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The deadly equation that killed over 54,000 Civil War prisoners is quite simple. POWs + small living area + severe overcrowding + no hygiene + bad water supply + sewage + no shelter + exposure to the elements + substandard food + disease = death. |
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My suspicion is that there was enough malice on both sides to have artificially created those conditions, the Confederacy has some level of mitigation in that they had limited resources throughout the war and as such could never have provided much more than the basics without adopting some creative thinking (prison farms for example). My impression overall is that both sides went out of their way to neglect POW's, places like Elmira and Point Lookout were as bad as anything the Confederates could come up with. |
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There is no doubt that there was malice on both sides and the Union was motivated to treat rebel prisoners badly once word got out on the conditions of the POW camps in the south. We should consider the scale of housing that many POWs. Multiple sources puts the number of POWs at 410,000 during the Civil War. The US population in 1860 was 31.4 million. The Civil War POWs represent 1.3% of the overall US population. 1.3% of today's US population is 4,242,000 people, or slightly greater than the population of LA. Our modern society would have issues housing that many people on such short notice. I could not find any numbers on the US prison population in 1860. The 1880 census said there were 57,000 inmates in the US. I also know that the prison population grew significantly after the Civil War. I make a wild ![]() Lastly, I assumed that the officers running the prisons were below average. Good officers were hard to come by in the Civil War. Competent officers would be given combat commands. I bet prison camp assignments were given to those officers who were incompetent or had made mistakes prior to their assignment. |
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My general argument though is not that there were no mitigating circumstances that contributed to the conditions POWs endured but rather that the North could have offered far better conditions than they did.
For example, by the end of the war, Elmira prison had a 25% death rate while the much-maligned Andersonville had 28% which cost the Commandant Henry Wirz his life as a war criminal. Confederate prisoners at Alton, Illinois Federal prison suffered from scurvy, anaemia and other diseases brought on by malnutrition. This is ironic, since unlike the South, Alton never experienced a food shortage so my argument is that while the Confederates could have tried harder to improve the welfare of POWs they did not have the resources to do much indeed I read in several sources Union POWs in many areas received the same rations that Confederate soldiers received whereas Confederate POWs in the North were dying of malnutrition in areas that had no food shortages which does back up the argument that conditions in the North were deliberately maintained. |
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