
The Rock Island Confederate Cemetery
During the American Civil War, the United States Army erected a Prisoner of War Camp on the island known as Rock Island, a 900-acre island in the middle of the Mississippi River. All total, over the life of the Prison, approximately 12,000 Confederate Soldiers were housed at the prison. There are still 1964 prisoners still on Rock Island, buried in the Rock Island Confederate Cemetery.
Rock Island Confederate Cemetery is the only remnant of the prison camp that was officially named The Depot for Prisoners of War at Rock Island, Illinois. This prison held thousands of Confederate soldiers. Located near the southeast corner of Arsenal Island in Rock Island, Illinois, the Confederate Cemetery is the final resting place for 1964 prisoners of war who died in captivity from disease and the poor living conditions in the camp.
During the summer of 1863, prison camps in the North were overflowing with Confederate soldiers captured in battle. As a result, the United States Army built a new prison camp on an island in the Mississippi River then known as Rock Island. The camp opened in December 1863 when the first prisoners, captured at the Battle of Lookout Mountain, arrived by train. The Rock Island Prison Camp was designed to hold more than 10,000 inmates at any one time, and over the 18 months of it’s operation more than 12,000 Confederate prisoners were housed within its walls.
The deplorable conditions at the camp led some to call it the “Andersonville of the North,” a reference to the infamous prison in Georgia. Disease, including smallpox and pneumonia, ran rampant through the prison claiming many lives, while others died from exposure to the elements and the unsanitary conditions of the camp. During the first four months alone, more than 950 Confederate soldiers died. Initially, the dead were buried in a plot located 400 yards south of the prison, but on advice from the prison surgeon, a new cemetery, one that would become Rock Island Confederate Cemetery, was established in 1864, located 1,000 yards southeast of the prison. In March 1864, the remains of 671 Confederate dead were reinterred in the new burial grounds. In all, approximately 1,964 Confederate prisoners were buried in the cemetery, with the last burial occurring on July 11, 1865. All structures that were part of Rock Island Prison Barracks have been demolished, leaving the Confederate Cemetery as the camp’s only remaining feature.
The Confederate Cemetery covers a rectangular, three-acre parcel of land, bound by Rodman Avenue and a post-and-chain fence to the north, Confederate Avenue to the south, and heavy tree cover to the east and west. A paved walkway extends from Rodman Avenue to the edge of the burials, passing a six-foot tall obelisk the Daughters of the Confederacy dedicated in 2003 to the Confederate veterans who died at Rock Island. At the south end of the grounds, opposite the monument, is the cemetery’s flagpole. Four Confederate cannons sit near the entrance, two each on either side of the monument.
The burial plot is roughly square and consists of 20 rows of graves running north-south. Although the spacing of each row is identical, the beginning and end of the rows are irregular. In 1908, the Commission for Marking the Graves of Confederate Dead began a program to place distinctive pointed-top marble headstones, inscribed with the name and regimental affiliation of each soldier, on the graves. The graves were previously marked with wooden markers and a few private headstones.
One may ask “Why do we care for the graves of the Confederate Soldiers who fought against the Union?” The answer is on the monument erected by the United Daughters of the Confederacy.
“In Memory of the Confederate Veterans Who Died at the Rock Island Prison Camp. May They Never Be Forgotten. Let No Man Asperse The Memory Of Our Scared Dead. They Were Men Who Died For A Cause They Believed Was Worth Fighting For And Made The Ultimate Sacrifice.”
Researcher: Edwin Reiter
National Park System, Rock Island Confederate Cemetery, Rock Island, Illinois,
https://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/national_cemeteries/Illinois/Rock_Island_Confederate_Cemetery.html (Accessed 9/28/2022)
North Carolina Genealogy Resources, A Database of Genealogical Resources,
https://www.ncgenweb.us/haywood/mil/RockIsland-IL.htm (Accessed 9/28/2022)
Wm. Duncan McQuagge, Photographer, Photos of Confederate Cemetery,
https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1977216/rock-island-confederate-cemetery (Accessed 9/29/2022)


