Henry Wirz

Henry Wirz

Henry Wirz
Born (1823-11-25)November 25, 1823
Zurich, Switzerland
Died November 10, 1865(1865-11-10) (aged 41)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Buried at Mount Olivet Cemetery, Washington, D.C., U.S.
Allegiance  Confederate States
Service/branch  Confederate Army
Years of service 1861–65
Rank Captain
Commands held Andersonville Prison
Battles/wars

American Civil War

Heinrich Hartmann Wirz[1] better known as Henry Wirz (November 25, 1823 – November 10, 1865) was a Swiss-born Confederate officer in the American Civil War. He is best known for his command of Camp Sumter, the Confederate prisoner-of-war camp near Andersonville, Georgia; he was tried and executed after the war for conspiracy and murder relating to his command of the camp.

Career and family

Born in Zurich, Switzerland, to Hans Caspar Wirz and Sophie Barbara Philipp, Henry Wirz received elementary and secondary education. He aspired to become a physician, but his family did not possess funds to pay for his medical education. Instead, he became a merchant and worked in Zurich and Turin. Wirz, who had married Emilie Oschwald in 1845 and had two children,[2] received a four-year prison term in April 1847 for inability to return money that he borrowed. The court commuted his sentence to 12-year forcible emigration. His wife refused to emigrate and obtained a divorce in 1853.[3]

In 1848, Wirz went to Russia and the next year to the United States, where he found employment in a factory in Lawrence, Massachusetts. After five years, he moved to Hopkinsville, Kentucky, and worked as a doctor's assistant.[4] He tried to establish his own homeopathic medicine practice in Cadiz, Kentucky and also worked as superintendent of a water cure clinic in Northampton, Massachusetts.[5]

In 1854, he married a Methodist widow named Elizabeth Wolfe, who stayed by his side to the end of his life. Along with her two daughters, they moved to Louisiana, where his wife, in 1855, gave birth to their daughter Cora. In Louisiana, Wirz worked for Levin Marshall as a plantation overseer and physician. By 1861, he had successfully navigated his transition to a new life in America.[6][7]

Civil War

Wirz enlisted as a private in Company A (Madison Infantry), 4th Battalion of Louisiana Infantry of the Confederate army in Madison, Louisiana.[8][9] He took part in the Battle of Seven Pines in May 1862, during which he was wounded by a minie ball and lost the use of his right arm. After returning to his unit on June 12, 1862, Wirz was promoted to captain "for bravery on the field of battle".[10] Because of his injury, he was assigned to the staff of Gen. John H. Winder, who was in charge of Confederate POW camps, as his adjutant.[11]

Confederate President Jefferson Davis made Capt. Wirz a Special Minister and sent him to Europe carrying secret dispatches to Confederate Commissioners James Mason in England, and John Slidell in France.[10] Wirz returned from Europe in January 1864 and reported back to Richmond, Virginia, where he began working for Gen. Winder in the prison department. Wirz then served on detached duty as a prison guard in Alabama, then transferred to help guard Union prisoners incarcerated at Richmond.

Camp Sumter

In February 1864, the Confederate government established Camp Sumter, a large military prison in Georgia near the small railroad depot of Anderson (as it was called then), to house Union prisoners of war. In April 1864, Wirz took command of Camp Sumter, where he remained for over a year.[6] Shortly before the end of the war, Wirz was promoted to the rank of major.[12]

Though wooden barracks were originally planned, the Confederates incarcerated the prisoners in a vast, rectangular, open-air stockade originally encompassing 16-1/2 acres, which had been intended as only a temporary prison pending exchanges of prisoners with the North. However, The prisoners gave this place the name Andersonville. The prison suffered an extreme lack of food, tools and medical supplies, severe overcrowding, poor sanitary conditions, and a lack of potable water.

