 323 died in December, 308 in January 1864, and 243 in
February.
THE DEADLY DEADLINE
The Sparrow diary specifically mentions the dead line at
Camp Douglas. Prisoners were shot for crossing the line there just as at such other
Federal prisons as Camp Morton, Indiana; Camp Chase and Johnson=s Island in Ohio; Point Lookout, Maryland; Newport
New, VA; and Fort Delaware for violating stated bounds, usually to answer the call of
nature. Several Confederate prisoners were shot or bayoneted to death while in the very
act of relieving themselves.
The arctic weather led to additional suffering. AAnother punishment was to make the men pull down
their pants and sit, with nothin under them, on the snow and frozen ground. I have know
men to be kept sitting until you could see their prints of some days after in the snow and
ice. When the [guards] got weary of this they commenced whipping, making the men lay on a
barrel, and using their belts, which had a leather clasp with a sharp edge, cutting
through the skin.@
A prisoner swore that when the men who were being punished
this way attempted to sit on their coattails they were cruelly kicked in the back by the
guards and forced to sit longer on their bare bones. Prisoners were forced to stand in the
snow for hours without moving, and guards checked footprints to see if they had moved.
Those who did received lashes. Some prisoners who arrived in the bitter cold weather lost
toes, fingers and ears. One improvised two wooden pegs as substitutes for feet and hobbled
around surprisingly well.
The mildest cruelty took the form of random firing into the
barracks to disturb the prisoners= sleep,
shooting prisoners who moved too slowly, or hanging them by their feet to encourage them
to take the Aoath to the United States.@ The more common severe tortures included Areaching for the grub,@ bending over without bending the knees for several
hours, causing blood to gush from the prisoners nose and protruding eyeballs almost
bursting from their sockets with pain, or being lashed a hundred times with the metal
buckle end of a belt. ASolitary confinement@ meant being squeezed into a ten foot square room
with twenty others, with only a ten-inch window for ventilation.2
A fearsome animal came to Prison Square on June 28, 1864. AThe Yanks have fixed a frame near the gate (to Prison
Square) with a scantling piece of timber across it, edge up, and about four feet from the
ground, which they make our men ride whenever the men do anything that does not please
them. It is called The Mule. Men have sat on it >till
they fainted and fell off. It is like riding a sharp top fence.@13 The Amule@ could be made more painful by adding weights.
Sometimes the Yanks would laugh and say, AI will
give you a pair of spurs@ which was a bucket of
sand tied to each foot. Other prisoners confirmed that men had to ride the mule in the
worst winter weather. By 1865 it had grown to 15 feet tall and required a ladder to mount.
There was a mule for the garrison in White Oak Square, except there it was called11
the Ahorse@.
A SERIOUS FLAW IN THE RECORD OF CAMP DOUGLAS
WAS IN COUNTING (OR MISCOUNTING) THE DEAD
AFrom February 1862, >till all
the Secesh had left there, nearly all of the Medical Colleges in the northwest were
supplied with the bodies stolen from the dead buried at the city cemetery and the >appearance of the graves gives evidence of the
truth of this statement.=@2
On June 9, 1862, a difference between the
Chicago Tribune and Official Records was reported, with 1,480 men unaccounted for
according to the Tribune. One of the reasons was that some deaths were unreported.2
On July, 186 2, commandant Tucker, in taking command of Camp Douglas, reported, Athere is scarcely a record left at camp and it will
be difficult to ascertain what prisoners have been at the camp or what has become of them.@
By March 31, 1863, mortality was again out of
control, and diseases claimed 706 prisoners. If t rue, the toll in two months was only 277
short of the 1862 record. Suspiciously, there are not Camp Douglas ret urns in the
official records for March 1863. The Tribune appears to have counted the dead carefully
and indicated that the toll could have been Aupwards
of 700.@14
Unfortunately, record keeping was atrocious. It
seems that in the period from February, 1862, to April, 1863, about 728 Confederates were
missing. This in not the worst of it. If 700 died in early 1863, as the Tribune and some
historians of the period believed, the superintendent should have found 1,636 graves.
Various explanations were put forward for this discrepancy. The bodies were being washed
into the lake, according to the Tribune, toward the water one mile south. The cemetery was
also a favorite hunting ground for grave robbers. Another explanation is that the dead
were dumped into unmarked gave and soon lost in the swampy soil.7 By 1864 about
2,235 prisoners had lost their lives since the prison opened according to the Official
Records. This may be 967 short of the true figure at the time, based on the Tribune=s figures.
There were 23,637 cases of sickness in 1864,
according to the study made at the time. This is more than three times the number shown in
official records for the entire 700 days at Camp Douglas; August 1863 to August 1865.
Since they were not reporting to Washington,
the number is sick in the Barracks (Levy), a lack of reporting deaths would certainly
follow. According to the History of Camp Douglas, close to 12,000 prisoners had suffered
through the bitter winter of 1862, and 1863 when temperatures fell below zero. From 1,400
to 1,700 lay dead but only 615 could be counted in the desolate graves far from camp.
Between 700 and 1000 had disappeared.
On December 1, 1866, only 1,402 graves (of the
earlier 2,968) could be identified. Very little care seems to have been taken in the
interment of bodies. General A. Hoyt warned that close to 2000 bodies were now unaccounted
for. Somehow Camp Douglas was exterminating the dead as well as the living.
THE CONFEDERATE BURIAL MOUND
Oak Woods Cemetery could have become the
largest Confederate burial site outside of the South, but subsequent events made it
impossible to learn the number buried there. The Oak Woods Cemetery simply buried whatever
the O=Sullivans, (unqualified grave removers)
brought in, and numbered the grave markers at Oak Woods according to City Cemetery
records. These records cannot be verified because no Confederate burials were recorded
with the City Clerk.2 Also the army failed to supervise, inspect or validate
the removals. History had been blindfolded, and there is no way of knowing how many
Confederates, or which ones, are at Oak Woods.
On September 1, 1880, General Bingham reported,
Amany of the graves are sunken dn many of the
corner stakes are missing. There is evidences that one of the sections has been used as a
roadway. The ground around these lots has been raised and improved which gives them the
sunken appearance.@ The mound area was later
filled in to the level of the rest of the cemetery.
Other than the modest obelisk on this mound,
completed in 1893 by sympathizers from the South, from Chicago, and other parts of the
North, there was nothing to distinguish this burial site. Thirty years later, bronze
tablets were added w2ith a partial list of the dead. About 100,000 sympathetic persons,
including President Grover Cleveland, attended the dedication of the edifice on Memorial
Day, 1895. Since that time, nothing has been done to memorialize these unfortunate
Confederate prisoners of war, other than a small gathering of supporters each year on
Memorial Day.
Camp Douglas has to be the North=s best kept secret of the Civil War B their Andersonville B but a camp that must be identified with extreme
cruelty and Aconvenient@ record keeping of the dead.
Researched by:
C.B. Pritchett Jr.
Pritchett Ford
P.O. Box 200
Albany, Ga 31702-0200
NOTE: All of the above information is
originally documented with footnotes. These did not transfer into html code. I
will add these as soon as possible. If you need prior information, please write.
Jack B.
Harris
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