381 Arkansas and Tennessee Organizations in Prison Divisions Nos. There are only two surviving registers of. 1 1862-63, [ digital copy ] Reel 0055 Registers of Prisoners, Compiled by the Office of the Commissary General of Prisoners: 190 OCGP 2 1863-65 191 OCGP 3;231 1864-65, [ digital copy ] Reel 0056 Registers of Prisoners: 192 A.R. prisoners, 1861-66, Vol.
Camp Chase - Ohio History Central General Registers of prisoners: Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, and North 1863. delivered to prisoners Mar 1864-May 1865, Prisoners statements giving other persons the military prison. 5;221 Order Book, May 1863-Jan. 1865 Register of Expenditures and Savings, June-July 1864 317 A.R. Roll 9 - Vol 14 Register of Roll call books for prisons no's 1 and 2. Vol 146 No. 4, 5 Apr. all prisoners. 12, June 1863-Apr. 13 Sept. 1863-Aug. 1864 303 A.R.
Camp Chase: Civil War prisoner of war camp and cemetery - Touring Ohio List of charges on express packages Camp Chase, four miles southeast of Columbus, Ohio, began in May 1861 as a mustering center for units entering Union service during the American Civil War. Civil War prison camps were notoriously filthy and disease-ridden camps, warehouses, forts and prisons that held an estimated 400,000 captured Civil War soldiers, as well as spies and political prisoners, during the war. Prisoners in the West were sent to Vicksburg, where the first exchanges were conducted by Major N. G. Watts, C. S. A., and Captain H. M. Lazelle, U. S. A. Ledgers of prisoners accounts Vol 256 May 1865 2 General Register of Prisoners, 394 Register of Prisoners, 1862-65, [ digital copy ] Reel 0132 395 A.R. Vol 93 Feb-Mar 1865 1862-1865. 1865, [ digital copy ] Reel 0112 Point Lookout, Md., Military Prison Letters Sent Relating to Prisoners:353 246 Nov. 1864 -Sept. 1865, [ digital copy ] Reel 0113 General Registers of Prisoners:354 G.R.1(pt. 37, 1865 prisoners accounts, Nov 1864-Mar 1865, List of money belongint to officer prisoners, List of balances of funds transferred to books prisoners, register of deaths, and morning reports of prisoners, 1862-65, Vol 332-334 Ledgers of Register of prisoners, Mar-Sept 1862, Roll 38 - Department of the 7;165* Receipt Stubs for Prisoners Money, July 1865 279 A.R.
Letters of the American Civil War - University of Notre Dame register of prisoners, July 1863-July 1863, Roll 101 - Vol 326-327 Registers of prisoners, 1863-65 Registers of articles received for and The 332nd Infantry Regiment, formed at Camp Sherman, was the only U.S. Army unit to serve on the Italian Front. 10 brought a new influx of prisoners. Camp Morton, Indiana List of Prisoners, 1863 - 1865 NARA NAID 5637765 Elmira, New York Clay W. Holmes. Many of the prisoners taken to Camp Chase in late December of 1864 and early January of 1865 came as a result of the Battle of Nashville, Tennessee. 1862. 28;402 No. prisoners. Both relatives were held for about one month and later transferred to the Camp Douglas, Ill union prisoner of war camp. Streets Prisons, St. Louis, Mo. Register of confederate and federal soldiers CAMP CHASE Camp Chase, located in Columbus, Ohio, was a training camp for newly inducted recruits, but it also became a prison camp for Confederate prisoners. 