A compilation of South Carolinians who were held in
captivity during the Civil War
First published in 2002 by the South Carolina
Historical Society, Dark Hours was the second of
two landmark Civil War research projects carried out
by Randolph W. Kirkland, Jr. The companion volume
on South Carolinians killed in military service, Broken
Fortunes, was published in 1995. Highly prized by collectors
and historians, both of Kirkland's monumental
projects have now been restored to print as Civil War
Sesquicentennial Editions by the University of South
Carolina Press.
Representing more than fifteen years of research
drawn from some two hundred different sources,
Kirkland's Dark Hours is a compendium of the 11,238
South Carolinians held in captivity as a result of their
service to the Confederacy. Kirkland's list includes the
individuals' names, ranks, units, where and when they
were captured, where they were held, when they were
moved, their final dispositions, and sources to assist
researchers. This volume is the most complete record
ever published of South Carolinians held in Union
captivity during the Civil War. In his introduction
Kirkland provides meticulous details and background
information to the circumstances, implications, and
nuances of the federal prison system during the war.
He also includes appendixes outlining source codes
and abbreviations for place names and ranks along
with extracts from official documents concerning
prisoners of war.
An established researcher of South Carolina Civil War
military service, Randolph W. Kirkland, Jr., is the
great-grandson of Judge T. J. Withers, a member of
the 1860 Secession Convention.
"A prodigious feat of research
which will be indispensible
to the specialist."—Canadian
Military History |