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Official Brochure of Andersonville National Historic Site (NHS) in Georgia. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
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Andersonville
Andersonville National Historic Site
Georgia
Courage and Sacrifice
Imagine yourself as a prisoner of war (POW) struggling to survive in a disease-ridden prison, sometimes
in aching isolation, sometimes in filthy, overcrowded
conditions. Imagine the day-to-day uncertainty when
all you can think about is food, water, freedom, and
death. What was it like to be, as one soldier wrote,
“dead and yet, breathing?”
felt it, witnessed it, yet I cannot find the language to
adequately describe it.” POW experiences connect
soldiers from one generation to the next. When
William Fornes, held as a POW in Korea, visited
Andersonville he said, ”A feeling came over me that
I had something in common with these people, and I
feel that way about all wars.”
Would freedom ever come? How? When? Could you
escape? Should you try? Questions like these tormented POWs. For some, freedom came in a matter
of days; others waited torturous years. Too many
found freedom only in death.
Since the American Revolution our soldiers have
marched off to war, defending our country, families,
and liberties. Some have given their lives. Some have
been captured and held as POWs, subjected to torture, starvation, inadequate medical care, and unspeakable conditions. Some have returned home
but have been forever changed.
Andersonville prisoner George Tibbles, 4th Iowa Infantry, recalled, ”No one can imagine the agony of
continued hunger unless he has experienced it. I have
I had an undying faith that my
country was not going to forget
me. No matter how long I stayed
there, no matter even if I died
there, my country was not going
to forget me.
—Col. Tom McNish, USAF, POW Vietnam 6.5 yrs
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
Andersonville National Historic Site is the only national park to serve as a memorial to all American
prisoners of war. Once filled with desolation, despair,
and death, Andersonville today offers a place for
remembrance and reflection. Here we remember
POWs and honor their courage, service, and sacrifice.
Walk the grounds of Andersonville—the Prison Site,
where nearly 13,000 Civil War soldiers died in 14
months, mostly from disease and starvation; the
National Prisoner of War Museum, dedicated to
American soldiers who suffered captivity in all wars;
and Andersonville National Cemetery, a final resting
place for our veterans.
Illustration of Camp Sumter, above, drawn from memory by Andersonville
prisoner Pvt. Thomas O’Dea, 16th Maine infantry. nPS
Exhibit items, left to right: stockade lock and canteen, Andersonville, Civil War; radio and headset, World War II; “blood
chit,” Persian Gulf War; Holy Bible, World War II; returning
soldiers pamphlet, Korean War; toothpaste, toothbrush, and
rubber sandals, Vietnam War. NPS
These images by Keith Rocco depict POWs of various wars
supporting one another. The years changed and each war
had a different name, but the suffering endured by these
soldiers forged a common experience across time. nPS
Civil War Prisons: A Cruel Legacy
In 1901 and 1911 Emogene Marshall travelled from Ohio to visit the grave of her
brother, Edwin Niver, buried here in grave
2183. In the decades following the Civil
War, Americans were haunted by the
deaths of their loved ones in military prisons. Although Andersonville was the most
infamous Civil War prison, some 150 others were set up across the country. In 1863
the Union and Confederate governments
adopted laws of war to protect prisoners,
yet some 56,000 soldiers died in captivity.
How and why did this happen?
When the Civil War started, neither side
was prepared to hold thousands of enemy
prisoners. Although no formal exchange
system existed early in the war, both
armies paroled prisoners to lessen the bur-
den of providing for captives. Prisoners of
war were conditionally released, promising not to return to battle until officially
exchanged.
A formal exchange system adopted in
1862 failed when the Confederacy refused
to exchange or parole captured black US
soldiers. In the South, captured Union soldiers were first housed in old warehouses
and barns around Richmond, Virginia. As
the number of prisoners increased, prisons
were hastily erected in Florence, South
Carolina; Millen and Andersonville, Georgia; and other locations. In the North, Federal training camps were converted into
prisons at Camp Douglas, Illinois; Camp
Chase, Ohio; and Elmira, New York. Other
Confederate prisoners were held at Fort
Prisoner of War Camps —
North and South
McHenry in Baltimore, Fort Warren in Boston Harbor, and other coastal fortifications.
Civil War Prisons’
Death Toll
Confined soldiers suffered terribly from
overcrowding, poor sanitation, and inadequate food. Mismanagement by war-weary
governments worsened matters. Most prisoners died from disease, starvation, or
exposure. The end of the war saved hundreds of prisoners from an untimely death,
but for many the war’s end came too late.
