Tags:
Interesting information Margaretann. My great grandfather and his brothers (First Alabama Cavalry, Company C) were stationed there 1862-63. According to his pension records, he was treated in the hospital there on two different occasions for measles and pneumona and his brother died in the hospital there of measles, as that disease was rampant in the camp there. My great grandfather's family was moved with others to Memphis in December of 1863 where they boarded a riverboat for southern Illinois (possbly the Alton area) where they lived for 4 years before moving back south.
How good to see a thread about contraband camps!
My ancestors were from Tippah County MS. A raid came through Ripley in about September 1864 and the men were eager to join the US Colored Troops and left. Well, some of the women folk followed them. One of my ancestors, who was a USCT widow, stated in her pension file that they were to be taken to Corinth, but it was quickly filled and they were diverted, and as she said, "they put us on a train and sent us to the Contraband Camp at President's Island." I have been trying to find out much about this camp and how it worked.
I know that Corinth was somewhat of a model contraband camp and well organized I have learned. But I have never seen these images of the memorial to the Corinth camp! I know that there was a measles outbreak and a good number died, there. But I am delighted to see that their is something memorializing the formerly enslaved people whose first taste of freedom they experienced at Corinth!
Thank you for sharing these images!!!
-Angela-
Unfortunately I don't George. I only have the horrific stories he and his wife told their younger children and grandchildren (my father being one) of their trip to and time in Corinth 1862-63, the trip to Memphis with other Southern Unionists and the riverboat journey up the Mississippi. My family also has his worn and tattered discharge from the First Alabama Cavalry that he kept with him until the day he died on December 27, 1911 in Mississippi.
© 2024 Created by IIGSExecDirector. Powered by