-
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
Daily News - 150 Years Ago
General Civil War Sites
Other Resources
WordPress
Topical Paradise
- 19th NY Volunteer Infantry
- 33rd New York Infantry Regiment
- 50th New York Engineer Regiment
- 1860 Election
- Abraham Lincoln
- Andrew Johnson
- Army of the Potomac
- Battle of Fredericksburg
- Benjamin Franklin Butler
- Charleston
- Conscription
- Copperheads
- draft
- Edwin M. Stanton
- Fort Sumter
- George B. McClellan
- George Gordon Meade
- George Washington
- Gettysburg Campaign
- Horatio Seymour
- inflation
- Jefferson Davis
- New York City
- Overland Campaign
- Peninsula Campaign
- Presidential Reconstruction
- Prisoners of War
- Reconstruction
- recruitment
- Richmond
- Robert E. Lee
- secession
- Seneca Falls NY
- Siege of Petersburg
- Slavery
- South Carolina
- Southern Economy
- southern scarcity
- Thanksgiving
- The election of 1864
- Ulysses S. Grant
- Virginia
- William H. Seward
- William Tecumseh Sherman
- World War I
Categories
- 100 Years Ago
- 150 Years Ago
- 150 Years Ago This Month
- 150 Years Ago This Week
- 160 Years Ago
- 400 Years Ago
- 800 Years Ago
- After Fort Sumter
- Aftermath
- American Culture
- American History
- American Society
- Battle Monuments
- Battle of Fredericksburg
- Battlefields
- Books I've Enjoyed
- Chancellorsville Campaign
- Civil War Cemeteries
- Civil War prisons
- Confederate States of America
- First Manassas – Bull Run
- Foreign Relations
- Gettysburg Campaign
- Impeachment
- Lincoln Administration
- Maryland Campaign 1862
- Military Matters
- Monuments and Statues
- Naval Matters
- Northern Politics During War
- Northern Society
- Overland Campaign
- Peninsula campaign 1862
- Postbellum Politics
- Postbellum Society
- Reconstruction
- Secession and the Interregnum
- Siege of Petersburg
- Slavery
- Southern Society
- Technology
- The election of 1860
- The election of 1864
- The election of 1868
- The Election of 1872
- The election of 1920
- The Grant Administration
- Uncategorized
- Veterans
- Vicksburg Campaign
- War Consequences
- World Culture
- World History
- World War I
Subscribe by Feed
Subscribe by Email
Tag Archives: Elmira Prison
.24
Probability of dying at “Hellmira” From a Seneca County, New York newspaper in July 1865: REBEL PRISONERS AT ELMIRA. – The Elmira Advertiser gives the statistics of the number of rebels that have been imprisoned at Elmira. The whole number … Continue reading
Posted in 150 Years Ago This Month, Aftermath, Civil War prisons
Tagged Elmira Prison, Prisons
Leave a comment
“large personal profits”
April 1865 – surrender, assassination, joy, resignation, despair, mourning. And news of alleged corruption in the military bureaucracy. Four from Seneca County, New York newspapers in April 1865: REMOVAL OF MAJOR HADDOCK. – It is reported that Maj. Haddock has … Continue reading
Everybody Loves Abraham
From a Seneca County, New York newspaper in April 1865: THE REBEL PRISONERS AT ELMIRA. – It is stated that the rebel prisoners at Elmira were keenly affected by the news of Mr. Lincoln’s assassination, and requested permission to make … Continue reading
praying for spring?
Elmira, New York, as a prison for captured rebels and as a recruiting and mustering in place for new Union soldiers, was in the news 150 years ago this month. From the Richmond Daily Dispatch February 18, 1865: Religion in … Continue reading
Andersonville North
“in a land of plenty; to die of lingering torture.” From the Richmond Daily Dispatch November 16, 1864: The Treatment of Southern prisoners at the North. We find in the Washington National Intelligencer a private letter relative to the condition … Continue reading
a death at Elmira
From the Richmond Daily Dispatch September 8, 1864: … Mr. W. B. Egerton, a citizen of Petersburg, died in the Federal prison at Elmira, New York, on the 21st ultimo. Elmira started accepting Confederate prisoners on July 6, 1864. By … Continue reading
Posted in 150 Years Ago This Month, Civil War prisons, Northern Society
Tagged Elmira Prison, Prisoners of War, Prisons
Leave a comment
straddle
It’s May 1st somewhere … Since the beginning of the war Elmira served as a rendezvous point for New York soldiers heading south. Here’s evidence that Union soldier miscreants were also confined there and that Confederate prisoners would soon be … Continue reading