Wirz recognized that the conditions were inadequate and petitioned his superiors to provide more support; this was denied. In July 1864, he sent five prisoners to the Union with a petition written by the inmates asking the government to negotiate their release.[13]

At its peak in August 1864, the camp held approximately 32,000 Union prisoners, making it the fifth-largest city in the Confederacy. The monthly mortality rate from disease, dysentery, and malnutrition reached 3,000. Around 45,000 prisoners were incarcerated during the camp's 14-month existence, of whom close to 13,000 (28%) died.[14]

Trial and execution

The execution of Wirz near the U.S. Capitol moments after the trap door was sprung.
Wirz's grave marker at Mount Olivet Cemetery, denoting him as a "hero" and a "martyr".
Wikisource has original text related to this article:

Wirz was arrested by a contingent of the 4th U.S. Cavalry on May 7, 1865 in Andersonville, taken first to Macon, Georgia , and then by rail to Washington, D.C., arriving there on May 10, 1865. He was held in the Old Capitol Prison, since the Federal government decided to put him on trial for conspiring to impair the lives of Union prisoners of war.[6] A special Military Commission was convened with Maj. Gen. Lew Wallace presiding. The other members were Gershom Mott, John W. Geary, Lorenzo Thomas, Francis Fessenden, Edward S. Bragg, John F. Ballier, U.S. Volunteers, T. Allcock, 4th New York Artillery, and John H. Stibbs, 12th Iowa Volunteers. Col. Norton P. Chipman served as Judge Advocate.[15]

Charges

The military tribunal took place between August 23 and October 18, 1865,[15] held in the Court of Federal Claims, and dominating the front pages of newspapers across the United States. Wirz was charged with "combining, confederating, and conspiring, together with John H. Winder, Richard B. Winder, Joseph [Isaiah H.] White, W. S. Winder, R. R. Stevenson, and others unknown, to injure the health and destroy the lives of soldiers in the military service of the United States, then held and being prisoners of war within the lines of the so-called Confederate States, and in tho military prisons thereof, to the end that the armies of the United States might be weakened and impaired, in violation of the laws and customs of war", and for "violation of the laws of war, to impair and injure the health and to destroy the lives—by subjecting to torture and great suffering; by confining in unhealthy and unwholesome quarters; by exposing to the inclemency of winter and to the dews and burning sun of summer; by compelling the use of impure water; and by furnishing insufficient and unwholesome food—of large numbers of Federal prisoners".[16] Wirz was accused of committing 13 acts of personal cruelty and murders in August 1864: by revolver (specifications 1, 3, 4), by physically stomping and kicking the victim (specification 2) and by confining prisoners in stocks (specifications 5, 6), by beating a prisoner with a revolver (specification 13) and by chaining prisoners together (specification 7).[17] Wirz was also charged with ordering guards to fire on prisoners with muskets (specification 8, 9, 10, 12) and to have dogs attack escaped prisoners (specification 11).[18] Wirz was found guilty of all charges except the murder in specification 4.[19]

Testimonies

The court heard the testimonies of former Camp Sumter prisoners, ex-Confederate soldiers and residents of nearby Andersonville. Out of the 160 witnesses on the stand, 145 testified that they did not observe Wirtz killing anybody; others failed to provide particulars and introduced evidence remained hearsay.[20] 12 said that they witnessed cruelty on behalf of Wirtz. However, there was one witness whose testimony was particularly damning. He went by the name of Felix de la Baume and claimed to be a descendant of the Marquis de Lafayette.[21] He identified under oath a victim allegedly killed personally by Wirz. This eyewitness was a skilled orator and his story was so compelling that he was given a written commendation signed by all the members of the commission for his part in the trial. However, it was claimed after the trial that his real name was Felix Oesser and that he was a deserter from the 7th New York Volunteer Regiment.[21]

Among those giving testimony was Father Peter Whelan, a Catholic priest who worked with the inmates, who testified on Wirz's behalf.[22] Also among those called to testify was Robert E. Lee. According to Fitzhugh Lee, the nephew of General Robert E. Lee, "[Lee] knew the captain had done all that was possible with the resources at his disposal; subsistence for them had been most difficult to procure, their exchange for an equal number of Southerners had been refused, while the Federal blockade kept out medical supplies."[23]

Verdict

In his closing statement, the Judge Advocate General Joseph Holt vilified Wirz and pronounced that, "his work of death seems to have been a saturnalia of enjoyment for the prisoner [Wirz], who amid these savage orgies evidenced such exultation and mingled with them such nameless blasphemy and ribald jest, as at times to exhibit him rather as a demon than a man."[24]

In early November 1865, the Military Commission announced that it had found Wirz guilty of conspiracy as charged, along with 11 of 13 counts of acts of personal cruelty. He was sentenced to death.[25]

