The Story Behind Illinois' Mass Gravesite Is Like Something From A Horror Movie
By Elizabeth Crozier|Published June 06, 2018
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Elizabeth Crozier
Author
An Illinois transplant who grew up and went to school in Indiana for 22 years, Elizabeth holds a BFA in creative writing and has enjoyed traveling across the country and parts of Europe. She has visited half of the states, as well as parts of Canada, Mexico, and the Caribbean, and regularly travels home to the Hoosier State to see friends and family. With more than five years of writing experience, Elizabeth’s articles have been featured on several websites, and her poetry and short stories have been published in multiple literary journals.
You probably didn’t know that Illinois is home to the largest mass gravesite in all the of Americas. The final resting place of thousands of soldiers, Confederate Mound in Chicago carries a harrowing history that is like something out of horror movie.
Perhaps not for the faint of heart, this chilling tale is full of many sorts of death. Read on if you dare:
Confederate Mound is a mass gravesite that is thought to hold about 6,000 bodies. The names of the known buried (about 4,200) are listed all around the sides of the monument, and then there are 12 individual grave markers to commemorate unknown soldiers who found their final resting place here.
The Civil War was a time of terror and violence. Confederate prisoners were kept at Camp Douglas, an overcrowded training camp where they met many different fates.
Due to the proximity to Lake Michigan, the winter got extremely cold, and many soldiers died of diseases like scurvy and dysentery. Others were shot as punishment by cruel guards. In part because of this, the camp was nicknamed "80 Acres of Hell."
Not much commemorated this mass gravesite until 1893 when this 30-foot memorial was placed over it. At the very top of the monument is a statue of a somber soldier, and in addition to the 12 markers circling it, there is also a pyramid of cannonballs and an old cannon sitting nearby.