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The North’s Last POW Camp
« on: November 17, 2018, 04:20:15 pm »

The North’s Last POW Camp


By David L. Keller
Winter 2019 • MHQ Magazine
During the Civil War, more Confederate soldiers died at Chicago’s Camp Douglas than on any battlefield.

IT WAS FEBRUARY 1862, AND ON THE OUTSKIRTS OF CHICAGO, A SMALL CROWD GATHERED and watched anxiously as several thousand Confederate prisoners of war climbed out of a long string of boxcars. Under the guard of Union soldiers, augmented by local police officers and volunteer constables, the captives—“traitors,” the Chicago Tribune branded them—marched some 400 yards to the gates of Camp Douglas, a Union army camp that had been hastily repurposed as a military prison to accommodate them.

By historynet

A three-volume history of Chicago published in 1885 included this aerial view of Camp Douglas but noted that it had “already ceased to exist, except as a memory.” (Kankakee Community College (Archive.org)

The arrival of the Confederate POWs, who vastly outnumbered their guards, had been a source of worry for some in Chicago who feared that the camp couldn’t contain them. What if they broke free and attacked? But once Chicagoans got a look at the defeated soldiers, the fears surely dissipated. The prisoners, who had no winter coats or blankets, had endured several days of travel on unheated boats up the Mississippi River to Cairo, Illinois, and then more exposure to frigid temperatures during the 300-mile train trip to Chicago.

http://www.historynet.com/norths-last-pow-camp.htm