Sunday, August 21, 2016

Rebel Prisoners Treated Well at Fort Delaware

In my recent correspondence I described how I witnessed the exchange of sick and wounded prisoners on the Savannah River ["Our Prisoners" New-York Times, November 26, 1864].  In this report, which was the first of its kind to document the terrible plight of the Andersonville prisoners, I described the wretched condition of the brave "soldiers of the Republic" who had at last been delivered from the "unutterable misery" of the notorious prison pen known as Camp Sumter located near Andersonville, Georgia.  Evidence in the form of the pale and forlorn specters shuffling off or being carried from the gangplanks of the steamers gave living (barely) proof of the vindictiveness of southern authorities.  A hard accusation, indeed.  But the exchanged prisoners gave the lie to the myth of the chivalrous Southrons in the "wasted hungry aspect of the sufferers, whose filth and squalor and skeletal frames appeal to Justice to the God of justice."  Further proof of deliberate mistreatment of the Union prisoners was evident in the testimonies of those thus far brought back - an estimated 10,000 men returned to "our welcome keeping."


Fort Delaware (photo by William Myers)

By glaring contrast, Rebel prisoners confined at the North have been generally treated well as this correspondent set out to prove on his recent visit to Fort Delaware on Pea Patch Island located midway between Delaware and New Jersey on the Delaware River.  The prison compound resembles a medieval fortress complete with moat, drawbridge and portcullis.  The Confederate officers are kept within this fortress while the enlisted men are comfortably housed outside in sturdy barracks.  Long lines of these structures, which house 400 men apiece, are situated far enough from the fort to isolate the men from their officers.   Leaderless, the prisoners acquiesce to their surroundings more readily as there have been few escapes from the island.  Although, remarkably,  it most be noted that a few daredevils have sought to swim to freedom by the unpleasant expedient of slipping through the privy holes of the latrines that stretch out over the river.   The distance is about 2,000 yards from the prison to the Delaware shore (it is even farther to New Jersey side), and even the strongest swimmer risks being swept out to sea by the strong and swift cross-currents of the Delaware.        

But why would the prisoners attempt so bold and desperate a plan?   They are given better rations in the prison than the poor devils ever received in the Rebel army:  two regular meals a day consisting of eight ounces of meat, thirteen ounces of bread, and generous amounts of soup and coffee. Their Yankee counterparts at Andersonville receive far less and have to scrounge for extra foodstuffs just to subsist on their pitifully meager rations.  And they are without shelter, constantly rained upon, and crammed into an open area of just five acres within a stockaded compound manned by trigger-happy guards with orders to shoot to kill if a prisoner ventures too near the so-called "dead line."  There is no dead line at Fort Delaware, though large calibre artillery pieces mounted on the walls of the fort are loaded and trained on the prisoners' barracks to discourage insurrection.  After all, as many as 12,000 or so restless prisoners outnumber the 200 guards by a considerable margin.

Whereas medical care at Fort Delaware is judged adequate for the needs of the Rebel prisoners, the charnel house mislabeled as a hospital at Andersonville is a place where the cure is indeed worse than the disease.  By and large, sick Union prisoners suffer from cruel neglect, unsanitary conditions, and a severe lack of sufficient food needed to nurse a sick prisoner back to health.   Yet despite the heat and the presence of numerous pests, situated as it is on a marshy, alluvial island, the prisoners at Fort Delaware are considerably healthy.  Many of the Rebels hail from deep South states and are generally immune to the heat of summer on the island.  They suffer more from the cold Northern winter as icy winds blow off the Delaware and across the island.  It is true they are not allowed to receive heavy or sturdy clothing as this, in the event of another prisoner exchange, would be tantamount to supplying the Rebel army.  Of course, neither are prisoners permitted to wear any coats of blue material or suits of blue color as this might aid in escapes from the prison.  However, the barracks are supplied with two stoves each per structure to provide heat during the cold winter months.  A prisoner admitted to me that he suffered so much from the cold because of the men who position themselves in front of the red-hot stoves.  Dubbed "stove rats" by their fellow prisoners, only a concerted rush from the inmates of the barracks will dislodge the stove rats who refuse to share the warmth with their barracks' mates.   
Despite some unavoidable privations, Fort Delaware is considered a safe haven for Confederate prisoners of war, while the prison pen at Andersonville is said to rival the infamous prison ships of the British for unbridled cruelty, where American Patriots died by the thousands under similar horrific conditions during the Revolutionary War.  

