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    1. [KYOWEN-L] Andersonville "Search" Page
    2. This link was not working this morning so I did not send it along with the other material but it is open now for free lookups. My great-great grandfather was confined in Andersonville. Barbara -------------------------------------------- Andersonville Prisoners of War, 1863-65 The most infamous Confederate prison camp of the Civil War, Andersonville housed an estimated 45,000 Union soldiers during the war. This database is a collection of records compiled by the National Park Service of camp inmates between 1863 and 1865. Researchers will find rank, unit, death, and capture information in addition to the inmate's name and state of residence. In some cases, the National Park Service has more information for some soldiers. Inquiries regarding these men can be directed to: National Park Service, Andersonville National Historic Site, Rt. 1, Box 800, Andersonville, GA, 31711. With over 37,000 records, this collection can be an enormous help to researchers of Union ancestors who were captured by the Confederate States of America in the later years of the war. Bibliography: National Park Service, Andersonville National Historic Site. "Andersonville Prisoner of War Database." Orem, UT: Ancestry, Inc., 1999. To search this database, go to: http://www.ancestry.com/ancestry/search/3708.htm

    03/31/1999 11:24:46