Travlyr
Member
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2009
- Messages
- 14,088
"U.S. Secretary of War Edwin Stanton, at Gen. U.S. Grant's urging, halted the customary exchange of prisoners. Grant stopped exchanges because they helped the South, which was short on manpower. "
"by the end of the war, approximately 30,000 Union prisoners had died in Confederate camps and 25,000 Confederates had died in Union prisons."
a) Tens of thousands died in prisons, on both sides
b) They were in prisons to begin with because the North didn't want to exchange prisoners
There you go... It was Lincoln's fault that Northern prisoners were starved to death. Yeah. You got a bridge to sell me?