No I can not answer this question
Sounds like Andersonville, Georgia.
living condiations were like how peolpe could not live without their homes cause they have lost it by the ww2 and it was haertbroken to people to see their homes being trashed just all by the war and they didnt know what to do.
the united states flag
Well the Union did not like slavery and the south did not so they left to create there own laws and allow slavery.
A number of Southerners insist on calling the Civil War "The War Between The States." In his inaugural address, Lincoln requested the states make their militias available to the United States Army. At that point the states had to choose whether or not to make their militias available to the Union Army or the Confederate Army. Many Southerners refer to that event. The people living in the Southern Mountains and throughout much of the South sided with the Union and fought for the Union. One of the Union's greatest generals, General Thomas, was a southerner. Another of the Union's greatest generals, General Sherman, had lived much of his life in the south. The governor of Texas, Sam Houston, sided with the Union. It was a civil war.
No I can not answer this question
not nice
It Sucked
it was very very bad the soldiers were beaten up and ill treated
Confederate soldiers were not as well fed, clothed, sheltered, or supplied as their Union counterparts. Many went shoeless. They often ran short on ammunition and supplies. When Lee surrendered, he asked for provisions for his men. That had more to do with his decision than his tactical predicament.
sad, depressed and homesick because of the harsh and horrible living conditions and the soldiers missed their home family and friends.
it was very poor living conditions and soldiers were subject to diseases such as trench foot, the gout, aids, pneumonia, etc . it was also very dirty and was an awfully cramped place to live.
they were really hard living conditions
The living conditions were horrible. They were sorta like the middle passage. Look it up on wikipedia
WHAT WERE LIVING CONDITIONS FOR THE WOMEN IN 1600
A bad mixture of boredom, horror and privation. By the second half of the war, the Confederates were barefoot and living on half-rations. In fact, Lee's march on Gettysburg had a lot to do with a nearby boot-and-shoe factory, from which he hoped to supply his troops. The worst conditions were in the prison-camps, especially Andersonville, where the captured Union soldiers were reduced to starvation and cannibalism.
lush