The story of the hometown of Allied prisoners of war "Hometown. I want to return" begins with the captive of the Confederates. A grandmother of a 76-year old friend and a worker of the history association talk about a point lookout. During the Civil War, the alliance set up a prison for Confederate soldiers captured near the point lookout. A warm and familiar voice indicates an age sign and the narrator is willing to remember the story. She has that story in the book, but she remembers that from her memory. She knows the story well, so it is hard to say that she has not read it one word at a time.
In the 1860s, civil war prisons were particularly uncomfortable places, psychosis due to paralytic cutting, gangrene and war. It is said that the spirit of the Confederate soldiers who had problems intervening in this former joint prison troubled majestic granite and brick megalands and was located in a short ferry from Pea Island, Delaware. On the weekend of October, the Diamond State Ghost Investigator will visit the fort for 3 hours at 6:30 pm and 9:30 pm. Here we use ghost sensing equipment to find supernatural phenomena. Tickets are $ 50. - MM
32 Salisbury - Early town in the hilly area at the foot of North Carolina. Today it is known for the Confederate Prison and the National Cemetery, but its revolutionary war prison is little known and is most likely to be built in the latter part of the war. There is no evidence that a prisoner of war has been imprisoned in the battle of the coopens. 36 Gilford Court Battle - On March 15, 1781 British forces in Cornwalls attacked Natanal Green at Guildford Court, North Carolina (now part of Greensboro). Patriotic army. The green army was forced to withdraw from the battlefield, but the British army was hit hard and many people were killed or injured.
The problem of black prisoners of war is a matter which is constantly being discussed between the two sides. In the early stages of war prisoners are ranked. However, the Southern Alliance refused to interact with black prisoners. The correspondence of the alliance was to stop the exchange of prisoners. The position of Allied forces has been changed so that rebirthed black people can exchange and ultimately can exchange all soldiers regardless of race. By that time the federal leadership understands that the lack of white allies that can serve as soldiers is an advantage and that there was no massive exchange of black or white prisoners before the Confederation of the Confederates Did.