CSA Soldiers Used As Human Shields
The following article was taken verbatim from 'The South Was Right' from the authors, Donald and Ronald Kennedy.
During the summer of 1990, the leading news consisted of the events in
Iraq and Kuwait. One of the more heinous acts in modern times was committed by
Iraq, under the leadership of Saddam Hussein. He had the audacity to take
Americans and other foreigners as hostages and use them as human shields to
protect his vital military bases. The idea of this inhumane and barbaric policy
brought down upon Iraq the condemnation of the entire civilized world. Where do
you suppose Hussein got the idea of using prisoners as human shields to protect
military installations? Perhaps Hussein had been studying the war measures used
by the Yankees in their invasion of the South!
Approximately the same
time Hussein was setting up his human shield, the Yankee myth-makers were hard
at work making a "documentary" entitled "The Civil War." As we have noted, this
propaganda series was produced by a prejudiced man from the North-the place
where so many slaves were brought into this country after the Yankee flesh
merchants had kidnapped them from their homes in Africa. The Northern
myth-makers seem to have trouble remembering such facts that are not in keeping
with the official Yankee myth of history.
Now let's see if our Southern
history will help us determine where Hussein got his idea about using humans as
a shield to protect military installations.
In the summer of 1864 the
South was pressed on all fronts. The city of Charleston, South Carolina, was
under a Yankee blockade. The combined guns of the Yankee forts and the Union
navy were shelling the city. The Confederates were answering the Yankees shot
for shot. The Yankee government took six hundred Southern POWs and sent them to
Charleston. The Yankee invader had hit upon a great idea-"Why not put Southern
POWs in front of our position and make the Confederates fire on their own men?"
By this method the Yankees hoped to prevent further shelling of the Yankee
position by the Confederates.47
Captain Walter MacRae of the Seventh
North Carolina was one of the six hundred hostages used by the United States
government as a part of its human shield. He gives a vivid account of life under
the guns and the resultant horrors visited upon these innocent Southern POWs.
The prisoners were placed in a stockade less than two acres square. They were
beneath the guns of the Yankee fort and situated so that every shot from the
Confederate forts ". . . must either pass over our heads or right through the
pen [stockade]. Any which fell short or exploded a tenth of a second too soon,
must strike death and destruction through our crowded ranks."48
Captain
MacRae describes the poor living conditions and food that was issued to the
Southern POWs. The men were confined in a very small area (two acres), and no
sanitary facilities were provided. They had to eat, sleep, and care for their
wounded in the same place where garbage and sewage were dumped. Their only
supply of water was from holes they dug in the sand. The water holes quickly
filled with a mixture of rain water, salt water, garbage, and sewage. Their food
consisted of provisions that had been condemned by the Federal government as
unfit for Yankee troops. These "rations" consisted of worm- and insect-infested
hardtack, a one-inch square, one-half-inch-thick piece of pork, and eight ounces
of sour corn meal.
The POWs were placed under the guard of the
Fifty-Fourth Massachusetts (Glory) and its cruel commander, Col. E. N.
Hollowell. When some of the POWs protested the conditions of the rations to
Colonel Hollowell, he replied, in true Yankee fashion, ". . . there was meat
enough in the crackers, bugs, and worms."49
Within the stockade, the
Yankees roped off a perimeter. Any POW who walked too close would be shot.
Colonel Hollowell also gave orders to the black troops to shoot into any
gathering of POWs larger than ten men or at any POW who broke any other rule of
the prison.
This barbaric attempt of the Yankee invader to use Southern
POWs as a shield to protect their positions did not work. Captain MacRae noted
that the Southern gunners did slow down and take more time to aim (the better to
hit the Yankee invader). With each well-placed shot from the Southern guns, a
great shout of joy would go up from the Southern hostages. When the Southern
guns fired, someone in the stockade would shout and everyone would hit the dirt
and watch as the friendly fire would do its work on the invader. After a few
months of this bombardment, the Yankees removed the men to another prison where
they were treated no better, but at least they were not in danger of being
killed\by their own men.
The Yankee apologists tell us that the North
was justified in using Southern POWs as a human shield because the Confederates
were treating Northern prisoners just as badly. This accusation was denied by
both the people of Charleston and by the Confederate government. Yankee major
general C. V. Foster stated:
Our of ricers, prisoners of war in
Charleston, have been ascertained to be as follows [rations]: Fresh meat three
quarters of a pound or one half pound hard bread or one half pint of meal;
beans, one fifth pint.50
This amount was about five times the quantity
given to the Southern POWs held by the Yankees. Foster, in a letter to his
superior, Gen. Henry Halleck, made the following statement:
Many of the
people of Charleston exerted themselves in every way to relieve the necessities
of our men, and freely, as far as their means would allow, made contributions of
food and clothing.51
He also stated that the kind and just treatment the
Northern POWs received from the South had induced over half (sixty-five percent)
of the men to go over to the Southern cause and sign an oath of allegiance to
the Confederacy. It may be noted that only one percent of the six hundred
Southern POWs held by General Foster went over to the Yankee side. This, in
itself, is evidence that the Northern POWs were treated kindly by the people and
government of Charleston.
The next time you hear a liberal news
commentator venting his wrath on evil tyrants who use innocent human beings as
hostages or human shields, stop and remember the six hundred Southern POWs at
Charleston. When you hear or read about terrorists such as Saddam Hussein, stop
and ask yourself, "Where do you suppose he got that idea?"