For the men who survived, the memory of
the atrocities they witnessed was the cruelest legacy of all.
Andersonville Prison, Georgia, south end view of
stockade (detail), August 17,1864, by A.J. Riddle.
Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, VA
Camp Douglas, Chicago, Illinois, ca. 1863
Chicago History Museum, ICHi-01800
Whether held in the
North or South, a prisoner of war was more likely
to die than a soldier in
combat. Prisons were
overcrowded, short on
food, medical supplies,
shelter, and clothing,
while disease and death
ran rampant. How many
prisoners died is not
known. Surviving records
suggest some 30,000, or
15 percent of Union prisoners, and about 26,000,
or 12 percent of Confederate prisoners died.
215,000
Confederate POWs
195,000
Union POWs
Number
that died
30,000
15%
26,000
12%
Where We Held Each Other Prisoner
National Prisoner of War Museum, Prison Site, Andersonville National Cemetery
Established in 1970 Andersonville National Historic Site has three main features:
the National Prisoner of War Museum,
which also serves as a visitor center; the
Prison Site; and Andersonville National
Cemetery.
Start your visit at the POW Museum. It describes both the Civil War prison camp and
the hardships, experiences, and sacrifices
of American POWs throughout history.
Prison Site Hastily built to relieve crowding at Richmond prisons and to relocate
Union prisoners away from the battlefront, Camp Sumter military prison, commonly known as Andersonville, was an unfinished, undersupplied prison pen when
the first prisoners arrived in February
1864. Intended to hold 10,000 men, the
16½-acre pen had a 15-foot-high stockade
wall and two gates. Nineteen feet inside
the stockade was the “deadline,” marked
by a simple post and rail fence. Guards sta-
The camp was covered with vermin all over. You
could not sit down anywhere. You might go and
pick the lice all off of you, and sit down for a half
a moment and get up and you would be covered
with them. In between these two hills it was very
swampy, all black mud, and where the filth was
emptied it was all alive; there was a regular buzz
there all the time, and it was covered with large
white maggots.
tioned in sentry boxes shot anyone who
crossed this line. The stockade was expanded to 26½-acres in June, but POWs
continued to arrive, and by August over
32,000 struggled to survive in what the
men called “hell on earth.”
Today this area is outlined with double
rows of white posts. Two sections of the
stockade wall have been reconstructed,
the north gate and the northeast corner.
In 1901 and 1911 Emogene
Marshall travelled from
Ohio to visit the grave of
her brother, Edwin Niver.
— Sgt. Samuel Corthell
Co. C, 4th Massachusetts Cavalry
From To the Memory of My Brother by
emogene Niver Marshall
Andersonville National Cemetery
Andersonville
National Historic Site
Andersonville National Cemetery, established
July 26, 1865, is a permanent resting place of
honor for deceased veterans. The first interments, in February 1864, were soldiers who
died in the prison. They are in sections E, F, H,
J, and K. By 1868 over 800 more interments in
sections B and C—Union soldiers who died in
hospitals, other prison camps, and on battlefields of central and southwest Georgia—
brought the total burials to over 13,800. Five
hundred of these graves are marked ”unknown US soldier.” Today the cemetery contains over 19,000 interments in 18 sections lettered A through R (no section O), and one
memorial section. Sections are in four quadrants separated by cemetery roads.
Please respect graves and funerals that might
be in progress. Use the Nationwide Grave
Locator, gravelocator.cem.va.gov, to locate
burials online.
Please help maintain a reverent atmosphere
by following these cemetery regulations:
• Pets are prohibited on landscaped and
grassy areas. Pets on leash are welcome
in other parts of the park.
• No jogging, picnicking, or recreation
activities
• Keep voices lowered
• Place all litter in refuse containers
• Do not sit on cemetery headstones or
monuments
• Respect the privacy of all funerals
Dorence Atwater
Nineteen-year-old
Dorence Atwater, 2nd
New York Cavalry, was
captured in July 1863.
He spent eight months
in Richmond, Virginia,
prisons before arriving
at Andersonville. In
June 1864 he was detailed to work in the
hospital where he recorded the names and
grave locations of the
deceased. He secretly
copied this list and
smuggled it out when
he was released.
After the war he asked
the War Department
to publish the list, but
they refused. He met
Clara Barton, a battlefield nurse, who was
looking for missing soldiers. She was eager to
help. Barton accompanied Dorence in the US
Army Quartermaster
expedition to Ander-
sonville to mark the
graves of the dead.
