Overcast
52°
Crystal Lake, IL
Overcast|Forecast »

Treatment of Civil War prisoners repulsive

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 1)

Even so, the camp commandant, Capt. Henry Wirz, was one of the few Confederate officials or military officers to be tried at war’s end for, what would be called today, “crimes against humanity,” or simply the cold-hearted, barbaric killing of captured enemy soldiers.

Although probably innocent of actually or deliberately killing anyone himself, Wirz appears to have been the scapegoat for revenge-minded northerners who blamed the South for the bloodbath of the “War of the Rebellion.”

Wirz was found guilty of, in what was probably a kangaroo court trial, unnecessary cruelty and murder of military combatants and hanged on Nov. 10, 1865. His last words were reported to have been that he was innocent of all charges of cruelty and murder.

It should be remembered that conditions in northern military prisons were not much better than those of the Confederacy. In such Union prison camps as those in Alton, Rock Island, Springfield and Chicago in Illinois, and Johnson’s Island, Ohio (where the husbands of the two petitioning wives were held), Confederate prisoners died at a rate of 12 percent. At the notorious Elmira Prison in New York, the death rate was more than 20 percent.

The audacious petitioning of two devoted Confederate wives saved, from what might have been at least ill-treatment or even a lingering death as military prisoners, two Confederate soldiers who were spared the all-too-often inhumane treatment endured by military prisoners in both the North and the South.

• Crystal Lake resident Joseph C. Morton is professor emeritus at Northeastern Illinois University and author of “The American Revolution” and “Shapers of the Great Debate at the Constitutional Convention of 1787.” Email him at demjcm@com.cast.net.

||2|Next Page

Comments


Reader Poll

How concerned are you about the overuse of antibiotics?

Very
Somewhat
Not at all