In a letter to U.S. President Andrew Johnson, Wirz asked for clemency, but the letter went unanswered. The night before his execution Louis Schade, an attorney working on behalf of Wirz, was told by an emissary from a high Cabinet official that if Wirz would implicate Jefferson Davis in the atrocities committed at Andersonville, his sentence would be commuted. Allegedly, Schade repeated the offer to Wirz and was replied, "Mr. Schade, you know that I have always told you that I do not know anything about Jefferson Davis. He had no connection with me as to what was done at Andersonville. If I knew anything of him I would not become a traitor against him, or anybody else, even to save my life." Rev. P. E. Bole received the same visitor and later sent a letter to Jefferson Davies, who included it as well as Wirz's reply to Schade in his book, Andersonville and Other War-Prisons (1890).[26] Andersonville quartermaster Richard B. Winder, who was in the prison at the time also confirmed this episode.[3]

Execution

Wirz was hanged at 10:32 a.m. on November 10, 1865, at the Old Capitol Prison, by the U.S. Capitol,[27] the present-day site of the Supreme Court of the United States. His neck did not break from the fall, and the crowd of 200 spectators guarded by 120 soldiers watched as he writhed and slowly suffocated. He was buried in the Mount Olivet Cemetery in Washington, D.C.

Wirz was one of two men tried, convicted, and executed for war crimes during the Civil War, the other being Confederate guerrilla Champ Ferguson. Confederate soldiers Robert Cobb Kennedy and John Yates Beall were executed for spying and Marcellus Jerome Clarke and Henry C. Magruder were executed for being guerrillas).

Wirz controversy

The Wirz Monument in Andersonville

Henry Wirz's trial and execution created a lasting controversy. It started when it was disclosed that the star witness for the prosecution worked for the Interior Department and that he had perjured himself at the trial. He was not Felix de la Baume from France, but Felix Oeser born in the 1840s in Saxony, which was a part of the German Confederation at the time, and was actually a deserter from the 7th New York Volunteers.[28] The Washington Evening Star published on November 27, 1865 the following, "The German witness Beaume, who figured extensively in the Wirz trial, has been dismissed from the Interior Department, it having been shown that he was a deserter from the 7th New York (Steuben) regiment. His real name is Felix Oessel."[21]

The Wirz controversy grew out of the remaining after his trial questions pertaining to guilt and responsibility for multiple deaths of prisoners of war in camps on both sides following after the Dix-Hill Cartel suspension. The Grand Army of the Republic, the United Confederate Veterans, Sons of Confederate Veterans and the United Daughters of the Confederacy, among others, evoked sad memories of Civil War prisoners portraying Wirz either a villain, or a martyr-hero, thus further contributing to the disputation. In 1899-1916, sixteen states erected monuments dedicated to the Camp Sumter's prisoners.[29] In response, the United Daughters of the Confederacy initiated a construction of a monument honoring Henry Wirz in Andersonville, Georgia.[29] Until recently, Sons of Confederate Veterans annually marched to a Wirz's memorial in Andersonville, along with supporters of a congressional pardon for him.[30]

During and after the trial Wirz was reviled in the court of public opinion as The Demon of Andersonville.[31] After time passed, some writers suggested Wirz's tribunal was unfair and claimed that, "Wirz did not receive a fair trial. Nevertheless, he was found guilty and sentenced to death."[32] Even a few of his former prisoners conceded during the trial that the little support Wirz received from the Confederate government in terms of food, water and medical supplies made the conditions at Andersonville beyond his scope of responsibility. In 1980, historian Morgan D. Peoples referred to Wirz as a "scapegoat".[33] Wirz's conviction remains controversial.[14][28]

Despite the surrounding controversy, the Wirz's trial, one of the nation's most famous early war crimes tribunals, created enduring moral and legal notions and established the precedent that certain wartime behavior is unacceptable, regardless if committed under the orders of superiors or on one's own.[34][35]

In popular culture

In Saul Levitt's 1959 play The Andersonville Trial, Wirz was first played by Herbert Berghof. When the play was recreated for an episode of PBS's 1970-71 season of Hollywood Television Theatre, Wirz was portrayed by Richard Basehart. Wirz was portrayed by actor Jan Tříska in the American film Andersonville (1996).

