Andersonville: Confederacy's Cruelest Prison

Restoring unity in America after the Civil War was never going to be easy. Too many Americans felt they could never forgive wrongs committed by the enemy during the conflict. Southerners could point to the destruction wrought by General Sherman's army on its destructive march through Georgia and South Carolina. And Northerners could point to Andersonville.


This Confederate prisoner-of-war camp, which opened 150 years ago this week, was built in southeast Georgia to hold the Union prisoners who could no longer fit into Virginia's prison camps.

Its stockade, in which prisoners were detained, measured 1,600 feet by 780 feet, and was designed to hold a maximum of 10,000 prisoners.

 

Read Full Article »


Comment
Show comments Hide Comments


Related Articles