Searching...
    7 matches on "Prisoners of war"
    Civil War Ex-Prisoners of War Battle Flags
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    Civil War Ex-Prisoners of War Battle Flags  Save
    Description: These two flags belonged to Ohio men held in Confederate prison camps during the Civil War. It is possible that one or both of the flags belonged to the Franklin County Ex-Prisoners of War Association. One flag is blue with gold fringe. Painted on each side is a shield with a brown background and gold border, beneath which is a scroll bearing text. On the front, the shield features an eagle and the text "We can forgive but never forget." On the back, an eagle perches on a soldier's camp roll and rucksack with crossed bayonets behind it. Below, connected by three chain links, is a hand-painted image of a dog attacking a ragged man on the ground, symbolizing the soldiers' horrific experiences in Confederate prisons. Beneath the shield is a scroll bearing the words "Death before Dishonor." The flag is 52 by 59 inches (132 by 150 cm). The second flag, the national colors of the United States with gold fringe, bears the names of Confederate prison camps that held Union soldiers. Among the camps were Andersonville, Libby, and Cahaba. It has 38 gold painted stars arranged in a double-circle pattern with three stars in the middle and one in each corner. The flag measures 57.48 by 71.65 inches (146 by 182 cm). Ohio battle flags were on display at the Ohio Statehouse until the 1960s, when the state formed a committee to oversee efforts to restore the fragile flags. Some of the battle flags were on display on the plaza level of the Ohio History Center from 1970 until 1989. For conservation reasons, the flags have been in storage since 1989. In the 1960s, the collection was photographed and commercial artist Robert Needham painted illustrations of many Civil War flags. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: Om1330_1637692_001
    Subjects: Military Ohio; Civil War; Prisoners of war; Flags; Eagles
    Places: Franklin County (Ohio)
     
    Camp Chase in 1861 illustration
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    Camp Chase in 1861 illustration  Save
    Description: This bird's-eye view shows the layout of Camp Chase in Columbus, Ohio. Established in 1861, Camp Chase served as a recruitment and training center for the Union Army and as a prison camp for captured Confederate soldiers during the Civil War. There are over 2,200 Confederate soldiers buried in the cemetery at Camp Chase. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL04216
    Subjects: Camp Chase Confederate Cemetery (Columbus, Ohio); United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865; Prisoners of war; Prisons--Ohio; Ohio History--Military Ohio
    Places: Columbus (Ohio); Franklin County (Ohio)
     
    Johnsons Island cemetery
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    Johnsons Island cemetery  Save
    Description: This is a postcard featuring a photograph of the Confederate burial grounds on Johnsons Island, a military prison in Sandusky Bay where Confederate prisoners of war were held during the American Civil War. The prison was in operation from April 1862 to September 1865. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL06146
    Subjects: Cemeteries; Cemeteries--Ohio; Confederate States of America; Soldiers; Civil War 1861-1865; Civil War--Prisoners and prisons
    Places: Sandusky (Ohio); Erie County (Ohio)
     
    Johnsons Island military prison illustration
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    Johnsons Island military prison illustration  Save
    Description: This is an illustration of the military prison on Johnsons Island in Sandusky Bay where Confederate prisoners of war were held during the American Civil War. The prison was in operation from April 1862 to September 1865 and was later destroyed. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL06147
    Subjects: Confederate States of America; Soldiers; Civil War 1861-1865; Civil War--Prisoners and prisons
    Places: Sandusky (Ohio); Erie County (Ohio)
     
    Johnsons Island military prison illustration
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    Johnsons Island military prison illustration  Save
    Description: This is an illustration of the military prison on Johnsons Island in Sandusky Bay where Confederate prisoners of war were held during the American Civil War. The prison was in operation from April 1862 to September 1865 and was later destroyed. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL06148
    Subjects: Confederate States of America; Soldiers; Civil War 1861-1865; Civil War--Prisoners and prisons
    Places: Sandusky (Ohio); Erie County (Ohio)
     
