Andersonvilles of the North: The Myths and Realities of Northern Treatment of Civil War Confederate Prisoners

Similar documents
Edmund J. Davis: Civil War General, Republican Leader, Reconstruction Governor

Driven From Home: North Carolina's Civil War Refugee Crisis

U.S. HISTORY SUMMER PROJECT

Northern Character: College-educated New Englanders, Honor, Nationalism, And Leadership In The Civil War Era

Presidency of Ulysses S. Grant

The Early Morning of War: Bull Run, 1861

Free Labor: The Civil War And The Making Of An American Working Class

CIVIL WAR SESQUICENTENNIAL: Strategy, Tactics, and Fighting the Civil War

The Americans (Reconstruction to the 21st Century)

The Justice Safety Valve Act of 2013 S. 619

Paper 4.1 Public Health Reform (PHR) Public Health Priorities For Scotland Public Health Oversight Board 19 th April 2018

Chapter 20 HEALTH AND SANITATION Last updated October 2007

Civil War and Reconstruction in Georgia. SS8H6: The student will analyze the impact of the Civil War & Reconstruction on Georgia.

A copy can be downloaded for personal non-commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge

LAWS OF CORRECTION & CUSTODY ALABAMA PEACE OFFICERS STANDARDS & TRAINING COMMISSION

9. The first and only president of the Confederacy was A) Robert E. Lee. B) Alexander Stephens. C) Jefferson Davis. D) John Crittenden.

The End of the War, Outcomes, and Reconstruction

THREE HUNDRED DAYS IN A YANKEE PRISON Reminiscences of Camp Chase, Ohio

Confederate Political Economy: Creating And Managing A Southern Corporatist Nation

The Civil War The Two Sides: Chapter 13, Section 1 Differences in economic, political, and social beliefs and practices can lead to division within a

The Civil War,

Case 1:15-cv SCY-KBM Document 8-4 Filed 02/06/15 Page 1 of 10 EXHIBIT 2. Protecting Your. Health & Safety A LITIGATION GUIDE FOR INMATES

Pleading Guilty in Lower Courts

THE PREPARED CURRICULUM: FOR POST-SECONDARY AND CAREER READINESS

REVIEW FOR CHAPTERS 15, 16, AND 17 TEST

Written Statement of Jim E. Lavine, NACDL President. on behalf of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF CRIMINAL DEFENSE LAWYERS

Jus in Bello through the Lens of Individual Moral Responsibility: McMahan on Killing in War

DRAFT REVISED NORTHERN CHEYENNE LAW & ORDER CODE TITLE 6 RULES OF EVIDENCE CODE. Title 6 Page 1

The South Secedes By USHistory.org 2016

The Politics of Reconstruction. The Americans, Chapter 12.1, pages

BANQUE AFRICAINE DE DEVELOPPEMENT

History 1301 U.S. to 1877

NEGOTIATIONS WITH IRAN: Views from a Red State, a Blue State and a Swing State

SSUSH 9 The student will identify key events, issues, and individuals relating to the causes, course, and consequences of the Civil War.

Beleaguered Winchester: A Virginia Community at War,

INTRODUCTION DEFINITION OF KEY TERMS

Concept Note Western Sahara

Poverty And Its Impact On Food

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Articles of Confederation. Essential Question:

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE 136/93

Amendments for Consideration at 2018 Texas Division Reunion # 1 PROPOSED AMENDMENT CHANGE (7.2) Proposed by David McMahon

Clinical Trials in Singapore

Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South ( ) Section 2 Radicals in Control

THE SECESSION CRISIS.! Lincoln s election leads South Carolina to secede on December 20, 1860.! Question: would other states follow?

Sample file. 2. Read about the war and do the activities to put into your mini-lapbook.

The Constitutional Convention formed the plan of government that the United States still has today.

Annex C: Draft guideline

BELIZE DEFENCE ACT CHAPTER 135 REVISED EDITION 2003 SHOWING THE SUBSIDIARY LAWS AS AT 31ST OCTOBER, 2003

CERTAIN PERSONS NOT TO HAVE ANY WEAPONS 1 [N.J.S.A. 2C:39-7a]

CHAPTER 14 PUNISHMENT AND SENTENCING CHAPTER OUTLINE. I. Introduction. II. Sentencing Rationales. A. Retribution. B. Deterrence. C.

