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Salisbury Prison

Salisbury National Cemetery
Unknown Dead Monument, Salisbury National Cemetery, 202 Government Road, Salisbury (Rowan County, North Carolina).jpg
Unknown Dead Monument with the Maine Monument in the background.
Salisbury National Cemetery is located in North Carolina
Salisbury National Cemetery
Salisbury National Cemetery is located in the US
Salisbury National Cemetery
Location 202 Government Rd., Salisbury, North Carolina
Coordinates 35°39′41″N 80°28′34″W / 35.66139°N 80.47611°W / 35.66139; -80.47611Coordinates: 35°39′41″N 80°28′34″W / 35.66139°N 80.47611°W / 35.66139; -80.47611
Built 1863
Architectural style Dutch Colonial Revival
MPS Civil War Era National Cemeteries MPS
NRHP Reference # 99000393
Added to NRHP April 12, 1999

Salisbury National Cemetery is a United States National Cemetery located in the city of Salisbury, in Rowan County, North Carolina. Its first interments were Union soldiers who died at a Confederate prisoner of war camp at the site during the American Civil War. Administered by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, it encompasses 65 acres (26 ha), 15 acres (6.1 ha) in the original location and 50 acres (20 ha) at the annex. As of 2012 it had 6500 interments (in 6000 standard graves, many of which also hold a spouse), plus an estimated 3,800 in 18 mass graves, at the original location and 5000, in 4500 graves, in the new location.

In May 1861, North Carolina seceded from the Union and the Confederacy sought a site in Rowan County for a military prison. A twenty-year-old abandoned cotton mill near the railroad line was selected as the location. It was brick and three stories tall with an attic. Cottages and a were later added. The number of prisoners increased from 120 in December 1861 to 1400 in May 1862. In the early part of the war, prisoners were well cared for and even indulged in baseball; recorded in a drawing by Maj. Otto Boetticher.

By October 1864 the prison held 5000, and 10,000 soon after that. The town of Salisbury had only 2000 residents, making it the fourth largest town in the state, and there was concern about the safety of those on the outside. Later when the prison became overcrowded and the death rate rose from 2% to 28%, mass graves were used to accommodate the dead.

In February 1865 men were moved to other locations. 3729 who could do so marched to Greensboro to be taken by train to Wilmington, North Carolina. 1420 others were transferred to Richmond, Virginia. By the time Union Gen. George Stoneman reached Salisbury, the prison was a supply depot. Stoneman ordered the prison burned and a wood fence built around the graves. Of the buildings that constituted the prison, one house on Bank Street still stands.


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