This article details the experiences of survivors of the Andersonville prison camp after the Civil War. Feeling marginalized by the public after returning to the North, prisoners of war worked to demonstrate that their experiences were exceptional enough to merit the same kind of respect and adoration given to other war veterans. In particular survivors utilized the strategy of waving the bloody shirt, describing purported Confederate atrocities at the camp to a Northern audience looking for figures to blame for the horrors of war. Through prison narratives, veteran organizations, the erection of memorials, and reunions years later, Andersonville survivors worked to establish their role in the Civil War not as forgotten captives, but war ...
This paper examines the lives and experiences of the men who survived the horrors of the Confederate...
Artifact label: “A Ten Pound Ball and a Six Inch Chain” -- Josiah Brownell Josiah Brownell. At Ander...
Saturday, September 8th, saw a powerful collaboration between the Civil War Institute, Antietam Nati...
The memory of Civil War prisons has always been contested. Since 1861, generations of Americans stru...
Breaking the Chains of Civil War Prison History As in WWII, many combatants and former POWs of t...
Łukasz Niewiński - BiałystokThe Civil War (1861-1865) broke out in the United States as a result of ...
Soon after the close of military operations in the American Civil War, another war began over how it...
The prisoners on Rock Island, though some would later describe it in awful, vivid detail, were provi...
Unlike many other historic sites, Andersonville does not fit neatly into any one box. It is not a ba...
This post is part of a series featuring behind-the-scenes dispatches from our Pohanka Interns on the...
Following the bloody years of the Civil War, veteran organizations became a breeding ground for nati...
Located along the Ocmulgee River, Macon, Georgia, is known for its International Cherry Blossom Fest...
This post is part of a series featuring behind-the-scenes dispatches from our Pohanka Interns on the...
Prisoners of War In this important study of northern prisoner of war camps and policies governin...
Fighting the Battle of Memory Remembering the Battle of the Crater: War as Murder by Kevin Levin off...
This paper examines the lives and experiences of the men who survived the horrors of the Confederate...
Artifact label: “A Ten Pound Ball and a Six Inch Chain” -- Josiah Brownell Josiah Brownell. At Ander...
Saturday, September 8th, saw a powerful collaboration between the Civil War Institute, Antietam Nati...
The memory of Civil War prisons has always been contested. Since 1861, generations of Americans stru...
Breaking the Chains of Civil War Prison History As in WWII, many combatants and former POWs of t...
Łukasz Niewiński - BiałystokThe Civil War (1861-1865) broke out in the United States as a result of ...
Soon after the close of military operations in the American Civil War, another war began over how it...
The prisoners on Rock Island, though some would later describe it in awful, vivid detail, were provi...
Unlike many other historic sites, Andersonville does not fit neatly into any one box. It is not a ba...
This post is part of a series featuring behind-the-scenes dispatches from our Pohanka Interns on the...
Following the bloody years of the Civil War, veteran organizations became a breeding ground for nati...
Located along the Ocmulgee River, Macon, Georgia, is known for its International Cherry Blossom Fest...
This post is part of a series featuring behind-the-scenes dispatches from our Pohanka Interns on the...
Prisoners of War In this important study of northern prisoner of war camps and policies governin...
Fighting the Battle of Memory Remembering the Battle of the Crater: War as Murder by Kevin Levin off...
This paper examines the lives and experiences of the men who survived the horrors of the Confederate...
Artifact label: “A Ten Pound Ball and a Six Inch Chain” -- Josiah Brownell Josiah Brownell. At Ander...
Saturday, September 8th, saw a powerful collaboration between the Civil War Institute, Antietam Nati...