ONE OF THE UNION PRISONERS CAPTURED AT CABIN CREEK AND FORCED TO MARCH TO CAMP FORD, TEXAS

ONE OF THE UNION PRISONERS CAPTURED AT CABIN CREEK AND FORCED TO MARCH TO CAMP FORD, TEXAS

The Confederate prison camp was located about four miles northeast of Tyler, Texas.


All of the Union prisoners captured by Gano and Watie's force at Flat Rock and Cabin Creek marched roughly 400 miles to the prison.

All of the Kansas prisoners were released on May 22, 1865. A list of the prisoners from Camp Ford's records appears in the book "The Second Battle of Cabin Creek: Brilliant Victory."

James W. Carson, Co. H, 2nd Kansas Cavalry, was one of those prisoners.

He was born 7/2/1843 in Farmington, Iowa and lived at Marysville, Kansas when he enlisted on 11/20/ 1861.

According to his military records, he was wounded seven times during the war. The last time at the Second Battle of Cabin Creek. This wound caused a lifelong disability that gave him a pension of $16 per month.

He was taken prisoner at Cabin Creek and was forced to march to Camp Ford, Texas until he was released at the end of the war.

He was officially mustered out of federal service on 9/11/1865 at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

Carson died on 4/10/1916 in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. His grave at the Wyuka Cemetery in Nebraska City, Nebraska, has a GAR medallion.

Information and photograph courtesy of Terry Purrington, Carson's great-grandson.

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