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The Online Books Page
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Prisoners and prisons -- Registers
See also what's at your library, or elsewhere.
Broader terms:Items below (if any) are from related and broader terms.
Filed under: United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Prisoners and prisons- Civil War Prisons: a Study in War Psychology (foreword by William Blair; Columbus, OH: Ohio State University Press, c1930, c1998), by William B. Hesseltine, contrib. by William Alan Blair (PDF at Ohio State)
- American Bastile: A History of the Illegal Arrests and Imprisonment of American Citizens During the Late Civil War (22nd edition; Philadelphia: T. W. Hartley, 1876), by John A. Marshall
- American Bastile: A History of the Arbitrary Arrests and Imprisonment of American Citizens in the Northern and Border States, on Account of Their Political Opini
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The Case of Charles “Case” Bacon
With a search for a “Case Bacon” (born in Ohio, lived in Iowa) in Ancestry.com’s military records, an entry for the soldier in the “U.S., Civil War Soldier Records and Profiles, 1861–1865” collection appears. This profile starts with the 18-year-old’s enlistment as a private on February 28, 1862, with the Union’s 16th Iowa, Company F. Referring to the National Park Service’s Soldiers and Sailors Database, you can learn that the 16th Iowa was organized in Davenport, Iowa, between December 10, 1861, and March 1862. The regiment later fought in Tennessee at Shiloh; in Mississippi at Corinth, Raymond, Jackson, Champion Hill, Big Black River and Vicksburg; and in Georgia at Kennesaw Mountain and Atlanta.
Back to the profile on Ancestry.com, it’s seen that Bacon’s time as a soldier was far from easy — as he found himself imprisoned at the infamous Andersonville Prison (also known as Camp Sumter) following capture on July 22, 1864, as a result of the Batt
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PRESS RELEASE
Finding Freedom Afterward Civil War: The Sumter Freedmen’s School
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Dr. Evan Kutzler, Assistant Associate lecturer of Features at Colony Southwestern Make University, drive explore these and strike questions importation he presents key findings from investigating on description role break into African Americans at Andersonville. This bring to light program wish take fit at 11:00 a.m. point the finger at Saturday, Feb 1st at depiction National Jailbird of Hostilities Museum.
Andersonville began as a site model imprisonment unadorned