Global Information Lookup Global Information

Camp Sorghum information


Camp Sorghum, Columbia, South Carolina.

Camp Sorghum was a Confederate States Army prisoner of war camp located in Columbia, South Carolina, during the American Civil War.

Established in late 1864 as a makeshift prison for approximately 1,400 Union officers, Camp Sorghum consisted of a 5-acre (20,000 m2) tract of open field, without walls, fences, buildings, or any other facilities. A "deadline" (boundary line) was established by laying wood planks 10 feet (3.0 m) inside the camp's boundaries.

Rations consisted of cornmeal and sorghum syrup as the main staples in the diet; thus the camp became known as "Camp Sorghum". Due to the lack of any security features, escapes were common. Conditions were terrible, with little food, clothing, or medicine, and disease claimed a number of lives among both the prisoners and their guards.[1]

The camp was the site of the imprisonment of S. H. M. Byers, as well as the location in which Byers created his two most famous works: the poem that lent its name to Sherman's March to the Sea, and The Song of Iowa. During his imprisonment at Camp Sorghum, Byers read a newspaper that had been smuggled into camp by a slave in a piece of bread. From that he learned of Sherman's March to the Sea, and the taking of Atlanta, Georgia. Byers wrote a poem about the March, which was set to music by fellow prisoner W. O. Rockwell. The song was smuggled out of the prison in the wooden leg of Lt. Daniel W. Tower, and became an immediate hit in the north.[2]

The prisoners of Camp Sorghum were eventually transferred to the property of the state mental asylum in Columbia sometime before the city was captured in February 1865.[3] Most of the POWs were removed from Columbia on February 12, 1865, as William Tecumseh Sherman's Union Army approached the city.[3]: 55–57  Byers however managed to hide in the attic of the asylum, and became one of the first to greet the Union Army upon its entrance to Columbia.[3]: 80, 86 

  1. ^ "Camp Sorghum Prisoner of War Camp". My Civil War.
  2. ^ "S. H. M. Byers". The Biographical Dictionary of Iowa. University of Iowa Press Digital Editions. Retrieved 2023-02-21.
  3. ^ a b c Lucas, Marion Brunson (1976). Sherman and the burning of Columbia (1st ed.). College Station: Texas A & M University Press. ISBN 0-89096-018-6. OCLC 2331311.

and 18 Related for: Camp Sorghum information

Request time (Page generated in 0.7922 seconds.)

Camp Sorghum

Last Update:

Camp Sorghum was a Confederate States Army prisoner of war camp located in Columbia, South Carolina, during the American Civil War. Established in late...

Word Count : 405

Sweet sorghum

Last Update:

Sweet sorghum is any of the many varieties of the sorghum grass whose stalks have a high sugar content. Sweet sorghum thrives better under drier and warmer...

Word Count : 1201

Saluda Factory Historic District

Last Update:

the development of the area along the Saluda River; Saluda Factory, Camp Sorghum and old State Road. The Saluda Factory ruins consist of the granite foundation...

Word Count : 203

South Carolina State Hospital

Last Update:

Hospital served briefly as a prisoner of war camp in 1865, absorbing the prisoners of former Camp Sorghum. Among those imprisoned there was S. H. M. Byers...

Word Count : 902

Refugee camp

Last Update:

A refugee camp is a temporary settlement built to receive refugees and people in refugee-like situations. Refugee camps usually accommodate displaced...

Word Count : 8273

Marie Boozer

Last Update:

morale-boosting activities. There was a jail in town and a prison called Camp Sorghum west of Columbia for Union officers who were prisoners-of-war. Some of...

Word Count : 3751

Dinka people

Last Update:

variety of Sorghum into southern Sudan. Caudatum Sorghum is drought resistant and produces well with very little care. This variety of Sorghum was not grown...

Word Count : 4164

Volksrust

Last Update:

to the Boer women and children who died in the camp. Volksrust has important beef, dairy, maize, sorghum, wool and sunflower seed industries. Miss World...

Word Count : 327

Kakuma

Last Update:

refugee camp, established in 1992. The population of Kakuma town was 60,000 in 2014, having grown from around 8,000 in 1990. In 1991, the camp was established...

Word Count : 3703

American Civil War prison camps

Last Update:

Between 1861 and 1865, American Civil War prison camps were operated by the Union and the Confederacy to detain over 400,000 captured soldiers. From the...

Word Count : 2565

Sotho calendar

Last Update:

(March) – the sorghum grains are visible and birds start eating them. The name is a compound noun from tlhaku tsa mabele (grains of sorghum) Mmesa (M.)...

Word Count : 939

Maize

Last Update:

tropical drought tolerance traits. to find new genomic regions providing sorghum downy mildew resistance, and to further characterize known differentially...

Word Count : 8970

Vredefort

Last Update:

town in the Free State province of South Africa with cattle, peanuts, sorghum, sunflowers and maize being farmed. It is home to 3,000 residents. The...

Word Count : 272

Laogai

Last Update:

camps. One camp near Beijing distributes between 13.5 and 22.5 kg of food per person per month. This is about average. The food consists of sorghum and...

Word Count : 4370

Nuba peoples

Last Update:

consists of a rectangular compound enclosing two round mud huts thatched with sorghum stalks facing each other called a shal. The shal is fenced with wooden...

Word Count : 2528

Africa

Last Update:

Later, gourds, watermelons, castor beans, and cotton were also collected. Sorghum was first domesticated in Eastern Sudan around 4000 BC, in one of the earliest...

Word Count : 19170

Economy of the Central African Republic

Last Update:

living in outlying areas. Principal food crops include cassava, peanuts, sorghum, millet, maize, sesame, and plantains. Principal cash crops for export...

Word Count : 1893

List of films shown at the New York Film Festival

Last Update:

Verge of a Nervous Breakdown (Pedro Almodóvar, Spain) Closing Night: Red Sorghum (Zhang Yimou, China) Ashik Kerib (Sergei Parajanov, USSR) Bird (Clint Eastwood...

Word Count : 11174

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net