http://timeteam.lunchbox.pbs.org/time-team/explore-the-sites/lost-civil-war-prison/why-we-went-there/ Camp Lawton or the Millen Prison was a stockade which held Union soldiers who been taken as prisoners-of-war during the American Civil War. It opened in October 1864 near Millen, Georgia, in Jenkins County and had to be evacuated within six weeks, due to the advance of Sherman's army through Georgia. With an area of 42 acres (17 ha) and holding over 10,000 of a planned 40,000 men…
Civil War Prison Camps American Battlefield Trust
WebLost Civil War Prison. Relive the Dig ». In the fall of 1864 the Confederate Army marched Union prisoners into a hastily built compound called Camp Lawton in Jenkins County, Georgia. The population mushroomed to more than 10,000 in just six weeks. Then, as Sherman's army approached, guards and prisoners alike were forced to flee. WebIn the very beginning of the Civil War, prisoners of war were exchanged right on the battlefield, a private for a private, a sergeant for a sergeant and a captain for a captain. In 1862 this system broke down and caused the creation of large holding pens for prisoners in both the North and South. ear of light
Camp Lawton Historical Marker
WebOct 11, 2012 · Archaeological investigation of the Camp Lawton Stockade in the Bo Ginn National Fish Hatchery continued during the recent shooting for the television show. Work focused on uncovering more information about the more than 10,000 Union prisoners who were held in the 42-acre Confederate run prison. http://www.civilwaralbum.com/misc10/fortlawton1.htm WebThe Lost Civil War Prison, Camp Lawton, was rediscovered in 2009 by Georgia Southern University's Department of Sociology and Anthropology in what is now the Magnolia Springs State Park. The park and a fish hatchery were built in the 1930s by the Civilian Conservation Corp (CCC), and it was long assumed that this twentieth-century development ... ct-251