Thousands held at Civil War prison finally get reverent funeral
Story highlights
- "Funeral for 13,000" remembers soldiers who died 150 years ago at Civil War prison in Georgia
- Events through Sunday will recall stories of courage, despair at Andersonville
- Observances coincide with annual National POW/MIA Recognition Day
(CNN)A
simple wooden casket, placed on a raised bier, bore witness for
thousands of Civil War soldiers who died while under the guard of fellow
Americans.
Battlefields were the
places for winners and losers. But survival was the only matter of
magnitude at prisons in the North and South, the audience was told
Saturday afternoon during the "Funeral for 13,000" at a national
cemetery in southwest Georgia.
The
juxtaposition of yesterday and today was apparent from the beginning of
the memorial service at Andersonville National Historic Site: A bagpiper
playing "Going Home" led a horse-drawn caisson carrying the ceremonial
casket. Sheriff's deputies and members of the armed forces walked in the
procession toward the cemetery rostrum. Among those in the crowd were
men and women portraying Civil War soldiers and civilians. One woman
wore a black mourning dress and veil.
Despite
the somber mood, there was a prevailing note of appreciation for the
sacrifice of those who died at Andersonville and other prisons.
"It's
a great day to be a soldier," said Sergeant Major of the Army Daniel A.
Dailey, referring to the role uniformed men played in the forging of a
great nation through a bloody civil war that cost more 600,000 lives.
Events planned through Sunday
at Andersonville are the culmination of the site's sesquicentennial
observance of an often-overlooked aspect of the war: Away from the
battles that are famous today -- Gettysburg, Antietam, Shiloh --
thousands of prisoners endured wretched conditions. At Andersonville
alone, nearly 13,000 Federal soldiers and civilian captives died over 14
months. Officials wanted those who fell 150 years ago to finally
receive a proper, reverent funeral.
The observance coincides with the annual National POW/MIA Recognition Day.
Dailey,
in an address carried nationally by C-SPAN, praised descendants for
keeping alive the memories of those who died in the prisons.
He
told the story of Sgt. Christian Kephart, a father of four girls who
enlisted with the 13th Pennsylvania Cavalry in 1863. Kephart survived
Andersonville but died of dysentery at another camp.
No one knows why he enlisted. Was it for an enlistment bounty? To save the country? End slavery?
Only
about 1% of Americans serve in the military today. Dailey referenced
the POW/MIA flag flying above the cemetery. Since the Civil War, he
said, the United States has learned to provide humane treatment for
prisoners, including enemy combatants.
Speakers reminded Americans of the ordeal the soldiers went through. And they prayed to the creator.
"Here
at Andersonville, we are suffering from what we have forgotten," said
Judson Mitcham, poet laureate of Georgia. "Tell us again how to praise
and grieve and witness. Give us this day, forgive us our trespasses."
Officials
hope that visitors don't see the weekend events just as a history
lesson. There are larger questions of how soldiers transition to
civilian life. How a nation binds its wounds after war and tells the
story of those who were held captive in all wars.
Eric
Leonard, former chief of interpretation at Andersonville, told C-SPAN
that the number of prisoners proliferated after an exchange system broke
down, partially because the Confederate government would not agree to
exchange African-American captives.
At
first, many prisoners that were moved by train from Virginia to
Andersonville believed that conditions would be better. But the
stockade's main stream quickly became polluted. Officials had no real
understanding of how germs and disease spread. They channeled water to
create a latrine, hoping the flow of the creek would "flush" the toilet.
"They ... completed the perfect breeding ground for dysentery," Leonard said.
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