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To Die in Chicago: Confederate Prisoners at Camp Douglas 1862-65

de George Levy

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"Did Wirtz, the commandant of Andersonville prison, ever do anything as inhumanly brutal as was inflicted on Confederate prisoners in Camp Douglas?" --Sgt. T. B. Clore, Camp Douglas survivor The Chicago doctors who inspected the prison in 1863 called Camp Douglas an "extermination camp." It quickly became the largest Confederate burial ground outside of the South. What George Levy's meticulous research, including newly discovered hospital records, has uncovered is not a pretty picture. The story of Camp Douglas is one of brutal guards, deliberate starvation of prisoners, neglect of the sick, sadistic torture, murder, corruption at all levels, and a beef scandal reaching into the White House. As a result of the overcrowding and substandard provisions, disease ran rampant and the mortality rate soared. By the thousands, prisoners needlessly died of pneumonia, smallpox, and other maladies. Most were buried in unmarked mass graves. The exact number of those who died is impossible to discern because of the Union's haphazard recordkeeping and general disregard for the deceased. Among the most shocking revelations are such forms of torture as hanging prisoners by their thumbs, hanging them by their heels and then whipping them, and forcing prisoners to sit with their exposed buttocks in the ice and snow. The Confederate Camp Andersonville never saw such gratuitous barbarity.… (mais)
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Camp Douglas has been overlooked by history, and this is yet another example of "Those who win the war write the history". While reading this it was almost as if I could envision being there. This book is filled with tales of the horrible conditions that existed and the autrocities that the rebels faced at the hands of the union. Smallpox, scurvy, and a whole host of other very preventable diseases took many of these mens lives, and was put into motion by the greed of those who were left in charge of Camp Douglas and the northern politicians (including Lincoln) who were bribed or otherwise inclined to look the other way. Outright cruely by use of the "mule", making men sit in two feet of snow without any pants on, hanging by thumbs makes one wonder how these men could endure such horrible conditions. At one point in the history of this camp the guards were pretty much let loose to enforce so called "rules" as they saw fit, and they didn't hesitate to shoot for any real or imagined infraction of the rules. Horrible recordkeeping made it impossible to know exactly how many died, who they were, or where their bodies are now located. There are even stories that some of the medical schools' needs for cadavers was satisfied by stolen rebel bodies.
This is a wonderfully written book and was nicely researched. Anyone who is interested at all in the CW should read it. ( )
  CarlaR | Oct 3, 2006 |
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"Did Wirtz, the commandant of Andersonville prison, ever do anything as inhumanly brutal as was inflicted on Confederate prisoners in Camp Douglas?" --Sgt. T. B. Clore, Camp Douglas survivor The Chicago doctors who inspected the prison in 1863 called Camp Douglas an "extermination camp." It quickly became the largest Confederate burial ground outside of the South. What George Levy's meticulous research, including newly discovered hospital records, has uncovered is not a pretty picture. The story of Camp Douglas is one of brutal guards, deliberate starvation of prisoners, neglect of the sick, sadistic torture, murder, corruption at all levels, and a beef scandal reaching into the White House. As a result of the overcrowding and substandard provisions, disease ran rampant and the mortality rate soared. By the thousands, prisoners needlessly died of pneumonia, smallpox, and other maladies. Most were buried in unmarked mass graves. The exact number of those who died is impossible to discern because of the Union's haphazard recordkeeping and general disregard for the deceased. Among the most shocking revelations are such forms of torture as hanging prisoners by their thumbs, hanging them by their heels and then whipping them, and forcing prisoners to sit with their exposed buttocks in the ice and snow. The Confederate Camp Andersonville never saw such gratuitous barbarity.

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