Republic of Macedonia CRIMINAL CODE. (with implemented amendments from March 2004) 1 GENERAL PART 1. GENERAL PROVISIONS

Workers United Canada Council Submission to Ontario s Changing Workplaces Review

PETITIONER'S RESPONSIBILITIES - HAL MARCHMAN ACT

case 3:04-cr AS document 162 filed 09/01/2005 page 1 of 6

Rebecca Curtiss Spring 2009 Review of American Gulag: Inside U.S. Immigration Prisons by Mark Dow

RULES AND REGULATIONS GOVERNING THE LICENSING OF SLAUGHTER HOUSES IN COCHIN

media.collegeboard.org/digitalservices/pdf/ap/ap european history course and ex am description.pdf

CHAPTER 44 CHILDREN AND YOUNG PERSONS ACT ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS PART 1 PRELIMINARY PART 11 SPECIAL PROVISIONS AS TO PROCEDURE

THE QUALIFICATION OF PSYCHIATRISTS AS EXPERTS IN LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

RESPONSE TO CONSULTATION ON ARSON AND CRIMINAL DAMAGE DRAFT SENTENCING GUIDELINE

Radicals in Control. Guide to Reading

The Dumbarton Oaks Proposal

CONFEDERATE VETERAN RECORDS,

The Animal Welfare Act

Crime in San Francisco--A Study of the Police Court Docket--December 1924 through February 1925

Name: 8 th Grade U.S. History. STAAR Review. Constitution

Reconstruction

Close Read: Radical Reconstruction. What was the radical plan for Reconstruction after the Civil War?

CRS Report for Congress

Tennessee's Radical Army: The State Guard and Its Role in Reconstruction,

WEST AFRICA FOOD CRISIS AND MALI REFUGEE PROBLEM

Joint Stakeholder Submission to the UN Committee Against Torture Pre-session review of Malawi

Sexual Assault and Misconduct and the ADF s Military Justice System. Air Commodore Paul Cronan AM Director-General ADF Legal Service

Assembly Bill No. 602 CHAPTER 139

The humanitarian situation in Yemen in facts and figures 11 September 2017

Minimizing Civilian Casualties, the Case of ISAF

EQUAL ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE FOR ALL MISSOURIANS

Bladed Articles and Offensive Weapons

DC Petitioner, Kurt Eichenwald (hereinafter referred to as Petitioner ) submits this Verified

B. (No. 2) v. EPO. 122nd Session Judgment No. 3692

Additional Material: Overview of Presidential and Congressional Reconstruction

Pollution (Control) Act 2013

NEGOTIATIONS WITH IRAN: Views from a Red State, a Blue State and a Swing State

A Primer for Protecting the Legal Rights of Rescuers & Animal Shelter Volunteers SECTION 1983 TO THE RESCUE

CHILD CARE CENTER Regulations GENERAL LICENSING REQUIREMENTS (Cont.) Article 4. ENFORCEMENT PROVISIONS

5. Base your answer on the map below and on your knowledge of social studies.

AR 15-6 Investigating Officer's Guide

"The Little Third Reich on Lake Superior: A History of Canadian Internment Camp R (Book Review)" by Ernest Robert Zimmerman

"Armed with Expertise: The Militarization of American Social Research During the Cold War (Book Review)" by Joy Rohde

THE STATE versus SHEENA CHIKUNDA. HIGH COURT OF ZIMBABWE BHUNU J HARARE, 10 October Criminal Review

Sherman s March through Georgia to the Sea, 1864

National Human Rights Commission NATIONAL SEMINAR ON PRISON REFORMS 2014 RECOMMENDATIONS

Analyzing the Features of the Articles of Confederation. Placard A

The Collapse Of American Criminal Justice Books

2014 Honorable Mention Estelle Wachtel-Torres, M.D. Literary Competition. Clay, Kosciuszko & 97 Commonalities By Leonard T.

US History Module 1 (A) Lesson 3. A New Nation

Imperfect Conceptions: Medical Knowledge, Birth Defects, and Eugenics in China (review)

The Americans (Reconstruction to the 21st Century)

Southern Perspective on Reconstruction

Unit 7 Our Current Government

Transcription:

Civil War Book Review Summer 2009 Article 3 Andersonvilles of the North: The Myths and Realities of Northern Treatment of Civil War Confederate Prisoners Jeanne T. Heidler Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/cwbr Recommended Citation Heidler, Jeanne T. (2009) "Andersonvilles of the North: The Myths and Realities of Northern Treatment of Civil War Confederate Prisoners," Civil War Book Review: Vol. 11 : Iss. 3, Article 3. Available at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/cwbr/vol11/iss3/3

Heidler: Andersonvilles of the North: The Myths and Realities of Northern Review Heidler, Jeanne T. Summer 2009 Gillispie, James M. Andersonvilles of the North: The Myths and Realities of Northern Treatment of Civil War Confederate Prisoners. University of North Texas Press, $24.95 hardcover ISBN 9781574412550 Prisoners of War In this important study of northern prisoner of war camps and policies governing them, James M. Gillispie counters many earlier treatments of the subject. Gillispie makes a compelling case that southern Lost Causers trying to counter condemnation of the South for the horrific conditions at southern camps such as Andersonville colored early accounts of northern prison policy and studies of prisoner of war camps. They argued that the North intentionally meted out treatment every bit as harsh without the Confederacy s mitigating excuse of lacking resources. Gillispie concedes that other historians have covered some of this ground, but their work has focused on individual camps. Gillispie instead examines all major camps to discern how commanders implemented Commissary General of Prisons William Hoffman s policies and to scrutinize Union policy on prisoners of war. Gillispie begins with an overview of post-war Union accounts of southern camps with a particular emphasis on Andersonville. Gillispie s survey of modern scholarship on northern prison camps would perhaps be more suited for an introduction, but it nonetheless provides an interesting starting point for the heart of his book, which is a thorough examination of Union prisoner of war policy and its relationship to conditions in each camp. While abuses certainly occurred in southern camps, Gillispie believes that many post-war narratives were fashioned to confirm the South s moral depravity rather than present a true picture. For example, these accounts often contrasted the treatment of prisoners in the South with the relatively humane handling of Southerners in northern camps. Northern accounts of southern barbarism also Published by LSU Digital Commons, 2009 1