Footnotes

  1. "Heinrich Hartmann Wirz". Us-civilwar.com. Archived from the original on 2008-06-10. Retrieved 2008-11-28.
  2. "Andersonville Prison". Trutv.com. Retrieved 2008-11-28.
  3. 1 2 Arch Fredric Blakey. Wirz, Henry, American National Biography Online, February 2000. Retrieved November 25, 2015.
  4. Captain Henry Wirz, National Park Service
  5. Tomes, R., & Smith, B. G. (1862). The war with the South: A history of the late rebellion, with biographical sketches of leading statesmen and distinguished naval and military commanders, etc. New York: Virtue & Yorston, Volume III, p. 685.
  6. 1 2 3 "Henry Wirz". Archived from the original on 2007-10-06. Retrieved 2008-11-28.
  7. "Wirz Trial Home Page". UMKC School of Law.
  8. U.S. National Archives. "Compiled Service Record of Henry Wirz, Fourth Battalion of Louisiana Infantry". Compiled Service Records of Confederate Soldiers Who Served in Organizations from the State of Louisiana. Footnote. Retrieved June 14, 2011.
  9. Bergeron, Arthur W. Guide to Louisiana Confederate Military Units, 1861-1865. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1989, p. 157-158.
  10. 1 2 Bill Carnes. Captain Henry Wirz, Materials prepared as part of a class assignment for The Seminar in Famous Trials course at the University of Missouri-K.C. School of Law.
  11. Soldier Details: Wirz, Henry, General and Staff Officers, Non-Regimental Enlisted Men, CSA, Civil War Soldiers and Sailors Database, National Park Service
  12. Page, James Madison, and M. J. Haley. The True Story of Andersonville Prison: A Defense of Major Henry Wirz. New York: Neale, 1908, p. 187.
  13. Jon Rice. "Scopes Trial Home Page – UMKC School of Law". Law2.umkc.edu. Retrieved 2012-11-16.
  14. 1 2 "Andersonville: Prisoner of War Camp-Reading 1". Nps.gov. Archived from the original on November 18, 2007. Retrieved 2008-11-28.
  15. 1 2 Trial of Henry Wirz, A Congressionally Mandated Report Summarizing the Military Commission's Proceedings, United States. 40th Congress, 2d Session. 1867-1868. House Executive Document No. 23, December 7, 1867.
  16. United States Congressional serial set, Issue 3794, p. 785.
  17. "The Norfolk Post. (Norfolk, Va.), 24 Aug. 1865". Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  18. Court Martial of Henry Wirz, Charges and Specifications
  19. Henry Wirz Court Martial, Finding of the Court
  20. Cloyd, Benjamin G. Haunted by Atrocity: Civil War Prisons in American Memory. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2010.
  21. 1 2 3 "Myth: The Mystery of Felix de la Baume". National Park Service. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  22. "Witnesses Who Testified at the Trial of Henry Wirz". National Park Service. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  23. Lee, Fitzhugh, "General Lee," p. 407
  24. Cloyd, Benjamin G. Haunted by Atrocity: Civil War Prisons in American Memory. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2010.
  25. "A summary of the trial of Henry Wirz" (PDF). Library of Congress. House of Representatives. 1866. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  26. Davis, Jefferson. Andersonville and Other War-Prisons. New York: Belford Co, 1890.
  27. Scopes Trial Home Page – UMKC School of Law
  28. 1 2 Drew, Troy; Carnes, Bill; Rice, John. "Wirz Trial Home Page". Law.umkc.edu. UMKC School of Law. Retrieved 2011-03-13.
  29. 1 2 The Wirz Monument, National Park Service.
  30. Horwitz, Tony. Confederates in the Attic: Dispatches from the Unfinished Civil War. New York: Pantheon Books, 1998, p. 328-331.
  31. The Demon of Andersonville; or, The Trial of Wirz, for the Cruel Treatment and Brutal Murder of Helpless Union Prisoners in his Hands. The Most Highly Exciting and Interesting Trial of the Present Century, his Life and Execution Containing also a History of Andersonville, with Illustrations, Truthfully Representing the Horrible Scenes of Cruelty Perpetuated by Him. Philadelphia: Barclay & Co., 1865.
  32. Heidler, David Stephen, et al. Encyclopedia Of the American Civil War: A Political, Social, and Military History, New York: Norton, 2001.
  33. Morgan D. Peoples, "The Scapegoat of Andersonville’: Union Execution of Confederate Captain Henry Wirz", North Louisiana Historical Association Journal, Vol. 11, No. 4 (Fall 1980), pp. 3–18.
  34. Darrett B. Rutman, "The War Crimes and Trial of Henry Wirz," Civil War History, Vol. 6 (June 1960), p. 117-133.
  35. James C. Bonner, "War Crimes Trials, 1865- 1867," Social Science, Vol. 22 (April 1947), p. 128-134

References

External links

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