Timeline

July 5, 1861 The first Confederate prisoners arrive at Camp Chase
July 21, 1861 The First Battle of Bull Run results in the capture of 1,050 Union prisoners
August 28, 1861 The War Department releases all Federal paroled prisoners from service
October 21, 1861 Colonel William Hoffman is appointed commissary general of prisons and prisoners by War Department Special Order 284
February 16, 1862 Fort Donelson, Tennessee, surrenders to Ulysses S. Grant, including 15,000 prisoners
February 21, 1862 The first Confederate prisoners arrive at Camp Douglas
February 22, 1862 The first Confederate prisoners arrive at Camp Morton
February 24, 1862 Camp Douglas has over 7,000 prisoners and only one surgeon
February 27, 1862 John H. Winder is appointed provost-marshal of Richmond, putting him in charge of nearly all Confederate prisoner of war camps
March 26, 1862 The first Union prisoners arrive at Libby
April 6-7, 1862 The Battle of Shiloh includes the capture of more than 3,000 prisoners
April 16, 1862 The Confederate Congress authorizes conscription
April 25, 1862 The city of New Orleans surrenders to Union forces
June 16, 1862 Hoffman orders all Confederate officer prisoners sent to Johnson’s Island
July 11, 1862 Confederate prisons in Richmond hold more than 8,000 Federal prisoners
July 22, 1862 Dix-Hill Cartel is signed, establishing guidelines for prisoner exchange
August 3, 1862 The first exchange of prisoners under the Dix-Hill Cartel occurs at Aiken’s Landing on the James River, freeing a total of more than 6,000 prisoners
August 26, 1862 Captain Henry Wirz assumes command of the POW camps in Richmond
November 10, 1862 Hoffman orders camp commanders to withhold rations for the purpose of creating prison funds for prisoners’ welfare
December 23, 1862 Confederate President Jefferson Davis announces that captured African American troops will be punished for servile insurrection
January 1, 1863 he Emancipation Proclamation goes into effect, authorizing the enlistment of African-American troops
February 28, 1863 Camp Douglas returns show 387 of 3,884 prisoners died in the month of February, most due to a smallpox outbreak
May 2-4, 1863 The Battle of Chancellorsville results in the capture of 6,000 Federal and 2,000 Confederate prisoners
July 1-3, 1863 During the Battle of Gettysburg, each side captures more than 5,000 prisoners
July 4, 1863 Vicksburg surrenders, including 29,500 Confederate prisoners
December 3, 1863 The first Confederate prisoners arrive at Rock Island
February 9, 1864 109 Union prisoners escape from Libby Prison, 59 reach Union lines
February 25, 1864 The first Union prisoners arrive at Andersonville
March 14, 1864 Union prisoner John Ransom arrives at Andersonville
March 27, 1864 Captain Henry Wirz is assigned to command at Andersonville
April 12, 1864 Confederate troops under General Nathan Bedford Forrest massacre hundreds of African-American troops attempting to surrender at Fort Pillow, Tennessee
April 17, 1864 General Ulysses S. Grant unilaterally halts prisoner exchanges until the Confederacy releases enough prisoners to equal earlier Federal releases and ts all POWs equally, regardless of skin color
May 8, 1864 Of the 12,954 POWs received at Andersonville, 728 have died thus far
May 10, 1864 Hoffman authorizes a pay rate of $.10 for ten hours’ work by Confederate POWs
June 1, 1864 Confederate POW rations are reduced in Federal camps
July 6, 1864 The first Confederate prisoners arrive at Elmira
July 11, 1864 The Union prisoner gang known as the Raiders are hanged by their fellow inmates at Andersonville
August 9, 1864 Andersonville returns show 33,006 prisoners, the highest total at the prison
August 31, 1864 Wirz reports that 2,993 prisoners died in August at Andersonville
September 13, 1864 The first Union prisoners arrive at Camp Lawton
November 21, 1864 John H. Winder becomes Commissary General of Confederate prisons
January 21, 1865 Bowing to political pressure, Grant reinstitutes limited exchanges
February 7, 1865 John H. Winder dies of a heart attack
April 9, 1865 General Robert E. Lee surrenders the Army of Northern Virginia, with less than 8,000 effectives on-hand
April 14, 1865 President Abraham Lincoln is shot by John Wilkes Booth, and dies the next day
April 27, 1865 The Sultana sinks in the Mississippi River, resulting in the death of more than 1,500 Union prisoners of war
May 5, 1865 Colonel George Gibbs abandons his post as commander of Andersonville
August 14, 1865 Clara Barton participates in the dedication of the Andersonville National Cemetery
August 25, 1865 The war crimes trial of Henry Wirz begins
July 11, 1865 The last Confederate prisoners leave Elmira
November 10, 1865 Captain Henry Wirz is hanged for war crimes
September 20, 1889 The Libby Prison Museum opens in Chicago, Illinois
February 3, 1899 The New Jersey Monument is dedicated in the Andersonville National Cemetery
June 7, 1902 A monument to Confederate prisoners is dedicated at Camp Chase
November 26, 1908 The Indiana Monument is dedicated in the Andersonville National Cemetery
May 12, 1909 The Henry Wirz Monument is dedicated in the town of Andersonville, Georgia
April 29, 1914 The New York Monument is dedicated in the Andersonville National Cemetery
November 8, 1985 President Ronald Reagan signs legislation creating the Prisoner of War Medal
April 9, 1998 The National Prisoner of War Museum is dedicated at the Andersonville National Historic Site