The Tennessee in the Civil War Message Board

Re: Union Prison at Hart's Island N.Y.

From the "Register of Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Who Died in Federal Prisons and Military Hospitals in the North" (Office of the Commissioner for Marking Graves of Confederate Dead, United States War Department, 1912, Reprint by Erickson Books, Nacogdoches, Texas, 1984):

page 33: "List of Confederate soldiers who, while prisoners of war, died at David's Island, Hart's Island, Fort Columbus, Willett's Point, Fort Lafayette, Fort Wood, in the State of New York, and at Portsmouth Grove in the State of Rhode Island, but subsequently were removed to Cypress Hills National Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York."

page 40: Private Wm. H. ROYAL, Company B, 38th North Carolina (Infantry) died on June 3, 1865 and was interred in grave #2939 of the National Cemetery.

See Department of Veterans Affairs website http://www.cem.va.gov/nchp/cypresshills.htm

HISTORICAL INFORMATION

Despite the early optimism of both the Union and Confederacy, by summer 1862, it was increasingly evident that the Civil War would be both long and costly. It was also apparent that additional burial grounds would be needed to accommodate the growing number of Union soldiers who died from battle injuries and disease.

While New York City and its outskirts were outside the area of military conflict, numerous hospitals were set up here to care for wounded Union troops. Cypress Hills began as a zone of the Interior Military Cemetery and was located within the boundaries of the large and private Cypress Hills Cemetery in Brooklyn. Almost three acres were set aside for the burial of Civil War dead in what became known as Union Grounds. In 1870, the Cypress Hills Cemetery Corporation deeded the property to the United States for a consideration of $9,600. An inspection report of September 1870 indicates that 3,170 Union soldiers and 461 Confederate POWs were already buried there. Most of the interments came from military hospitals in the area. There were also a number of reinterments from cemeteries on Long Island Sound and in Rhode Island.

Prior to 1873, eligibility for burial in a national cemetery was restricted to U.S. soldiers who died as a result of injury or disease during the Civil War. In 1873, however, Congress approved legislation extending burial rights to honorably discharged soldiers, sailors and Marines who served during the war. To accommodate the growing number of burials requested at Cypress Hills, more than 15 acres were purchased in 1884. In addition, in 1941, a small tract within the old Cypress Hills Cemetery, known as the Mount of Victory Plot, was donated by the State of New York. Today the cemetery consists of three parcels totaling a little over 18 acres: the Union grounds, a larger area on Jamaica Avenue, and the Mount of Victory. Although Cypress Hills was established to honor Civil War veterans, its grounds include the graves of soldiers who fought in the American Revolution, Spanish-American War, Korean and Vietnam wars. Cypress Hills National Cemetery was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1997..

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Union Prison at Hart's Island N.Y.
Re: Union Prison at Hart's Island N.Y.
Re: Union Prison at Hart's Island N.Y.
194th Infantry co G, Harts Island.
Re: 194th Infantry co G, Harts Island.
Pvt. John B. Barlow Co.F 37th NC Inf.
Re: Pvt. John B. Barlow Co.F 37th NC Inf.
Re: 194th Infantry co G, Harts Island.
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Re: 7 Indenpendent Co., Veteran Reserve Corps
Re: Union Prison at Hart's Island N.Y.
Re: Union Prison at Hart's Island N.Y.
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Re: Union Prison at Hart's Island N.Y.