    Johnson's Island Prison Camp illustration
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    Johnson's Island Prison Camp illustration  Save
    Description: Illustration showing Johnson's Island Confederate Prison and Cemetery around the time of the Civil War. Johnson's Island was a Union prison for Confederate officers during the American Civil War. It was located in the Sandusky Bay of Lake Erie, near Sandusky, Ohio. It was chosen as a prison site because it was thought that the island location would make escape more difficult. The 128th Ohio Volunteer Infantry served as guards at the prison, which began operation in April 1862 and continued to house prisoners until September 1865. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SC1177_002_01
    Subjects: United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865; Ohio History--Military Ohio; Johnson's Island Prison Camp; Prisoners of war;
    Places: Johnson's Island (Ohio); Sandusky (Ohio); Erie County (Ohio)
     
    Camp Chase Cemetery photograph
    Thumbnail image
    Save
    Camp Chase Cemetery photograph  Save
    Description: This image is a view of Camp Chase Confederate Cemetery, Columbus, Ohio. Rows of headstones mark the soldiers' graves. Visible in the left center background is a bronze figure of a Confederate soldier standing atop a stone arch. The cemetery is located in a residential neighborhood. Organized in 1861, Camp Chase initially replaced Camp Jackson, located near Columbus, as a recruitment and training center for the Union Army. The facility was named after Salmon P. Chase, Treasury Secretary under President Abraham Lincoln and former governor of Ohio. However, Camp Chase became a prisoner-of-war camp early in the war. The first inmates at Camp Chase were chiefly political and military prisoners from Kentucky and Western Virginia allegedly loyal to the Confederacy. Union victories at Fort Donaldson, Tennessee, on Feb. 16, 1862, and at Mississippi River Island No. 10, on April 8, 1862, brought an influx of Confederate prisoners to Camp Chase, most of whom were enlisted men and non-commissioned officers. During 1863 the prison population at Camp Chase numbered 8,000 men, its peak. Like many prisons in the north, Camp Chase was ravaged by disease; during late 1864, a smallpox epidemic resulted in many deaths. During the course of the Civil War, more than two thousand Confederate prisoners died at Camp Chase. Initially, prison officials buried dead prisoners in a Columbus city cemetery. In 1863, however, the prison established its own cemetery. Remains were reinterred in the prison cemetery after its opening. Following the war, thirty-one Confederate bodies from Camp Dennison near Cincinnati were moved to the Camp Chase cemetery. The Union military closed Camp Chase at the end of the Civil War. Efforts to mark the graves of the Confederate dead within the cemetery began by the mid-1890s. Led by William H. Knauss, a wounded Union Army veteran, this movement succeeded in bringing together both Union and Confederate veterans’ organizations to pay tribute to those interred in the cemetery. Memorial services have been held at the cemetery every year since 1896. On June 7, 1902, a monument to the Confederate dead was erected at the cemetery. In 1904, Congress allocated funds for the maintenance of Camp Chase Confederate Cemetery. Most of what remains of Camp Chase today includes two acres of land, consisting primarily of the Confederate cemetery. Officially, the Camp Chase Confederate Cemetery contains an estimated 2,168 remains in 2,122 graves. Camp Chase Confederate Cemetery has two monuments. The first depicts a bronze figure of a Confederate Civil War soldier standing atop a granite arch, his rifle held vertically in front of him, with both hands resting on the top of the barrel. Originally the memorial consisted of a wooden arch inscribed with the word “AMERICANS,” but in 1902 the wooden arch was replaced with this 17' tall stone memorial. The second monument is a 3-foot-tall boulder underneath the stone arch. Installed in 1897, the boulder bears an inscription that reads: "2260 Confederate Soldiers of the war 1861-1865 buried in this enclosure." (This statistic disagrees with the official record.) The Camp Chase site, including the Confederate Cemetery, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: AL06659
    Subjects: Camp Chase Confederate Cemetery (Columbus, Ohio); Camp Chase (Ohio); Civil War; Cemeteries--Ohio; Civil War--Prisoners and prisons; National Register of Historic Places
    Places: Columbus (Ohio); Franklin County (Ohio)
     
