To Die in Chicago : Confederate Prisoners at Camp Douglas 1862-65
To Die in Chicago : Confederate Prisoners at Camp Douglas 1862-65
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Author(s): Levy, George
ISBN No.: 9781565543317
Pages: 448
Year: 199901
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 57.23
Status: Out Of Print

"In this volume, Mr. Levy has done an excellent job of telling the story of Camp Douglas from its creation until the day it was abandoned." -- Civil War News "Levy seeks from the beginning to provide an explanation for the human misery that was so prevalent in the Union's military prison, and by drawing on a wealth of primary and secondary sources, he succeeds in that attempt." -- The Journal of Southern History The mere mention of the word "Andersonville" elicits feelings of anger and resentment concerning the Confederate prison camp, while "Camp Douglas" in Chicago causes many citizens, even some Civil War buffs, mere confusion. However, the atrocities that occurred in that Union prison camp were even more heinous than those at Andersonville. To Die in Chicago: Confederate Prisoners at Camp Douglas 1862-65 is the first book to delve into the murky waters surrounding what was to become the largest Confederate burial ground outside of the South. One prisoner lamented, "I wondered what caused all of this fearful mortality. Was it starvation, neglect, and cruelty? God alone knows.


" In fact, all three contributed to the demise of thousands, many of whom died from diseases including pneumonia, dysentery, and small pox. The exact number of prisoners buried at Camp Douglas remains unknown. Haphazard recordkeeping and a general disregard for the deceased make counting the dead an impossible task, despite the author's fastidious research, which includes new hospital records found in the National Archives. Compounding the difficulty, most were buried in unmarked mass graves. What is known is that the camp was originally built in 1861 as a Union recruiting and training depot, designed to house approximately 8,000 troops. The first prisoners arrived the following year. By December 1864, the number of inmates swelled to 12,082. Surmounting the overcrowding, mistreatment, and abominable living conditions, some prisoners, including T.


M. Page, survived. Of this group, he said, "no body of men was ever more tried in any ordeal which tests human nature and proves it credible to mankind." Now their story, and the story of those who died in Chicago, may be told. George Levy, retired professor of legal studies at Roosevelt University and lawyer, became interested in Camp Douglas as a student at the University of Chicago, which is located across the street from the site of the camp. Levy has served in the Public Defender's office and as an assistant attorney general for the state of Illinois.


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