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Saturday, March 23, 2019

Essay --

Dylan KippolaAMH2010Feb, 2014Kinston HangingsIn the early hours of February 2, 1864, liii normality Carolina men were captured by Confederate forces under the command of major(ip) General Pickett. Within four months of their capture, most would be dead. Most would follow victim to the diseases acquired in Southern P.O.W camps in Richmond, Virginia, and Andersonville, Georgia. However, twenty-two were publicly hanged in Kinston, northernmost Carolina. The wives, neighbors, friends, and former br differents in arms in the Confederate phalanx were forced to watch the executions. From the Confederacies point of view, the executed men were Union soldiers because they deserted. once captured, they deserved to be treated as prisoners of war. President Abraham Lincoln mentioned this on July 31, 1863. He ordered retaliation on the enemy prisoners in the Norths possession. His response was to kill a Southern P.O.W for every P.O.W the league killed. The Confederates argued that the men we re simply deserters and therefore execution was a legitimate penalisation for them. Desertion was most apparent in North Carolina. North Carolina was antonymous in both providing more soldiers to the Confederate army than any early(a) state and of having more deserters from the army than other states. Although North Carolinian disloyalty to the Confederacy was non any worse than other Southern states, it was more publicly pronounced. North Carolina was the last to secede and did so only after a statewide vote of the people. Because desertion was not a crime in the state, citizens who housed and protect deserters felt safe from arrest for hiding them. It was said that the deserters could band unneurotic and defy the officers of the law who came after them because of t... ...e placed over the heads of the condemned and they were hanged. Joining their other deserters. The thirteen remaining condemned men had four days to sit in the jails dungeon to think about their deaths that would take place on Monday, February 15th. Chaplain genus Paris described the scene in a letter that appeared shortly afterward in the North Carolina Presbyterian and the Wilmington Journal I made my first inflict to them as chaplain on Sunday morning. The scene beggars all description. Some of them were relatively young men. But they made the fatal mistake. They had only twenty-four hours to live.... here was a wife to say farewell to a husband forever. here a mother to take the last look at her finished son, and then a sister who had come to embrace for the last eon the brother who had brought disgrace upon the very name she bore by his imposition to his country.

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