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Andersonville Civil War Prison
Item 10 of 12
This is a contributing entry for Andersonville Civil War Prison and only appears as part of that tour.Learn More.
Small round historical markers and stone blocks dot the upper side of the field inside the deadline of Camp Sumter. These markers indicate locations of historical wells which prisoners dug in attempts to find clean water. Prisoners also expanded wells into possible escape tunnels. Prisoners faced possible death or punishment if they were discovered digging. Many soldiers recall the terrifying sense of defeat felt when tunnels and wells were blocked off or filled in by Confederate leaders who prevented prisoners from using them as water sources or escape routes. Today, visitors can walk the field and stand over several dozen different sites where wells were dug.

Trees have now grown into wells dug by prisoners.

Trees have now grown into wells dug by prisoners.

Well Marker

Beige, Circle, Iron, Concrete

Tree grown over well site.

Iron, Land lot, Metal, Fence

Well marker

Well marker

Prisoners dug wells inside the stockade walls to find additional sources of water or provide escape routes. When seeking water, prisoners dug forty to eighty feet down to reach the water table.[1] In many cases, guards covered over and filled in discovered wells and made them inaccessible for either water or as ways of hiding escape tunnels.[2] With no tree cover, it was difficult for soldiers to hide large wells dug in the camp. These futile attempts were remembered wistfully by prisoners like William Lyon, who wrote of both attempts to dig for water and to escape:

“The water was fearful, and we begged the rebels to give us tools to dig wells with. We dug wells all over the prison, but could get no water…we were exposed to the heat of the sun during the day….We finally concluded to start in one of our wells [to escape] which we had dug about sixty feet without getting water. Night after night we worked and threw the dirt into the well.”[3]

Similar themes appear in the memoir of John Maile, who described the discovery of well digging which led to the seeming benevolence of the camp commander:

“In the early summer, Capt. Wirz issued to the prisoners picks and shovels, with which to dig wells for increased water supply. From some of these wells the men started tunnels through which to escape. Discovering this, the commander withdrew the tools, and ordered the wells to be filled up. Permission to keep one of them open was purchased by a group of prisoners.” [4]

Unfortunately, the wells prisoners were permitted to keep, if any, were too small to provide for the thousands of prisoners inside the stockade. In Waite’s recollections, the preserved well only supplied water for a thousand men, just a fraction of the total population of the prison. In the aftermath of the Civil War several Union veterans’ groups such as the Grand Army of the Republic and later the Woman’s Relief Corps preserved the locations of the wells. From 1865 to 1909 before the transfer of the property to the United States Army, these groups worked to preserve the field in its most accurate form, including marking sites of wells.[5]

[1] “Wells,” Andersonville Prison Site Walking Tour Brochure, National Park Service, accessed December 16, 2020.

[2] Robert Scott Davis, “Andersonville Prison,” New Georgia Encyclopedia (January 21, 2003), accessed December 16, 2020. https://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/history-archaeology/andersonville-prison

[3] William N. Tyler, The Dispatch Carrier and Memoirs of Andersonville Prison (Port Byron, Ill.: Port Byron “Globe” Print, 1892), part 2, 23. Project Gutenberg, accessed December 16, 2020. http://www.gutenberg.org/files/40046/40046-h/40046-h.htm#Page_a9

[4] John L. Maile, Prison Life in Andersonville, With Special Reference to the Opening of Providence Spring (Los Angeles: Grafton Publishing Company, 1912), 56. Project Gutenberg, accessed December 15, 2020. http://www.gutenberg.org/files/39584/39584-h/39584-h.htm#Page_56

[5] “Wells,” Andersonville Prison Site Walking Tour Brochure, National Park Service, accessed December 16, 2020.

Image Sources(Click to expand)

Personal photograph, Erin Del Giudice Nov. 14, 2020

Personal Photograph, Erin Del Giudice Nov. 14, 2020

Personal Photograph, Erin Del Giudice Nov. 14, 2020

Personal photograph, Erin Del Giudice Nov. 14, 2020