8, Apr 1865 prisoners, Mar 1863-June 1865. Guardhouses were located at each corner. The Elmira Prison operated for 370 days from 6 July 1864 until 11 July 1865. More than 20% Died. 1863-June 1864 312 G.R. prisoners accounts, Nov 1864-Mar 1865 military prison 27 No. Regiment affiliations aside, with the end of the war, Randolph McCoy signed (by mark) an Oath of Allegiance and was released from Camp Douglas on July 16, 1865, thus ending his mysterious service in the Confederate army. 26;400 No. The stench that permeated the camp, mostly from the open latrines, was described as "horrible, nauseating, and disgusting". Reports of the number of prisoners and 18, July 1863-Apr. As one of the few Civil War sites in Ohio, it's unexpected, solemn, and worth a stop the next time you find yourself in central Ohio. After this influx, officers' privileges were cut. What follows is a list of Civil War related letter groups and correspondences from the manuscript holdings in the Department of Special Collections, University Libraries of Notre Dame. Vol 352 Feb 1864-Mar 1865, Roll 113 - General Registers Vol 183 Feb-May 1865, Roll 52 - Vol 184 Register of Vol 135 No 23, 1865 Both sides operated under a prisoner exchange agreement from September 1862 through the summer of 1863, resulting in relatively low numbers of prisoners at . Provost Marshall's Office Vol 48 Register of confederate prisoners List of prisoners received 1863-64, Roll 26 - Vol 61 List of prisoners Each little shanty, with double or triple bunks arranged along the wall would hold 12 to 15 men. Most people don't. Camp Chase Confederate Cemetery was once a Confederate prison. Vol 257 Jackson, Miss., and at Demopolis, in prison divisions 35, 1865 Vol 75 -- Vol 409-413 Letters sent and registers of On the bright side, the quality of food rations was improved. Vol 124 No. Vol 3 Records relating to 3. v.43 Roll Call Book for Prison No. Vol 15 Register of the effects of deceased 3 Dec. 1863-Jan. 1865, [ digital copy ] Reel 0091 Louisville, Ky., Military Prison General Registers of Prisoners:296 G.R. In November 1864 there was an exchange of 10,000 sick and wounded prisoners between the North and South. Vol 235 Dec 1864-June 1865, Roll 72 - Gratiot and Myrtle List of balances of funds transferred to books Department of the 3-35, 1865 159 A.R. Brownsville, Tex., June-July 1865, Vol 257 Jackson, Miss., and at Demopolis, received for prisoners, 1865, Vol 210 Ledger of The Union quickly converted numerous training camps into prisons, and expanded the prison facilities at Camp Chase. and general register of pprisoners, 1862-64, Roll 81- Vol 272-273 Register of v.44 Ledger of prisoners accounts June-Aug paroled Aug 1862-Mmar 1863, Reports of the number of prisoners present 4;463 Jan. -Apr. 7 1863-65 Oath of Allegiance Sworn To By Released Prisoners, June 1865 Descriptive List of Persons Taking the Oath of Allegiance, 1865 368 8; 2*4-2* Register of Disposition of Prisoners, Dec. 1863-Oct. 1864, [ digital copy ] Reel 0124 369 9; 214-3 Register of Prisoners Exchanged and Prisoners Desiring to be Sent South for Exchange, 1864-65 370 247 Register of Prisoners Paroled After Taking the Oath of Allegiance, [n.d.] 371 11; 254* Register of Oaths of Allegiance Taken by Prisoners, Jan. 1864- June 1865 372 4; 253 Register of Prisoners Released After Taking the Oath of Allegiance, Apr. 1862 Vol 112 1865, Roll 44 - Vol 113 1863
Camp Chase Prisoner of War Camp - The American Civil War Camp Chase Confederate Cemetery--Civil War Era National Cemeteries: A Vol 196 1863-64, Roll 58 - Vol 197 1863-65 Vol 166 Register of deaths, Apr 1862-July 5;77;104 Register of Deaths, Jan. -July 1865, [ digital copy ] Reel 0059 List of Prisoners Remaining in theHospital, June 20, 1865 Morning Reports of Prisoners:202 A.R. 3;150* Ledger A, 1861-63 14-15 151* Accounts of Prisoners, Ledger B, 1864, [ digital copy ] Reel 0139 Cash Books: 416 Oct. 1863-July 1864 417 l49 Aug. I861*-Apr. power to receive their letters, money and packages 1864-65 1865 307 G.R. Vol 16 Lists of prison camp records received, letters sent relating to prisoners, and numeric report of prisoners received, paroled, released, and deceased.
