There may have been more than one. The best known seems to have been just outside Baltimore, Maryland. The location today is "east of Gwynn's Falls at Brunswick Street and Millington Ave., adjacent to Camp Emory." It seems to have been a training facility, where new regiments learned to drill. Many such camps were established across the north and south at the start of the war. Regiments were formed locally, and then went into camp at some nearby spot to begin to learn how to soldier. Usually the camp was named for the commanding officer of the first regiment that trained there. The 128th New York trained at this Camp Millington in 1862.
During the Civil War, Camp Chase was a military staging, training and prison camp in Columbus, Ohio. Today, the site is a Confederate cemetery containing 2,260 graves.
He was the commandant of the Andersonville prisoner of war camp and the first person to be tried for war crimes after the Civil War.
Meridian, Mississippi
Camp Walker.
Poor hygiene and camp sanitation contributed to the high rate of disease during the US Civil War.
John Millington has written: 'Elements of civil engineering' -- subject(s): Civil engineering, Early works to 1850
The address of the Camp Dennison Civil War Museum Dar is: 7509 Glendale Milford Rd, Camp Dennison, OH 45111
The phone number of the Camp Dennison Civil War Museum Dar is: 513-576-6327.
During the Civil War, Camp Chase was a military staging, training and prison camp in Columbus, Ohio. Today, the site is a Confederate cemetery containing 2,260 graves.
There was a Camp Mason in Oklahoma and, another in Portland Maine.
Camp Douglas, Chicago, was a Union prison camp for Confederate captives during the American civil war.
He was the commandant of the Andersonville prisoner of war camp and the first person to be tried for war crimes after the Civil War.
The web address of the Camp Olden Civil War Round Table And Museum is: campolden.org
the Yankee camp was on the tenneessee river
Meridian, Mississippi
Andersonville
Andersonville