Desperate to be free: Union prisoners tunneling (National Park Service) |
But they
would find their experience to be different as the Civil War wore on. The green regiment, chopped up at Antietam in September 1862, was captured in only its
second engagement 19 months later in Plymouth, N.C.
Gone were the
ideas of battlefield victories and fame. Kellogg realized their world had been
turned upside down when the regiment surrendered in April 1864.
“On the morning of (April)
21st we awoke to new experiences. Instead of the calls to which we had -been
wont to listen, and the labor we had been accustomed to perform, we were but
passive beings, subject to the will of a conqueror,” Kellogg wrote in “Life and
Death in Rebel Prisons,” published in March 1865 near war’s end.
The soldier could not have predicted the extreme privation and horror he would witness
and endure at Andersonville prison in Georgia. He provided colorful details in
his book, considered one of the best personal accounts about life and death at Andersonville.
Various photographs of Robert H. Kellogg (Museum of Connecticut History) |
As McNutt
pointed out in a paper and a lecture in November at Andersonville National Historic Site near Americus, the Victorian ideal of manliness was courage
through sacrifice and action – a good death on the battlefield, should it come
to that.
“The POW experience was the direct antithesis of this ideal: Capture was socially seen the same as surrender,” wrote McNutt (the men of the 16th Connecticut said it was not their decision to surrender). “And the wartime experience of POWs in the American Civil War was passive, inactive – waiting. For exchange, for parole.”
The talk by the assistant professor of anthropology at Georgia Southern was titled “But Passive Beings, Subject to the Will of a Conquerer,” pulling the line from Kellogg’s book.
(At left, Father Peter Whalen prays for prisoners, Thomas O'Dea sketch, NPS)
As it turned
out, men confined with Kellogg were not all that passive, McNutt told the
November audience in the park visitor center. They resisted in a variety of
ways, trying to survive while buttressing their sense of manliness.
Tries were usually futile. But they dreamed of escape
McNutt spoke
about resistance at both Andersonville (Camp Sumter) and Camp Lawton, another
Confederate prison site in Georgia. McNutt directs the GSU archaeological project at the latter site
Andersonville is the emblem of POW suffering at Union and Confederate
camps during the Civil War. Of 45,000 men held there, 13,000 Union service
members succumbed to horrible conditions. Rather than a quick battlefield death
by a bullet or artillery round, they faced death on an hourly or daily
occurrence. It could come at any time.
Themes of heroism through endurance, martyrdom and stoicism arose, McNutt argues.
Soldiers engaged in tunneling, trickery and barter with guards. They endured beatings and incidents of cruel treatment – all while trying to stand tall amid the misery.
“Attempting
is just as important as being successful,” McNutt said of defiant acts. More
than 80 tunnels were found at Andersonville. Only 30-40 men successfully
escaped the prison, which held about 45,000 soldiers over its 13 months.
But that did not stop them from trying.
A National Park Service article about escape attempts includes a paragraph that gets at what McNutt and others have studied. By being taken captive, prisoners had to find other ways to “prove oneself” and disprove any notions of cowardice.“As a result, many prisoners faced the choice of either returning home after the war to be received as failures, or to attempt a dangerous escape. Those prisoners at Andersonville and elsewhere who never successfully escaped would often invent escapes or escape attempts in order to validate themselves in the eyes of their society,” the NPS says. (At right, Thomas O'Dea drawing of escape attempts at Camp Sumter)
'Can this be hell?
Kellogg was 20 years old when he passed through the gates of
Andersonville into the chaos and suffering.
"As we entered
the place, a spectacle met our eyes that almost froze our blood with
horror…before us were forms that had once been active and erect -- stalwart
men, now nothing but mere walking skeletons, covered with filth and vermin…Many
of our men exclaimed with earnestness, 'Can this be hell?'" the sergeant
wrote
The soldier survived Andersonville and was transferred after a few months to prisons in South Carolina paroled in November 1864. He was a
changed man.
Robert Kellogg (right) with Oscar Wiel (Museum of Connecticut History) |
One of only a handful of photographs of Andersonville (National Park Service) |
“If you want to get the truest picture of Andersonville, stick mostly with diaries and the memoirs published within the first 5 years” after the war, Gorman wrote when I asked followers of the Facebook page about Kellogg.
McNutt
concluded his paper outlining the impact of post-traumatic stress disorder
(PTSD) suffered by Civil War prisoners.
“The
restructuring of masculine identities, the resistance both physical and
symbolic, the creation of crafts and games, such as chess pieces found under
the brick oven at Lawton, all served to combat the depression and mental
effects of long confinement, a final deadly symptom of structural violence of
the internment system, through action and engagement,” he wrote.
“Acts of
resistance, effective or ineffective, were acts of survival.”
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