Description:

LT. JOHN ARRINGTON - "THE IMMORTAL SIX HUNDRED"
Fine content manuscript D.S., 1p. 11" x 4", [n.p.], Dec. 31, 1863, a "Requisition for Forage" for the prior month for "one private horse" issued to First Lt. John Arrington as Acting Regimental Adjutant of the 42nd Va. Vols. Infy. and signed twice by him at bottom. Boldly penned on "adversity" paper and in fine condition. Arrington enlisted as a private in the 42nd Va. on July 11, 1861 and was captured at Spotsylvania Court House on May 12, 1864. In June, 1864 he was confined Fort Delaware, then transferred to Hilton Head on August 20 as a member of the "Immortal 600". On August 20, 1864, a chosen group of 600 Confederate officer prisoners of war were transferred from their interment at Fort Delaware Prison, and to Federally-occupied Hilton Head, South Carolina. The purpose of this move was to place the men into a cramped stockade in front of Union artillery positions, in other words literally use them as human shields from the bombarding of the Confederate artillery of Charleston Harbor. The 600 prisoners were landed on Morris Island, at the mouth of Charleston Harbor. There they remained, in an open 1 1/2 acre pen, under the shelling of friendly artillery fire. Three died on the starvation rations issued as a retaliation for the conditions of the Union prisoners held at Andersonville, Georgia and Salisbury, North Carolina. On October 21, after 45 days under fire, the weakened survivors were removed to Fort Pulaski. Here they were crowded into the cold, damp casemates of the fort. On November 19, an attempt to relieve overcrowding was made by sending 197 of the men back to Hilton Head. Thirteen men died at Fort Pulaski, and five died at Hilton Head. The remaining prisoners to survive were returned to Fort Delaware on March 12, 1865, where an additional twenty-five died. The Immortal Six-Hundred became famous throughout the South for their adherence to principle, refusing to take the Oath of Allegiance under such adverse circumstances.

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January 20, 2010 10:00 AM EST
Stamford, CT, US

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