Atwater’s death register, published in 1866,
enabled many families
to locate their loved
ones. Thanks to his
work, over 95 percent
of the graves were
identified.
Right: Soldiers were
buried side by side in
trench graves.
connecticut state library
Georgia ARchives
Visiting Andersonville
Accessibility
We strive to make our
facilities, services, and
programs accessible to
all. For information go
to the visitor center,
ask a ranger, call, or
check our website.
Federal law prohibits
firearms in certain
facilities in this park,
including the National
Prisoner of War Museum. Those areas are
marked with signs at
all public entrances.
For firearms regulations check the park
website.
Capt. Henry Wirz
Black Soldiers: Captives for Freedom
State ARCHIVES of florida
Many of the African
American soldiers and
white officers imprisoned at Andersonville
were captured at the
Battle of Olustee, Florida (above) on February
20, 1864, including
Corp. James Gooding,
54th Massachusetts
Infantry. Gooding died
a prisoner on July 17,
1864 (left).
nPS
On January 1, 1863, Abraham Lincoln
issued the Emancipation Proclamation
opening the door for the enlistment of
African Americans, enslaved and free, in
the Union army. The North demanded all
captured soldiers be exchanged equally,
but the South refused to exchange black
prisoners. Some Confederate officers
ordered African Americans killed, not
captured. Some former slaves were returned to their owners, some were sold,
and others were forced to work for the
Confederacy.
Records show over 100 African American
soldiers were imprisoned at Andersonville.
Black prisoners set up their own area near
the south gate, received no medical treatment, and were forced to work the burial
detail and other hard labor. They were discriminated against by captors and fellow
Preservation and Safety
Stay on roadways, do
not park on grassy areas. • Do not climb on
earthworks. • Do not
disturb plants, animals,
monuments, buildings,
relics, or artifacts. • Possession or use of metal
detectors is prohibited.
• Natural conditions can
be hazardous. Wear
shoes to protect against
sandspurs in the grass.
• Watch for snakes, poison ivy, and fire ants
(red sandy mounds.)
• Be alert and observe
posted traffic regulations.
Swiss-born Henry Wirz enlisted in the
Confederate Army, was wounded, and
assigned to General Winder, commander
of military prisons. Wirz worked at prisons
At the trial of Captain Wirz black prisoners in Virginia and Alabama, before taking
command of Andersonville in March 1864.
testified they were treated “just the same
At war’s end, nearly 1,000 individuals were
as any of the rest.” However, punishment
was severe. Pvt. William C. Jennings, 8th US tried for violations of
the laws of war. CapColored Troops, received 30 lashes for not
tain Wirz remains
going to work and was put in the stocks,
the most famous of
while Isaac Hawkins of the 54th Massacuthe officers executed
setts Infantry received 250 of 500 lashes.
Records show 33 African Americans died at for war crimes.
Andersonville and were buried side-by-side
with fellow prisoners.
prisoners, who believed they were the
reason the Union refused to make prisoner
exchanges.
Capt. Henry Wirz (top
right) nPS
Wirz was hanged on
November 10, 1865, in
Washington, D.C.
Library of Congress
More Information
Andersonville
National Historic Site
496 Cemetery Road
Andersonville, GA
31711
229-924-0343
www.nps.gov/ande
Andersonville National
Historic Site is in southwest Georgia, 12 miles
north of Americus and
11 miles south of Montezuma on GA 49. No
public transportation
serves the park.
Andersonville National
Historic Site is one of
over 400 parks in the
National Park System.
To learn more about
national parks and
National Park Service
programs in America’s
communities, visit
www.nps.gov.
✩GPO:20xx—xxx-xxx/xxxxx Reprint 20xx
Printed on recycled paper.
After the War
What happened to Andersonville prisoners?
Hundreds died on their way home when
the steamboat Sultana exploded and sank
near Memphis, Tennessee, April 27, 1865.
Many others died of diseases contracted
during their imprisonment.
In 1890 the Grand Army of the Republic
(GAR), a Union veterans organization, purchased the site. The Woman’s Relief Corps
(WRC) of the GAR took charge of the property, hoping to create a memorial park. In
1910 the WRC donated the prison site to
the people of the United States. It was administered by the War Department and the
Department of the Army until Congress
designated it a national historic site in
October 1970.
Some survivors made post-war
pilgrimages to the infamous
site. The photo (right) was
taken in 1897.
Georgia ARchives