Andersonville Prison, Georgia
Andersonville, Georgia, was the most overcrowded and harsh military prison camp during the Civil War. It was officially named Camp Sumter but this name is rarely used. Conditions were so harsh that after the war, Union soldiers tried and executed the commander of the camp (Henry Wirz) for war crimes. At least 12,913 Union soldiers died in the camp, of about 45,000 who were sent there.
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Which former Confederate state had the most blacks holding office during Reconstruction
The real answer is: They came from farms
economics
Andersonville was the most notorious Confederate Prison for Union prisoners of war. They killed the most amount of people in the Civil War and it was the worst camp out of both the Union and Confederate sides. So you can lick my butthole!
Andersonville, Georgia
The Confederate POW camp at Andersonville in Georgia was the most notorious.
There were several camps, but the most notorious was at Andersonville, Georgia
Andersonville Prison was a very famous prison in the south during the Civil War period. This prison was infamous for its brutal treatment of captured soldiers.
The most notorious is Kevin Mitnick who served 5 years
Notably , Auschwitz concentration camp was both the largest and notorious . Auschwitz, Bergen-Belsen, Buchenwald, Dachau, Sachsenhausen, Theresienstadt, Treblinka and T.II
No, Alcatraz is not a man-made island. It is a rocky island located in San Francisco Bay in California, USA. It is known for its former high-security prison that housed some of the most notorious criminals in American history.
Raiford prison aka fsp located in Raiford fl
Near the town of Andersonville in southwest Georgia It was a horrible Civil War Prison Camp there was open-air stockade, enclosed by 20 foot-high log walls, grew to 26 acres, but remained horribly overcrowded and conditions became more and more intolerable. Running in the middle of the camp was a stagnant, befouled stream, absurdly named Sweet Water Branch, used as a sewer as well as for drinking and bathing. There were no barracks; prisoners were forbidden to construct shelters, and while some did erect tents and flimsy lean-tos, most were left fully exposed to the elements. Medical treatment was virtually nonexistent. Sounds like HELL! Nearly 13000 died there.......
most of the battlefields were located in Confederate states.
They were all located in the South, and west to Texas.