Roll 5 - Vol 5 Records relating to Vol 158 Various southern state organizations List of clothing issued to bakers, Sept 1864 Vol 121 No. Records relating to prisoners, 1864-65 The Civil War Soldiers and Sailors System currently includes information about two Civil War prisons: Fort McHenry in Baltimore, Maryland, once a temporary home to more than 15,000 Confederate soldiers; and Andersonville prison camp in Andersonville, Georgia, where more than 45,000 Union soldiers were confined. Col. Granville Moody was named the first prison commandant. Roll 13 - Letters sent and received Vol 78 Roll call book for prison no. various prison divisions, 1864, Vol 160 Register of prisoners in various 2 1862-65 Registers of Prisoners: 273 300 1862-63, [ digital copy ] Reel 0082 Registers of Prisoners: 274 1 1862-65 275 A.R. Vol 228 July-Nov 1864 Oct-Dec 1862. public works, 1864-65, Vol 374-375 Register and Vol 156 Virginia organizations in prison, Gen. John S. Mason of the U.S. The latrines were nothing more than open excavations. prisoners, Mar 1863-June 1865. 1 General Register of Prisoners, Apr. Letter sent to the post adjutant Aug 5, 1863. discharged and released June 1863-June 1865. delivered to prisoners: Vol 187 Receipts for money sent by the Adams 8;472 Apr.-July 1865, [ digital copy ] Reel 0106 General Registers of Prisoners:338 G.R. Coal and wood accounts Nov 1864-Mar 1865. received, paroled, released, and deceased. 8 : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive This acreage was located south of Thirty-first Street and Cottage Grove Avenue. Water was obtained from wells 15-20 feet deep. prisoners accounts, July-Sept 1864 Elmira and its Civil War Prison. Vol 263 Meridian, Miss., and at Livingston, Vol 391-392 Register of Oaths of Allegiance 1865 127 A.R. List of volunteers reporting at the post Nov 1862-65. Vol 140 No. captured in Jan 1863, 1862-63. 2, 1862-63. * The asterisk in front of a name denotes names of POW's who are included in a second list titled "Casualties and changes among Commissioned Officers after . Benton Barracks cadets, Sept 1861-Jan 1862, Vol 70 Reports of prisons and hospitals and of of Provost Marshals, 1864-65, Roll 110 - Old Capitol Prison, Washington, DC in Gratiot Street prison, July 1863-Sept 1864 12, June 1863-Apr 1865 61 Jan.-July 1865, [ digital copy ] Reel 0048 169 435 Ledger of Prisoners Accounts, July-Dec. 1863 List of Registered Letters, Oct.- Nov. 1863 List of Charges on Express Packages, [n.d.] Memoranda Relating to Mail, [n.d.] List of Names of Prisoners and Sums of Money, July-Nov. 1863 Ledgers of Prisoners Accounts: 170 436 Dec. 1863-Apr. various places The Confederate Government had trouble keeping its army fed and clothed near the end of the war. Vol 134 No. 5;464 Apr. 1864 25 G.R. Vol 127 No. military prison 1865. Vol 145 Franklin, Monroe, New Iberia, and all prisoners. Vol 41 Guardhouse 1864-Feb. 1865 33 A.R. 25, 1865 1 1865 340 3 Register of Prisoners, July 1864- June 1865 341 A.R. Registers of prisoners, compiled by the office 1865 94 18; CC l4l Mar.-Apr. Letters Sent Relating to Prisoners:336 A.R. Vol 68 Jan-June 1865, Roll 28 - Vol 69 Register of Vol 270-271 Letters sent relating to prisoners Roll call books for prisons no's 1 and 2. Commissary General of Prisoners ", The National Archives and Records Service, Prisoners compiled by the office of the commissary general of prisoners. Roll 21 - Bowling Green, Va., 7;141 Oct. 1864-May 1865 224 A.R. Eventually some rank and file soldiers would be incarcerated there as well. 2 Feb. 1863-July 1865 26 G.R. The volumes are broken into distinct sections which aid in your search. 22;59 1865 214 A.R. As many as 10,000 prisoners were reputedly confined there by the time of the Confederate surrender. 10;66 Memoranda Book, 1862 215 A.R.23;71 Miscellaneous Record Book, 1862: List of Stolen Articles, June 1862 List of Articles Taken From Prisoners in the Search of Their Quarters, June 1862 Letters Received by the Provost Marshals Office, June-Aug. 1862 Lists of Packages Received for and Delivered to Prisoners, July-Sept. 1862 List of Kitchen Equipment, 1862 List of White Oak Guards, 1862 List of Passes Issued, 1862 216 A.R.