Famous File 4-24-13
Common Ground
By Kalé Liam
Hobbes
Riddle me this, Rabbits: Where will you
find a cemetery inside another cemetery?
Oh, that’s just a wee bit too tough,
huh? Okay, let’s try this one instead:
What does a Civil War training facility
for Union troops, a Prisoner-of-War Camp for Confederate detainees and “Mark
Twain” have in common?
The
answer to both questions is: Woodlawn Cemetery
Woodlawn National Cemetery is 10.5
acres, has 8,693 occupants (as of 2005) and is contained within Woodlawn
Cemetery.
Before it became a cemetery, Woodlawn
National was a Civil War training facility for Union troops.
In 1861, it was called Camp Rathbun and
located near the town of Elmira, Chemung County, New York. It was established
to train soldiers before sending them off to fight in the war; and at full
capacity, it easily accommodated 2,000 soldiers.
The location was considered prime real
estate, because it was close to the crossing of the Erie and Northern Central
railway lines, but as the Civil War progressed, most of the camp’s property (30
acres) was not used.
Lieutenant-Colonel Seth Eastman was in
charge of Camp Rathbun and the hastily-run conversion to turn it into a
prisoner-of-war camp. By the summer of
1864, 20 new barracks were built and the old #3 Barracks was repaired.
His report to his superior, Colonel
Hoffman, stated that Rathbun could support 6,000 troops, but the reply he received
instructed him to expect between 8,000 and 10,000 detainees within ten
days!
Eastman had submitted calculations
stating only half that number could be housed properly:
·
Barracks are well
kept but only accommodate 4,000 (with the possibility of another 1,000 in
tents)
·
Kitchens capable of
feeding 5,000 a day
·
Mess Room seating
capacity is 1,500 at once; and
·
NO hospital
facilities on site
But Eastman was still told to expect
prisoners, and their arrival would be memorable indeed.
It was July 15th, 1864. A steamer arrived in Jersey City, NJ from
Point Lookout, Maryland with 833 Confederate prisoners-of-war, captured at the
Battle of Cold Harbour (in Virginia).
Once in Jersey City, the prisoners were
transferred to an 18-car train that would travel along the Erie Railway Line to
Elmira, NY. They were escorted by 128
Union guards.
Delayed until 6am to look for some missing
prisoners, the train left for Port Jervis, NY but arrived over four hours late.
The next stretch of track was between Sparrowbush, NY and Shohola, PA. It
snaked through hardwood forests with many blind curves forcing the train to
travel between 20 and 25 mph. It made Shohola by 2:50pm
Further up the route at Lackawaxen, PA,
a dispatcher permits a westbound coal train bound for Port Jervis to pass
through; as it had been more than four hours since he had heard anything about
the prison train.
The coal train had no sooner passes his
junction, when the dispatcher receives word that the prison train bound for
Elmira has just passed Shohola and was on its way to Lackawaxen!
One and one-half miles from Shohola,
the railway line passes through “King & Fuller’s Cut,” a series of blind
bends with as little as fifty feet of forward visibility. Neither train saw the other until it was too
late!
The trains collided head-on with the
force of an earthquake. Their combined speeds were only 30mph, but that created
enough momentum for the wood stored in the engines’ tenders to impale both sets
of engineers and firemen.
The remainder of the fatalities
occurred in the first three prison cars, as the box cars were “telescoped” into
each other, like wooden Russian “matryoshka dolls” of deceasing sizes nesting
inside the other.
The box car immediately behind the
prison train engine carried 37 passengers – 36 were killed instantly. Of the
remaining prisoner from that first box car, he was thrown from the wreckage and
lived!
Passengers in the latter cars received
injuries, and the surviving guards were busy again searching for five prisoners
who took advantage of the incident and escaped! They were never found.
Guards’ descriptions of the carnage
were detailed, as if they were describing a battle scene from the War.
The people of Shohola, and nearby Barryville,
NY, treated the wounded, with total disregard of their uniform colours. Doctors arrived in two relief trains from
Port Jervis and worked through the night, calculating the official death toll
to be: 44 prisoners, 17 guards and the four railway staff – and the dead were
quickly buried by the side of the railway in unmarked graves. “An inquiry found the dispatcher, who fled
the scene, to be negligent.1”
During its fifteen months in operation,
Elmira Prison opened its doors to 12,100 Confederate inmates, and almost 25% of
the occupants died from the combination of malnutrition, continued exposure to
harsh winter weather, and disease from poor sanitary conditions. The Confederates referred to the prison as “Hellmira”
as they considered it a death camp.
But, five day after the prison opened,
Surgeon Charles T. Alexander inspected the place, by request of Eastman’s
commanding officer, Colonel William Hoffman, who was also the Commissary
General.
The surgeon’s findings supported
Eastman’s reports as well as sanitary issues (i.e. clean drinking water) and
medical care (a make-shift hospital was made from a tent and run by a civilian
instead of a doctor); but, Colonel Hoffman did not heed the warnings and many
inmates died.
The dead were then prepared and buried at
Woodlawn Cemetery by the sexton, a former slave named John W. Jones.
The last prisoner left the camp on
September 25th, 1865. Elmira Prison was then closed, demolished and
converted to farm lands.
In 1877 Woodlawn Cemetery was
designated a national cemetery.
In 1911 the Shohola Monument was
erected. Upon one side are the names of the Union soldiers and the Confederate
soldiers upon the opposite side. Along
with the monument was the re-interment of the unmarked railway burials made 47
years earlier.
In 1937, the Daughters of the
Confederacy erected a monument to the Confederate prisoners who died while
incarcerated at Elmira Prison.
NOTABLE PEOPLE
Samuel L. Clemens, better known to
millions as “Mark Twain,” is buried at Woodlawn Cemetery. His wife, the former Olivia Langdon, had died
earlier in 1904, was cremated and also buried in there.
Halley’s Comet had made an appearance
when Samuel Clemens was born. The great
writer predicted that he would also “go out with it.”
When Mr. Clemens died at the age of 74,
it was April 21st, 1910 – the day after the return of Halley’s
Comet!
Information gleaned from the following:
[1] Elmira Prison
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camp_Rathbun
[2] Shohola Train Wreck
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shohola_train_wreck
[3] Woodlawn National Cemetery http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodlawn_National_Cemetery
[4] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodlawn_Cemetery
[5] Mark Twain http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Twain








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