Tthe following account is taken from the Point Lookout POW
Organization's homepage.
Point Lookout POW Camp (Camp Hoffman) was established after
the Battle of Gettysburg to incarcerate Confederate prisoners. It was in
operation from August 1863 through June 1865. Being only 5' above sea level, it
was located on approx. 30 acres of leveled land at the southern tip of Maryland,
in St. Mary's County, and surrounded by water on three sides by the Chesapeake
Bay and Potomac River. It was the largest prison camp in the
north.
Before the war, Point Lookout was a fashionable resort hotel and a
summer bathing place with over a hundred cottages where the elite spent their
leisure time. In 1862, with erection of additional buildings, it became a
military hospital for the care of union soldiers, as well as a supply depot for
the Army of the Potomac. In August 1863, the large building with outbuildings
arranged in spoke fashion (Hammond Hospital), became the care center for
wounded/sick Confederate prisoners as well as for union men.
During the
two year span of operation, Point Lookout saw approx. 50,000 POWs pass through
her gates. These were military and civilian, men and women, black and white.
It's also interesting to note that the youngest POW at Point Lookout was Baby
Perkins. He was born there. His mother was captured at the Battle of
Spotsylvania with her artillery unit.
Prison conditions were deplorable.
Rations were below minimal causing scurvy and malnutrition. Prisoners ate rats
and raw fish. It's recorded that one hungry Rebel devoured a raw seagull that
had been washed ashore. Soap skim and trash peelings were often eaten when
found. Lice, disease, and chronic diarrhea often resulted in an infectious
death. Prisoners were deprived of adequate clothing, often no shoes in winter or
a blanket among sixteen or more housed in old, worn, torn sibley tents. Even the
Point's weather played havoc with the prisoners. Because of it's location, it's
extremely cold with icy wind in the winter and a smoldering sun reflecting off
the barren sand in summer was blinding. High water often flooded the tents in
the camp area. The undrained marshes bred mosquitoes. Malaria, typhoid fever and
smallpox was common. The brackish water supply was contaminated by unsanitary
camp conditions. There was a deadline approx. 10' from the approx. 14' wooden
parapet wall. Anyone caught crossing this line, even to peek through the fence,
was shot. Prisoners were also randomly shot at during the night as they slept.
Mjr. Brady was the Provost Marshall and Mjr. Gen. Benjamin (Beast)
Butler would review the prison camp. Many times he galloped through the crowd of
men, hitting them as he sped by. The sixty gun Minnesota was within a short
distance from the shore to guard the prisoners.
***** Among the sites at
this prison were: 1830 Lighthouse, Hammond Hospital, the Nuns housing, Fort
Lincoln, guard quarters, officers quarters, stables, contraband quarters, union
quarters/tenting area, burying grounds, smallpox hospital, stockade, etc.
***** At present, a near 4,000 are accounted for as having died and are
buried in the Point Lookout cemetery. Their graves have been moved twice since
the original burial. They now rest in a mass grave under an 85' towering obelisk
monument erected by the federal government. Huge bronze tablets circling this
monument depict names of those so far recorded. Also in this well kept cemetery
is a smaller 25' monument erected by the state of Maryland to the memory of the
prisoners.