Rock Island County
History
Rock Island Civil War Prison Barracks
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Excerpt from Rock
Island Confederate Prison Deaths -
Compiled by Clifford W. Stephens (Command Historian of Rock
Island Arsenal) and Printed by
Blackhawk Genealogical Society of Rock
Island, Illinois.
Generously transcribed by Diana Hanson.
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One of the westernmost federal prisons for confederate prisoners of war
during the Civil War was located on Rock Island,
a government owned island in the Mississippi River
between Davenport, Iowa
and Rock Island and Moline,
Illinois. In the frontier era
from 1816 to 1836, Fort
Armstrong was located
on the western tip of this island. For more than a century the island has been
widely known as the site of the Rock Island
Arsenal. Constructed in mid-1863, the Rock Island
prison camp received its first prisoners in December 1863. In the months that
followed the camp received a mixed reputation - to some it was a northern
"Andersonville";
others felt that it offered more than the necessary comforts.
- On July 14th, 1863, Captain Charles
A. Reynolds of the Quartermaster Department was ordered by Quartermaster
General M. C. Meigs to construct a depot for
prisoners of war at Rock Island.
- The constructions plans
were furnished by the office of the Commissary General of Prisoners. The
plans called for the erection of 84 prisoners' barracks and a rough board
fence to enclose them.
- Construction began during
the last of August 1863 and by the following October 15th the camp was
ready to receive prisoners.
- Each barracks building was
one hundred feet long, twenty-two feet wide, and twelve feet high. All
barracks faced eastward. Each barracks had twelve windows, two doors, and
two roof ventilators four feet long and two feet wide. The kitchen for
each building was located at the west end and separated from the sleeping
quarters by a wall located eighteen feet from the west end. The remaining
eighty-two feet were taken up by living and sleeping quarters; sixty
double bunks were constructed, enabling each barracks to house one
hundred-twenty prisoners. There were six rows with fourteen barracks in
each row. The buildings were thirty feet apart and faced onto streets one
hundred feet wide, except that the fourth row opened on an avenue one
hundred and thirty feet wide which was one of the two avenues bisecting
the prison.
The barracks were enclosed by a stockade fence 1300 feet long, 900
feet wide, and 12 feet high. A board walk was constructed on the outside of the
fence, four feet from the top and sentry boxes were placed every one hundred
feet. There were only two openings into the enclosure; these consisted of
double gate sally ports located on the east and west ends of the fence. A
strong guard house was erected outside the enclosure at each of the two gates.
The Commissary-General of Prisoners,
Colonel Hoffman, made an inspection of the prison in November 1863 and in his
subsequent report to the Secretary of War reported the prison at Rock
Island had not as yet received prisoners. Just
a few days before Colonel Hoffman's inspection trip a large fire had destroyed
several of the prison barracks in Camp
Douglas located near Chicago,
Illinois. Colonel Hoffman, in
his report to the Secretary of War stated it was his intention to transfer one
thousand of these prisoners left without shelter to Rock
Island Prison Barracks.
- This transfer did not
occur, however, and it was not until December 3, 1863 that the first group of
prisoners arrived at the Rock Island
prison. These men, numbering 5,592 in all, were a part of the group of
prisoners captured by General Grant's Army in the battles of Lookout
Mountain and Missionary
Ridge on November 24th and 25th.
There must have been a great deal of suffering in this group on their
arrival. They were far from their homes and the coldness of the climate must
have left them half frozen for on the day of their arrival the temperatures
dropped to 32 degrees below zero. This condition was aggravated by sickness
among them, the worst disease being the dreaded small pox. The prison doctors
found 94 cases of this disease in the group and all had been exposed to it.
- The prison surgeon in
charge, Doctor J.J.
Temple, his
assistant Surgeon Iles - an old man, and Doctor Moxley were faced with the responsibility of checking
this terrible disease without hospital wards or adequate medicines.
According to the report made by the Assistant Surgeon General A.M. Clark,
after making his inspection of the prison in February 1864, Doctor Temple
was not aware of the extent of his authority or duties as a surgeon in
charge, Doctor Iles, although skilled
professionally, was completely bewildered; and Doctor Moxley
was a very young officer only commissioned a short time, anxious to do his
duty but entirely unfitted both by temperament and experience for a charge
of such magnitude.
.......Many entries have left out. Please see Diana Hanson or BlackHawk
Genealogical Society for access to the complete manuscript.
- The life of any prisoner
of war at the best is very monotonous and this was the case at Rock
Island prison. Prisoners passed their time
in making trinkets for sale, using shells and whatever came to hand. Plots
of escape were many but only 41 escapees managed to elude capture. On June 14, 1864 ten of
the prisoners tried their luck by tunneling from under barracks number 42
and under the south wall. The last two prisoners coming up out of the
tunnel were discovered by the sentry and the alarm was sounded. Guards
hurried out, capturing three prisoners on the island; one drowned when
attempting to swim the south channel of the Mississippi river which was
about four hundred feet wide. The remaining six crossed the river without
being caught and made their way over a high ridge which separates the Mississippi
from the Rock River. Four were
captured near the latter river but two made their escape good.
