Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Brief Historical Summary

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Brief Historical Summary

    From a book/pamphlet I received for Christmas:

    ***********

    “The Immortal Six Hundred”

    Excerpted from Fort Pulaski National Monument, Georgia, National Park Service Historical Handbook Series No. 18, Washington D.C., 1954, pp 38-40.

    Late in October 1864, Fort Pulaski became involved in one of the most barbaric episodes of the Civil War when more than 500 prisoners of war—Confederate officers of rank from lieutenant to lieutenant colonel—were brought to Cockspur from a stockade on Morris Island in Charleston Harbor. These officers, captured in battle and representing every Southern State and the border States of Missouri, Maryland, and Kentucky, were the victims of a cruel policy of retaliation and are known in Southern history as “The Immortal Six Hundred.”

    The dismal story began at Charleston when Confederate Gen. Samuel Jones, in an attempt to lift the bombardment of that city, adopted a dangerous stratagem of using prisoners of war as a shield.

    On June 13, 1864, Jones notified Union Gen. J. G. Foster, Commandant of the Department of the South, that 5 generals and 45 field officers of the U. S. Army had been quartered in a part 0£ the city which for many months had been exposed night and day to the fire of Federal guns. Foster immediately retaliated by requesting that 55 Confederate Officers of equal rank be sent from the prison at Fort Delaware to be placed in a stockade on Morris Island under the guns of Fort Sumter.

    This ugly situation was ended by a general exchange of the officers on August 3, but on that day Jones placed 600 more Federal officers in the residential section of Charleston, which was under bombardment. Federal reaction was prompt. Six hundred additional Confederate officers were sent down from Fort Delaware and this time they were placed in the stockade on Morris Island under the guns of Fort Sumter.

    What benefit Jones really expected to derive from his strategy is certainly not clear. There is evidence that he soon regretted the game he was playing and made every effort possible to have the Federal officers moved out of Charleston, but, due to the fortunes of war, Jones was powerless to stop the chain of events he had started. He could not get rid of his unwelcome guests, and, as General Sherman, poised for his march through Georgia, threatened the security of the Confederate prison at Andersonville, Ga., hundreds of new Federal prisoners sent from that place began to arrive in Charleston every day.

    In October, Fate intervened. Yellow fever, which had been smoldering in Charleston £or many weeks, became epidemic, and the acute danger from this source gave Jones the excuse to remove the prisoners without authority from his superiors. He sent the officers to Columbia and the men to Florence. On learning of this move, Foster ordered the Confederate prisoners from Morris Island to Fort Pulaski.

    When the “Immortal Six Hundred” arrived at Cockspur Island, they presented a forlorn picture. Uniforms in tatters, barefooted, suffering from diarrhea and hacking coughs, their ranks had already been reduced to 520. Forty-nine were in hospitals, 4 had escaped, 2 had been exchanged, and 2 had taken the oath of allegiance. Six were in a convict prison on Hilton Head Island for attempted escape, 13 were unaccounted for, and 4 were buried in the sands of Morris Island.

    At Fort Pulaski, Col. Philip P. Brown, Jr., commandant of the post, greeted the prisoners and promised to make the fort the model military prison of the United States. He said that he had already requisitioned blankets and clothing, full army rations, and plenty of fuel.

    Colonel Brown, 157th New York Volunteers, was a completely humane man and won the respect of his Confederate prisoners, but he could not carry out the promises he had made. His requisitions were ignored. In consequence, he could issue neither blankets nor clothing. Out of his garrison supplies he fed the prisoners as well as he could, but fuel on Cockspur was scarce and fires in the cookstoves could be lighted but once a day. When the weather turned cold there was neither wood nor coal to heat the prison casemates. Because of his attitude of humanity, Brown drew upon himself the censure of his commanding general.

    On December 15, Brown was ordered to impose a starvation ration composed of one-quarter pound of bread, 10 ounces ~f cornmeal, and one-half pint of pickles daily, and 1 ounce of salt every 5 days. Under this new order prisoners were permitted to secure additional food from sutlers, but since they had no money and were not allowed to receive funds from the Confederate States, they could purchase no food.

    For 43 days in the coldest months of an unusually severe winter, the prisoners at Pulaski subsisted on this cornmeal and pickle diet. Cats and dogs that strayed through the prison bars were immediately cooked and eaten. But day by day the men grew weaker. At night, with no blankets and no warming fires, they had to keep moving about or freeze. By mid-January 1865, scurvy began to take its toll. Meanwhile, Savannah had surrendered to General Sherman, and as a result the Federal forces in the far South were entirely reorganized.

