Hope Springs Infernal

I heard that about Andersonville as a kid when our family visited there in the early 60's. Maybe someone confused the two camps.

They are the same place. Andersonville is the name of the railroad depot and small town, and "Camp Sumter" the name of the Confederate military prison facility developed nearby. Even many Confederates, however, just referred to it as "Andersonville."

1741438319531.png


In this drawing of the prison facility, the railroad is visible in the background, with a train of cars on it passing through Andersonville...

1741438700977.png



The spring the popped up through the earth was called "Providence Spring."

The Veterans and the Women's Relief Corps saw to it the providence spring site was suitably marked in following decades.

1741438815164.png


The Spring popped up inside the prison stockade in August, 1864, and was considered a tremendous relief, as the creek which ran through the stockade, was terribly polluted. The "sinks" for the 30,000 inmates were located along it!

1741439337229.png
1741439380895.png


The prisoners, to avoid water polluted by the sinks, etc., walked to the edge of the stockade to dip water from the creek there, though the camps of the several hundred Confederate guards were outside, and contributed to rendering even that water less than pure. Many of the prisoners to find water fit to drink dug deep wells amid their tents. Generally though, the prisoners were constrained to water more or less polluted. After a heavy rainstorm in August, which caused a tremendous freshet to wash through the stockade, a spring burst forth, which provided fresh water from the ground, unpolluted by the miasmic swamp water of the creek generally... Hiram Buckingham recalled...

1741440041640.png



More detail of the appearance of the spring given here...


John Levi Maile, one of the inmates, noted later that while some in the post-war years were included to consider the spring's breaking forth, in its modest way, rather less than miraculous, others among the prisoners considered it just so.

1741439108679.png



The Providence Spring site is maintained within the Andersonville National Park...

1741440117601.png
 
They are the same place. Andersonville is the name of the railroad depot and small town, and "Camp Sumter" the name of the Confederate military prison facility developed nearby. Even many Confederates, however, just referred to it as "Andersonville."

View attachment 541703

In this drawing of the prison facility, the railroad is visible in the background, with a train of cars on it passing through Andersonville...

View attachment 541706


The spring the popped up through the earth was called "Providence Spring."

The Veterans and the Women's Relief Corps saw to it the providence spring site was suitably marked in following decades.

View attachment 541707

The Spring popped up inside the prison stockade in August, 1864, and was considered a tremendous relief, as the creek which ran through the stockade, was terribly polluted. The "sinks" for the 30,000 inmates were located along it!

View attachment 541709View attachment 541710

The prisoners, to avoid water polluted by the sinks, etc., walked to the edge of the stockade to dip water from the creek there, though the camps of the several hundred Confederate guards were outside, and contributed to rendering even that water less than pure. Many of the prisoners to find water fit to drink dug deep wells amid their tents. Generally though, the prisoners were constrained to water more or less polluted. After a heavy rainstorm in August, which caused a tremendous freshet to wash through the stockade, a spring burst forth, which provided fresh water from the ground, unpolluted by the miasmic swamp water of the creek generally... Hiram Buckingham recalled...

View attachment 541711


More detail of the appearance of the spring given here...


John Levi Maile, one of the inmates, noted later that while some in the post-war years were included to consider the spring's breaking forth, in its modest way, rather less than miraculous, others among the prisoners considered it just so.

View attachment 541708


The Providence Spring site is maintained within the Andersonville National Park...

View attachment 541712
You are advised not to drink water from it. It has a lot of alkaline in it.

I don't think Andersonville Spring water would sell very well anyway.

"Now is a homemade gourd cup!'
 

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