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Records in this collection
- Arkansas Second Registration draft cards 1948-1959
- Duty locations, Naval Group China, World War II, 1942-1945
- General Correspondence of the Record and Pension Office, 1889-1904
- Georgia World War II Draft Registration Cards 1940-1942
- Korean War Casualty File
- Korean War Deaths, 1950-1954
- Korean War Pows
- Korean War Pows [Repatriated]
- Louisiana draft cards 1940-1959
- Muster Rolls of the Marine Corps
- Pennsylvania, American Revolution Patriot Militia Index
- Pennsylvania, Oaths Of Allegiance Lists
- Pennsylvania, World War II casualty cards
- South Carolina, records of Confederate veterans 1909-1973
- U.S. Army Casualties, 1961-1981
- U.S. Civil War Medal of Honor, 1861-1865
- U.S. Civil War Prisoners, 1861-1865
- U.S. Civil War Sailors, 1861-1865
- U.S. Civil War Soldiers, 1861-1865
- United States Army Enlistments 1798-1914
- United States Civil War Pension Files Index 1861-1934
- United States Naval Enlistment Rendezvous 1855-1891
- United States, Revolutionary War, Pensions
- United States, World War I draft registration cards
- Vermont, enrolled militia 1861-1867
- Veterans Administration pension payment cards, 1907-1933
- Veterans with Federal Service Buried in Utah, Territorial to 1966
- Vietnam War Casualties
- Vietnam War Casualties Returned Alive
- Vietnam War Deaths
- World War II Army Enlistment Records
- World War II POWs
Find your ancestors in U.S. Civil War Prisoners, 1861-1865
Discover your ancestor’s role in the U.S. Civil War. Learn new and interesting details about their wartime service and some of the challenges of being captured by the enemy.
What can these records tell me?
Each record in this collection represents an individual who was captured and imprisoned during the U.S. Civil War. While the information for each person varies, U.S. Civil War Prisoners, 1861-1865 typically provides:
- First and last name of prisoner
- Affiliation (Union or Confederate)
- Prison
- Unit name
- Regiment
- Function
- Company
- Rank
- Type
- Date of capture
- Capture site
Discover more about U.S. Civil War Prisoners, 1861-1865
Thousands of soldiers were taken as prisoners during the U.S. Civil War and spent months or years in prison camps. While many soldiers died in prisoner of war camps, many others were involved in prisoner exchanges or survived until the end of the war.
The American Civil War was fought between 1861 and 1865, and began after a number of Southern states seceded from the country and formed the Confederate States of America. The ensuing conflict involved millions of Americans being recruited on both sides and became the bloodiest war in American history. The war was brought to a close in April of 1865 after the surrender of Confederate General Robert E. Lee to Union General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Court House, Virginia, close to the Union-Confederate border on the east coast of the United States.
Use these records to uncover fascinating new details about your ancestor’s Civil War service. Learn essential information about their war service and whether they survived their ordeal as a prisoner of war.