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Calvin E. Johnson, Jr.
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A native of Georgia, Calvin Johnson lives near the historic town of
Kennesaw and he's a member of the Chattahoochee Guards Camp, Sons of Confederate Veterans. He is Chairman of the Confederate History and Heritage
Month for the Georgia Division Sons of Confederate Veterans.
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Confederate History Month Series
A Confederate History Minute (9) – by Calvin E. Johnson, Jr.
Captain Henry Wirz, Confederate Hero and Martyr
Captain Henry Wirz was born, Hartman Heinrich Wirz in November 1823,
in Zurich, Switzerland where his father, Abraham Wirz was highly respected.
At the outbreak of the War Between the States, Wirz enlisted in the
Fourth Louisiana infantry on June 16, 1861. He was promoted to sergeant
a year later and was wounded at the Battle of Seven Pines. He never
recovered from the injury to his left wrist and it caused him great pain for
the rest of his life.
Wirz was promoted to Captain on June 12, 1862 and was first detailed
to General John Winder where he was given command of a Confederate
military prison in Richmond, Virginia.
After serving a year as special emissary to President Jefferson Davis in
Paris and Berlin, on March 27, 1864, he was installed as commandant of
Andersonville Prison at Fort Sumter in Georgia. Wirz did the best he was
able to do with many Union prisoners and the little food and medicine. It
is written that the guards got the same food and medicine as the prisoners.
The Confederacy sent a distress message to Union President Abraham
Lincoln and Union General Ulysses S. Grant. The South pleaded for an
exchange of Confederate and Union prisoners. Lincoln and Grant, however,
refused believing the Union prisoners might go home but the Confederate
prisoners might go back to fight.
Captain Henry Wirz was unfairly charged of war crimes and it is written
that no witnesses for the defense were allowed to testify. Among those
who would have is a Union soldier who was a prisoner at the
prison.
For over 30 years there have been efforts to exonerate the good name
of Captain Henry Wirz. There is an annual memorial service to Wirz
on the Sunday nearest November 10th each year in Andersonville, Georgia, at the monument to Wirz placed there
by the United Daughters of the Confederacy (Georgia Division).
A native of Georgia, Calvin Johnson lives near the historic town of Kennesaw, home
of the locomotive "The General" from the War Between the States. He is Chairman of the Confederate History and Heritage
Month for the Georgia Division Sons of Confederate Veterans. His email is: cjohnson1861@bellsouth.net.
Confederate History Month Series
Confederate Heritage Month
Confederate Memorial Day in Georgia
Why We Celebrate
Monument to Wirz at Andersonville
Defense of Wirz - essay by his attorney
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Georgia Heritage Council | P-6 2363 North Cliff Colony Drive
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