They were treated badly and were killed
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.
Both the Union and the Confederacy treated prisoner very badly in prison camps. They were starved, lived in horribly unhealthy conditions, abused and killed. After the Civil War, the commander of one Southern prison camp was tried and hanged. No such penalties were applied to comanders of the Northern prsioner camps.
Fairly well, but if taken as a POW they were treated harshly. Andersonville was a confederate prisoner of war camp in the final12 months of the civil war. War crimes were committed in this prison of union soldiers. They had lack of food, water, and lived in unsanitary conditions. Of the 45,000 men held there nearly 13,000 died from scurvy, diarrhea, and dysentery.
Grant's ending of the system of prisoner-exchange. It meant the Confederates were doomed to run out of men.
Glass, chemically treated (wet-plate negative) and then exposed to light was used.
bad
they were treated bad
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.
waz up
President Lincoln suspended the writ of habeas corpus (a writ ordering a prisoner to be brought before a judge) during the Civil War.
African Americans
waz up
It was used as a medicine in the Civil War. It treated infections from wounds. No antibiotics were available then!
A soldier taken as a prisoner during war.
anywhere there was an open wound......! do you know what causes gangrene?
Of course they were slaves. But during the civil War, they were treated very badly in the south because of discrimination. Some slaves were even killed for trying to run away. In the north, they were not slaves but still discriminated.
With decency and control. Not much rights as they have now though