Home › Forums › The U.S. Civil War › The Finding of Camp Lawton
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PhidippidesKeymaster
This is really cool, not only because of what they found, but how they found it:
Barely a footnote in the war's history, Camp Lawton was a low priority among scholars. Its exact location was never verified. While known to be near Magnolia Springs State Park, archaeologists figured the camp was too short-lived to yield real historical treasures. That changed last year when Georgia Southern archaeology student Kevin Chapman seized on an offer by the state Department of Natural Resources to pursue his master's thesis by looking for evidence of Camp Lawton's stockade walls on the park grounds. Chapman ended up stunning the pros, uncovering much more than the remains of the stockade's 15-foot pine posts. On neighboring land owned by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, he dug up remnants of the prisoners themselves — a corroded tourniquet buckle, a tobacco pipe with teeth marks in the stem and a folded frame that once held a daguerreotype.
Archaeologists comb newly-found Civil War POW campHere's an older thread from last year where I Google-mapped the site.Keep up with those MA theses! You never know where they could lead. 🙂
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