The troops making up the garrison at the prison consisted of the 4th
Regiment, U.S. Veterans Reserve Corps; the 37th Iowa Volunteer Regiment (Silver
Grays); the 48th Iowa (100-day men) three companies of the 2nd Battalion; 133rd
Illinois 100-day men; 197th Pennsylvania Volunteers; and, the 108th U.S.
Regiment Colored Infantry. This last group arrived for duty at the prison on
September 23, 1864.
- Lafayette Rogan, prisoner
of war at Rock Island Barracks, captured November 24, 1863, in the Battle
of Lookout Mountain, kept a diary. A copy of this diary has been made
available and several prints have been made by the Arsenal. From Rogan's
diary we get a good idea of the prison as seen by one of the less
fortunate inmates. Rogan's penmanship was good enough to have him chosen
as a recorder for the prison. As such, he was confined only to the limits
of the island and was quartered outside the stockade. Rogan does not dwell
on ill treatment of prisoners other than the usual hardships of imprisoned
men, lack of clothing and bedding is mentioned and of prisoners enlisting
in the Union. Rogan had hopes for an early exchange or parole but he was
not released until after Lee's surrender. Naturally, Rogan didn't like not
being selected among those exchanged or paroled but his loyalty to the
South would not let him sign the Amnesty oath which would release him from
prison. Rogan's penmanship and his ability to keep records of prisoners
was no doubt a factor in keeping him at the prison.
- During the twenty months,
the active period of the prison, 12,409 prisoners had been confined. Of
these, 730 were transferred to other stations; 3,876 were exchanged; 1,960
died while confined. 41 made their escape good; 5,581 were released after
taking the amnesty oath; and approximately four thousand enlisted in the
Union forces. There were 213 civilian or citizen prisoners in prison at Rock
Island Barracks, according to available
records, who were discharged in the last few months before the prison
closed. The strange thing is that there are no records of these civilians
on the sick, escape, or death list, although the Confederate
Cemetery
register does list a few burials of civilian prisoners. One hundred
ninety-seven of the citizen prisoners were from Missouri.
The presence of the latter group caused some trouble for Colonel Johnson,
the prison Commander, because they were visited by many of their friends
and relatives from Missouri.
It became so bad that Colonel Johnson wrote to General Dodge at St.
Louis requesting the publication in the Missouri
newspapers of regulations concerning visits to prisoner of war camps.
- Two months after Lee's
surrender to Grant, Rock Island
Barracks still had 1,112 prisoners in confinement. During this month 1,090
were released, 8 escaped and 12 died. Two were sick in the hospital but by
the 11th of July they had been discharged leaving the prison free of
prisoners. At this date all that remained in the prison command was one
company of 40 men and Colonel Johnson who remained to close out his
records.
So a historical period in the history of Rock Island came to a close,
a period remembered with bitterness by many, by a few, more pleasantly. Stories
grew out of this period, greatly added to and exaggerated as the years passed.
Like so many historical periods, certain facts became distorted and others are
lost or forgotten. This is generally true of the prison period on the island.
Very few visitors to the island ask about the Union soldiers who died doing
their duty for their country. Even the records of these men are incomplete and
very little can be found. On March
14, 1866 Major Kress, of the Arsenal in a letter to the
Quartermaster General reported the graves of 137 Union dead. In 1868
Quartermaster General Meigs in a letter to the
Secretary of War, mentioned that there were 136 Union dead at Rock
Island and he concurred with the recommendation
of General L. Thomas that these bodies be removed to the upper part of the
island. He did not concur on the removal of the Confederate dead to the same
location. These Union dead were removed to the site recommended, the present Rock
Island National
Cemetery.
Nothing remains of the prison buildings today.
Visitors on the island, as they view the island's beautiful scenery, see
nothing to recall this period in the island's history. Where once the Headquarters
buildings of the prison was located stands the mansion of the Commanding
General of the Ordnance Weapons Command. The stockade and the prison barracks
area is now a part of the Rock Island
Arsenal Golf Course and officers quarters. The
non-contagious disease hospital is the present site of two Arsenal shop
buildings. The pest houses of the day have given way to a huge shop building.
All that remains of the period of the island's history are the Confederate and National
Cemeteries, which lie
in quiet and peaceful groves of elms and oak trees. Perpetual care of the
graves give these peaceful sites with their rows of white headstones in long
straight rows, completely encircled by the towering trees, a serene and
peaceful resting place for those who died so far from home and friends.