    On January 21, Fort Pulaski became a part of the District of Savannah under the command of Bvt. Maj. Gen. Cuvier Grover, U. S. Volunteers, and, on January 27, following an inspection by Grover's medical director, Pulaski's prisoners were put back on full rations. This timely action saved the lives of many of the men. On March 5 the long ordeal was ended. Four hundred and sixty-five survivors of the original “Six Hundred” were returned to Fort Delaware.

    **********

    Hopefully the above is of some use to folks attending the event.

  • #2
    Re: Brief Historical Summary

    This information is a good start. I still strongly encourage folks to read Immortal Captives. It will really tell the tale and give you all a good idea of what we wish to recreate.
    [FONT=Times New Roman][b]Tripp Corbin[/b][/FONT]
    [URL=http://www.westernindependentgrays.org/]Western Independent Grays[/URL]
    [URL=http://www.armoryguards.org/]Armory Guards[/url]

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Brief Historical Summary

      Maybe someone can help me with this...

      I've been researching the background of the officer I plan on portraying at the event but have been stumped as to certain details of his imprisonment.

      Capt. Edward Carter was one of the wounded prisoners sent to Beaufort, S.C. before the bulk of prisoners were landed on Morris Island. I cannot find any account of the wounded in that hospital returning to join the others either on Morris Island or to Ft. Pulaski. I may need to change my individual if I cannot find evidence of him being at Ft. Pulaski.

      He was captured on July 3rd in the attack by Pickett's Division and was wounded in both legs, every source I've read explains he was on crutches the rest of his life and he was moved to Ft. McHenry and then to Ft. Delaware and eventually ended up with the IM 600 on the trip south. He is listed on the hospital rolls for the wounded offloaded in Beaufort and then shows up as being exchanged in December of '64. If he was never at Ft. Pulaski then I cannot justify portraying him (I already bought a set of period crutches too).

      Any info on whether or not the wounded in Beaufort caught up to the main body of prisoners?

      Any help is appreciated!
      Cheers,
      [COLOR=Red]Kirby Smith[/COLOR]

      Loblolly Mess

      Too many ancestors who served and events on the schedule to post here...

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Brief Historical Summary

        According to "The Biographical Roster of the Immortal 600, by Mauriel Joslyn" he never went to Pulaski.
        Coley Adair
        Critter Company

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Brief Historical Summary

          Coley,
          Thank you. I dont have a copy of the Biographical Roster but I do have the Immortal Captives book and couldn't find the answer in that book. Looks like I'll be changing to Capt. Hempstead then. They were in school together at VMI and I do have more information on him.

          Cheers,
          Cheers,
          [COLOR=Red]Kirby Smith[/COLOR]

          Loblolly Mess

          Too many ancestors who served and events on the schedule to post here...

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Brief Historical Summary

            Kirby,
            Last weekend at the Charleston Civil War Relic Show, I picked up a reprint of:

            “Prison Life During the Rebellion. Being a Brief Narrative of the Miseries and Sufferings of SIX HUNDRED Confederate Prisoners Sent from Fort Delaware to Morris Island to be Punished.” By Fritz Fuzzlebug (one of their number) 1869

            Although my copy is a reprint, printed for the SCV about 25 years ago or so. In the copy there is an:

            Captain E. Carter from the 8th Virginia Infantry captured at Gettysburg on July 3rd 1863. His home town is listed as Henrico.

            Now the list does not say anything about any of them being exchanged, or who died when, or if they made it to Ft. Pulaski. It just states that everyone on the list went south.

            Then again I haven’t looked at any other list other then the one in this book I have here in front of me, and do not know how it differs from what you have.
            Dane Utter
            Washington Guard

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Brief Historical Summary

              Dane,
              Thanks, I did a pretty deep look into his background prior to capture. I was fortunate enough to have done a capstone paper on his class at VMI, have a list of the classes he took, and if i can find it a list of what his marks were in those classes (grades).

              He grew up outside the town of Salem, Virginia (now Marshall) in Fauqier County in Northern Virginia and entered VMI in August of 1860. I found letters from his roommates in the archives and a few other things pertaining to his life as a cadet, resignation when the war came, and then followed his enlistment into the 8th Virginia Infantry and eventual bump up the chain of command to Captain by Gettysburg.

              He went on to be captured, imprisoned in the prisons mentioned before, and is listed as being exchanged in Dec. of 1864 in three different sources I've found but there is little mention as to where exactly the exchange or parole took place.

              He has a very interesting background but it may just be easier in the long run to switch and portray Capt. Hempstead as there is more resources available on him and I'd rather do the right thing than blow it off and make my own assumptions without fact to back it up. Hempstead was in the same class at VMI as Carter and their class would go on to lose the most of any class during the war.

              Cheers,
              Cheers,
              [COLOR=Red]Kirby Smith[/COLOR]

              Loblolly Mess

              Too many ancestors who served and events on the schedule to post here...

              Comment

              Working...
              X