MY CIVIL WAR "POW"
John Boague Lock
Co. D 19th. IA Inf.


Monday night a little after midnight, occured the death of John B. Lock, pioneer citizen of Gravity, Iowa, Civil War veteran and beloved friend of everyone who knew him. Uncle John, as he was familiarly known here, has been in poor health for several weeks. He has not been able to be up town at his shoe shop for some time on account of failing health. Several weeks ago he was taken to the baths at Burlington Junction, Missouri, where he took treatment three weeks. He seemed to receive some benefit from this treatment and for a time it was thought he was on the way to permanent recovery. The sciatic pains in his hips and back never received much relief and he continued to suffer severely although bravely bearing up all the time and letting no one know how severely he suffered, was ready with a smile and a joke when friends called to see him.

The end came peacefully about the midnight hour on that memorable day when Iowa voted on the prohibitory amendment to her constitution. It was the dying regret of this veteran of many battles that he could not participate in this election and do his part to write prohibition into the constitution of our state. The Saturday before his death he realized that he would be unable to come to town to vote and asked if there was not some way he could vote at home as he desired sincerely to have his part in making Iowa dry.

Uncle John will be greatly missed by everyone in Gravity. There was perhaps no more familiar figure amongst us than he. His genial good nature and his own affairs won for him a place in the community that is enviable. He was intensely loyal to his country, to the church and to his friends. Personlly we can say that he was one of our most loyal friends and remained true as steel during our ten years acquaintance. He was always found on the right side of public questions and always willing to assist any worthy enterprise with money according to his ability and with a large portion of moral support. To his government he was intensely loyal. To the republican party he gave unqualified support and always rang true on every political issue that came up affecting his party. Amongst the old soldiers he maintained a high standard, and at the time of his death was commander of the organization here.

His long service in the army established for him a record that few can equal. Enlisting when a mere boy of sixteen, he was taken at once to the front and fought in some of the bloodiest battles of the war. He was captured and taken prisoner to Tyler, Texas, where he remained for ten months enduring all the untold suffering of the southern prison. He would often sit and tell us of those days in prison; days terrible, and so full of human misery that we would like to forget them. His iron constitution bore bravely up and although a mere skeleton when liberated from prison, his will was not daunted, and he came home to do his share in rebuilding the broken republic.

The funeral service is being held today at the Methodist Church, conducted by Rev. Harwood his pastor, and attended by a large concourse of friends. The body will be laid to rest in the Gravity Cemetery.



CAMP FORD; TYLER, TEXAS
Handbook of Texas


CAMP FORD. In 1862 the Confederacy located a conscript-training camp four miles northeast of Tyler. The installation became known as Camp Ford, in honor of Col. John S. (Rip) Ford.qv On July 21, 1863, the Trans-Mississippi Department ordered the establishment of a prison camp at Camp Ford and transferred the prisoners of war then located at Shreveport, Louisiana, to Tyler for confinement. These and other POWs sent to Tyler encamped in the open under guard until November 1863, when reports of a plan to escape caused alarm among the local citizenry and the Confederates in charge. Accordingly, a stockade was built enclosing an area of two to four acres. A large spring ran along the south wall of the stockade and served as a water supply for the prison camp. The prisoners were required to improvise their own shelter, which they fashioned out of logs and other primitive building materials. Until the spring of 1864, morale among the prisoners at Camp Ford was passable, and the ranking federal officers maintained a decent sense of order. Enterprising prisoners made goods for use and sale, including crude furniture, clay dishes, woven baskets, brooms, clothing, and other useful articles. Some of these were traded or sold to local citizens for food and clothes.

Living conditions at Camp Ford became deplorable in April 1864, when the population was suddenly tripled by the addition of about 3,000 prisoners captured at the defeat of the Union army in Arkansas and the battles at Mansfield and Pleasant Hill, Louisiana. The stockade area was doubled in size in an effort to accommodate this influx. The 4,725 inmates were overcrowded and critically short of food, shelter, and clothing. Their plight was desperate for several months, until major exchanges of prisoners in July and October 1864 alleviated somewhat the shocking conditions that had prevailed. For the rest of the war the Confederates encountered great difficulties in supplying adequate rations to both prisoners and guards at Camp Ford. Sometimes the standard daily pint of meal and pound of beef per prisoner was down to a quarter pound of each, depending upon the supply available to the Confederate commissary department. Beginning with the overcrowding in April 1864, the quality of the shelters deteriorated. Nearby timber was less plentiful, and shelters had to be constructed quickly. The prisoners improvised all sorts of crude shelters ranging from brush arbors to blanket tents. Some simply dug holes in the ground for protection from the cold winds. A popular form of shelter was called a "shebang," a burrow into a hillside covered by a crude A-shaped framework made of poles, sticks, and clay to protect the entrance. The majority of the prisoners required the clothes that they were wearing when captured to see them through their captivity. The acute shortage of clothing was due to a lack of manufacturing in the South and to the federal blockade. In response to a letter from the ranking Union officers at Camp Ford, at least two shipments of clothes from the United States government were received by and distributed among the prisoners.

Escapes from Camp Ford were common, but no reliable estimate of the number is available. Postwar accounts of those attempts, some successful, were abundant among the members of the former Camp Ford inmates. After the war the former prisoners leveled charges against the Confederates for mistreatment and failure to provide humane living conditions at Camp Ford. However, the published accounts present many conflicting stories and viewpoints among the former prisoners. Nothing came of the charges. About 6,000 prisoners were confined at Camp Ford over the two years of its existence, making it the largest Confederate prison camp west of the Mississippi River. Of this number, 286 died there. Following the surrender of the Confederate Trans-Mississippi Department, the 1,200 remaining prisoners left Camp Ford, on May 17, 1865, bound for Shreveport. The remains of the prison compound were destroyed in July by a detail of the Tenth Illinois Cavalry.



HOMEPAGE