- HJW 
Barracks of enlisted men (photo by William Myers)
Inside of enlisted men's barracks (photo by William Myers)
  


[Editor's notes:  Despite the author's assertions that the southern prisoners were well fed and comfortably housed at Fort Delaware, it should be pointed out that General Schoepf, commandant of the prison, complained to Union Quartermaster General Montgomery Meigs that the barracks were sinking into the mud!  Also, despite common knowledge that a proper diet prevents scurvy, William Hoffman, the Commissary General of Prisoners, ordered prison officials to withhold vegetables from the prisoners' diet as this was considered an expensive luxury.  Yet, medical officers continued to report scurvy as the number one killer of prisoners housed at Fort Delaware.   
For more information, see Confederate Prisoners of War at Fort Delaware by Nancy Travis Keen; also, see Dispatches from the Front: A History of the American War Correspondent by Nathaniel Lande.]   

More notes from the editor:  "Henry Winser" has spent a considerable amount of time reporting from the Army of the Cumberland on the progress of General Sherman's Atlanta Campaign.  He was particularly impressed with a young Brigadier General named Charles Garrison Harker who was mortally wounded leading the attack at the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain.  Winser was so impressed he wrote a biography about the man along with coauthor, Bennett Carlton, titled, Have We Taken the Mountain?, which may be purchased from Amazon Books through the following link:  


 

Thursday, June 9, 2016

New Jersey Governor Charles Smith Olden - Strong for the Union - Defends his Record

TRENTON, Saturday, June 4, 1861

Your correspondent recently interviewed the Governor of New Jersey at newly established Camp Olden, named for his Excellency, Governor Charles S. Olden, where three New Jersey regiments are currently training to meet the enemy in decisive battle.  The men are in excellent health and spirits and all are eager to be off to the seat of war.  Camp Olden is situated in a salubrious and picturesque location about three miles from the City of Trenton.  The camp was recently moved to this locale so that the troops would have less contact with certain unwholesome establishments within the town that were supplying the men with strong drink designed to destroy their health and well-being.  I speak explicitly of the rum shops and houses of ill repute that formerly provided such unwholesome distraction from the soldiers' drill and camp duties.

Libelous accusations had been cast at the feet of the officers of the regiments, and even directed towards the Governor for not doing enough to prevent such unsavory practices as a few of the men were formerly wont to indulge.  These spurious statements accusing the authorities of not dissuading and even permitting these aforementioned  excesses by certain members of the regiments are detrimental to the character and good name of those who have been entrusted with the welfare of the troops.  Having seen the conditions at Camp and having interviewed many of these same New Jersey volunteers, I can assure our readership that the men are well-fed, well-supplied and healthy.  They are kept constantly at drill and vigorous exercise.  Their only complaint is that they are champing at the bit and ever anxious to get at the Rebels.  The men anxiously await the arrival of uniforms and arms from the Government, which are due to arrive within the week.  They are generally serious, sober, enthusiastic and brave young men, awaiting their chance at making history, and a glorious name for themselves in the contest to come.

Governor Olden has tirelessly worked to raise troops and supply the necessities of these soldiers while simultaneously performing the various duties of his office.  He is often found laboring long into the night, sleeping at his desk rather than at his comfortable mansion, "Drumthwacket."  It is true the Governor had once supported the Fugitive Slave Act, but he has always been firmly opposed to the expansion of slavery.  Before Fort Sumter, Governor Olden favored a peace compromise to avoid civil war.  In fact, he was the only sitting governor to attend a Peace Conference of over 100 politicians held at Willard's Hotel in Washington City this February past.  He told me he had attended the conference purely because his worst fear was that war would split his state asunder.  Not an abolitionist, the Governor has always decried extremism both North and South, and he equates secession with anarchy. Though of the Quaker faith, nonetheless, he wholeheartedly supports the war effort to put down the wicked, unjust Rebellion. 

Governor Olden was a member of the Whig Party when he entered political arena in 1844.  He became a Republican after the dissolution of the Whigs and was elected the 19th governor of New Jersey on the Republican ticket in 1859, defeating his democratic rival, Edwin R. V. Wright.  Olden is serving his second year in the governor's chair, and hopes to witness the crushing of the Rebellion ere long, and the Union preserved inviolate, before the third and final year of his term begins.

- H. J. W.    

Henry Winser, New-York Times reporter, interviews New Jersey Governor Charles S. Olden (portrayed by Bruce L. Sirak) at Allaire Village [Photo courtesy of William Myers, USS Lehigh]