      7 matches on "Prisoners of war"
      Skip to content
      OhioPix
      FAQ    Advanced Search
      Menu
      Menu
      • Home
      • Advanced Search
      • Frequently Asked Questions
      • OhioPix Use
      • Record Display
      • sitemap

      Topics

      • Agriculture
      • American Indians in Ohio
      • Architecture
      • Arts and Entertainment
      • Business and Labor
      item in cart
      Check out now
      Ohio History Connection
      FAQ
      Advanced Search
      Subject heading sitemap
      For questions regarding image orders, contact [email protected] or call 614.297.2530.
      1. Choose a product option

      Thank you for visiting OhioPix. Please note that orders for high-resolution files will be filled within 5-10 business days of placing your order. Thank you for your patience and understanding.
      If you are purchasing this image for exhibit or other non-profit
      use by an Ohio cultural heritage institution, please contact
      [email protected] before proceeding with your order.
      2. Read and Agree

      Ohio History Connection Use Agreement and Conditions of Reproduction

      1. One-Time Use. The right to reproduce materials held in the collections of the Ohio History Connection is granted on a one-time basis only, and only for private study, scholarship or research. Any further reproduction of this material is prohibited without the express written permission of the Ohio History Connection.
      2. Use Agreement. Materials are reproduced for research use only and may not be used for publication, exhibition, or any other public purpose without the express written permission of the Ohio History Connection.
      3. Credit. Any publication, exhibition, or other public use of material owned by the Ohio History Connection must credit the Ohio History Connection. The credit line should read “Courtesy of the Ohio History Connection” and should include the image or call number. The Ohio History Connection appreciates receiving a copy or tearsheet of any publication/presentation containing material from the organization’s collections.
      4. Indemnification. In requesting permission to reproduce materials from the collections of the Ohio History Connection as described, the requestor agrees to hold harmless the OHC and its Trustees, Officers, employees and agents either jointly or severally from any action involving infringement of the rights of any person or their heirs and descendants in common law or under statutory copyright.
      5. Reproduction of Copyrighted Material. Permission to reproduce materials in which reproduction rights are reserved must be granted by signed written permission of the persons holding those rights.
      6. Copyright. The Ohio History Connection provides permission to use materials based on the organization’s ownership of the collection. Consideration of the requirements of copyrights is the responsibility of the author, producer, and publisher. Applicants assume all responsibility for questions of copyright and invasion of privacy that may arise in copying and using the materials available through Ohio Memory.
        Warning concerning copyright restriction: The copyright law of the U. S. (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Under certain conditions specified in the law, libraries and archives are authorized to a photocopy or reproduction. One of the specified conditions is that the photocopy or reproduction is not to be “used for any purpose other than private study, scholarship or research.” If a user make a request for, or later uses, a photocopy or reproduction for purposes in excess of “fair use,” that user may be liable for copyright infringement. This institution reserves the right to refuse to accept a copying order if, in its judgment, fulfillment of the order would involve violation of copyright law.
      7. Photographs of Objects. The Ohio History Connection retains rights to photographs taken of artifacts owned by the Ohio History Connection. The images may be used for research, but any publication or public display is subject to the above conditions of reproduction. A new use agreement and appropriate fees must be submitted for each use

      Quality Disclaimer: To maintain the authenticity and preservation of historic artifacts, the Ohio History Connection will not alter or endanger items in the collection for the purposes of reproduction or digitization. By completing this order form, the signee acknowledges that any and all requests will be completed with conservation in mind and that the images produced will reflect the physical condition of the item which may exhibit dirt, scratches, stains, tears, fading, etc.

      Thank you for visiting OhioPix. Please note that orders for high-resolution files will be filled within 5-10 business days of placing your order.
      By clicking I Agree, I consent to the terms, and acknowledge that I am entering into a legally binding agreement.

       
      OhioPix
      Please note that only 10 images can be processed per order. If you would like to order more than 10, please contact [email protected].