Civil War Book Review, Vol. 11, Iss. 3 [2009], Art. 3 helped veterans lobbying for benefits and fueled Republican attacks on northern Democrats. Southerners, however, bristled over these narratives and responded with their own stories about Northern prisons to counter what they viewed as unfair assaults. The Lost Cause school of southern history followed close on the heels of this initial southern response. In addition to creating a pantheon of southern heroes, Lost Cause writers aggressively defended southern treatment of Union prisoners. Aside from claiming that disease was rampant in the camps because Northerners preferred to live in filth, the Lost Cause version described southern prisons as benign in intent but unavoidably harsh in practice because of Northern war policy. They blamed the northern blockade of Southern coasts for shortages in the camps and the Union s curtailment of the prisoner exchange cartel in 1863 for overcrowding. These writers principal aim, though, was to prove that conditions in northern camps were every bit as bad as those in southern camps and resulted from the intentional neglect the United States government and deliberate cruelty of northern officers. According to Gillispie, many twentieth century writers drew on these early accounts to shape their interpretations about those camps, and the result has been a distortion that persists to the present day. Gillispie, on the other hand, clearly demonstrates that the North was far better organized and efficient in establishing prisoner of war camps, and early conditions in them were consequently far superior to those in southern camps. He also persuasively argues that the North suspended the prisoner exchange cartel in 1863 because the Confederate government declared that it would not treat African American prisoners and their officers as legitimate prisoners of war, not as others have claimed that the Confederate pronouncement merely gave the Union an excuse to end a program that benefited the South. Nevertheless, the end of the cartel led to overcrowding in both Union and Confederate prisons, bloating numbers in camps designed for much smaller populations and creating horrendous problems in waste disposal and the procurement of fresh food. Disease became rampant and lethal. However, the efficient Union inspection system implemented by Hoffman generally brought about changes that improved most northern camps. While discounting accusations that the brief Union retaliation policy in 1864 led to excessive suffering, Gillispie admits that Hoffman s reputation as parsimonious was well deserved; yet he also provides ample evidence that Hoffman s thrift never resulted in undue distress among his prison populations. In fact, throughout most https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/cwbr/vol11/iss3/3 2

Heidler: Andersonvilles of the North: The Myths and Realities of Northern of the war, Hoffman insisted that prison rations match those of Union armies in the field, daily allowances that exceeded 4,000 calories per man. Nineteenth-century nutrition standards equated abundant calories with a superior diet, no matter its substance. Rations lacked sufficient vegetables and were almost totally devoid of fruit, causing malnutrition and greater susceptibility to disease, but that was hardly a calculated plan to wreck the health of southern prisoners. Gillispie insists that because it is impossible to determine how many Confederate soldiers became prisoners with pre-existing medical conditions, it is also impossible to know if they became ill after they arrived in prison camps. He is less convincing when he compares death rates in northern prisoner of war camp hospitals to the death rate at the Richmond, Virginia, Chimborazo Hospital. Because this facility was used to treat Confederate soldiers and in some cases had a higher death rate for certain diseases than many Northern prisoner of war camps, Gillispie argues that Confederate prisoners often fared better in Union camps than in the care of their own government. The argument ignores the extreme shortages of medical supplies that Chimborazo suffered throughout the war. Gillispie does not completely absolve northern commanders and doctors of responsibility for the large numbers of ill and ultimately dead prisoners in some northern camps. Some commanders were clearly incompetent, overwhelmed, or alcoholics, and sometimes were all of the above. In addition, medical arts sometimes employed practices likely to worsen the plight of the sick rather than heal them. Some doctors neglected their prison patients for more lucrative private practice and did not insist that camp hospitals maintain even minimal levels of cleanliness. Gillispie argues, however, that these were local problems, not government policy. When inspectors noted neglect, Hoffman replaced incompetent commanders and corrected abuses. Gillispie provides a welcome addition to Civil War scholarship. His understanding of how and why the myths surrounding northern policies came into being amounts to a convincing revision of existing interpretations that will be a standard source for years to come. Jeanne T. Heidler is Professor of History at the United States Air Force Academy. Along with David S. Heidler, she is the editor of the five-volume Encyclopedia of the American Civil War. She and David S. Heidler have Published by LSU Digital Commons, 2009 3

Civil War Book Review, Vol. 11, Iss. 3 [2009], Art. 3 recently completed a biography of Henry Clay that will be published by Random House later this year. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/cwbr/vol11/iss3/3 4