It was a place no one wanted to go…but no one who went there was given a choice. On February 24, 1864, when the first Union prisoners arrived at Andersonville prison, it was still under construction in southern Georgia. Before long, the prison went from brand new to infamous, as nearly a quarter of its inmates died while in captivity. No wonder it was a place no one wanted to go. The warden, Henry Wirz, was at the top of the “problem list.” Wirz was executed after the war for the brutality and mistreatment that occurred under his watch. His methods of abuse of prisoners were absolutely horrific.

Camp Sumter, better known as Andersonville, was built after the prisoner exchange system between the North and South broke down in 1863 over disputes about the treatment of Black soldiers. Thrown together quickly using slave labor, the stockade sat in the Georgia woods near a railroad but far from the fighting. Covering 16 acres, it was meant to have wooden barracks, but skyrocketing lumber prices stalled construction, leaving Union prisoners under the open sky in makeshift “shebangs” cobbled from wood scraps and blankets. A nearby stream started out as their water source, but within months it was fouled by human waste.

Andersonville was designed to hold 10,000 men…a shockingly large amount. Nevertheless, within just six months, over three times that number were crammed inside its walls. That was the least of the problems Andersonville Prison had. The prison soon became famous for its extreme overcrowding, lack of supplies, and staggering death toll. From February 1864 to May 1865, around 45,000 Union soldiers were confined there, and nearly 13,000 died from disease, malnutrition, and exposure. In fact, over 100 men died each day during the worst periods. By 1890, fewer than 1,000 survivors remained. Andersonville prison camp was one of the grimmest places of the American Civil War. Erosion along the creek banks created a swamp that took up much of the compound. Food rations were scarce, and at times, half the prisoners were sick. Some guards mistreated inmates, and there was frequent violence between different prisoner groups. The story of Andersonville is a stark reminder of the human cost of war and the resilience of the human spirit in the face of some of the most overwhelming hardships. Andersonville stood out as the worst of the many grim Civil War prisons on both sides. Wirz ultimately faced the consequences for the cruelty there, being executed after the war ended.

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