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File Details: AJZSm, 1000 DPI, TIFF, Copy Negative, 6.1 Mb

Image ID: AJZS

Credit:

unknown photographer

Date:

1865.07

Negative Size:

stereo

Equipment:

walking stick

Locations & Lines:

New Orleans LA; Louisiana

Military Units:

19th Iowa Infantry; US Army

Sources:

Library of Congress

Library of Congress says: Commissioned officers of 19th Iowa Infantry after their exchange as prisoners of war, New Orleans.

Miller, Photographic History of the Civil War, Vol. 7, p49 says: These pictures represent some of the ragged non-commissioned officers and commissioned officers of the Nineteenth Iowa Infantry after they reached New Orleans for exchange. Razors and scissors had evidently been held at a premium in Camp Ford, from which they had come. During almost the entire war this Confederate prison was maintained near Tyler Texas. For a time it seemed forgotten. Up to the spring of 1864, conditions here were better than in many prisons. The stockade included a number of noble trees, several springs, and a stream of some size. Abundant opportunities for bathing were afforded. Drinking water was excellent. Wood was plentiful and an abundant supply of fresh meat was furnished. Prisoners at first build themselves log huts. Later any simple shelter was a luxury. Many of the captives were forced to burrow into the sides of the hill. The supply of wood became scanty. Meat grew scarcer until at last corn-meal was the staple article of diet. Clothes wore out and were not replaced.

Library of Congress credits Alexander Gardner.

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