Trenches, Tales, and the Turning Point of the Civil War: Vicksburg National Military Park

Photo by S. Resendez

Created by Congress in 1899 and later managed by the National Park Service, Vicksburg National Military Park was designed to preserve one of the most decisive campaigns of the American Civil War. We’ll explore why this battlefield was considered so significant that it became one of the earliest preserved military parks in the United States and how its mission has evolved from battlefield preservation to broader cultural interpretation. This space wasn’t just saved for its military importance, it was saved because what happened here reshaped a nation.

Vicksburg was the site of a siege that lasted 47 days in the summer heat of 1863. Ulysses S. Grant orchestrated a bold campaign that ultimately split the Confederacy in two. It is up to us, as visitors, to imagine life during war and what siege warfare meant…the exhaustion, the hunger, the civilians sheltering in caves carved into clay hillsides. This wasn’t just strategy. It was survival for all involved. It was a test of endurance, strategy, and survival. Vicksburg National Military Park has preserved earthworks, reconstructed forts, and more than 1,300 monuments honoring both Union and Confederate soldiers. These monuments include the restored ironclad gunboat USS Cairo, the first U.S. warship sunk by a torpedo and later recovered from the Yazoo River giving visitors a rare glimpse of Civil War naval warfare. In the park, Vicksburg National Cemetery is the final resting place of over 17,000 Union soldiers, making it one of the largest national cemeteries in the country.

Photo by S. Resendez

The Park District Visitor Center is open 8:30 am to 4:30 pm Wednesday through Sunday. Tour road is open from 8:30 am to 5 pm daily with last vehicle entry at 4:40 pm. Public restrooms are open at the Visitor Center and USS Cairo 7 days a week. Park grounds are open sunrise to sunset daily. They are closed Thanksgiving, Christmas Day, and New Year’s Day. The USS Cairo outdoor exhibit area including the ironclad itself is open 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM daily. The USS Cairo Museum is open 7 days a week from 8:30AM till 4:30PM. Make sure to check the website for closures and other updates. This park offers Living History programs and Ranger programs. Check the website’s calendar for further information on these programs.

It’s easy to get caught up in the views, the monuments and the beautiful scenery, but think about what you don’t see. Walking here isn’t just a hike—it’s stepping through layers of survival, resilience, and stories that never really left.

MILE MARKER: Civilians dug hundreds of caves into the hills to survive constant bombardment…entire families lived in them for weeks. It’s one thing to walk the trails but it’s another to imagine living beneath them.

HIKE IT!: While there are no traditional hiking trails (the one hiking trail, Al Scheller Hiking Trail, is currently closed as of this publication), Tour Road is a walkable, pedestrian-friendly, way to create walking loops that range in length from 3 miles to 16 miles. Along the left side of the road, there is dedicated lane for non-motorized transportation. Pets are welcome on this road, but must be kept on a 6 ft or less leash at all times, and owners are responsible for picking up after their pets.



From Prison Camp to National Memorial: Exploring Andersonville National Historical Site

Photo courtesy of NPS/ANDE

Stand in the quiet fields of Andersonville and it’s hard to imagine that the peaceful landscape was once the site of one of the most notorious prisons of the Civil War. Beneath the Georgia grass lies a powerful story of survival, suffering, and the resilience of thousands of men who endured unimaginable conditions here.

Andersonville National Historic Site preserves the grounds of Camp Sumter (not to be confused with Fort Sumter), known during the American Civil War as Andersonville Prison, one of the Confederacy’s largest and most infamous prisoner-of-war camps. Camp Sumter operated roughly from February 1864 until April 1865. Andersonville was intended to hold about 10,000 Union prisoners of war. Instead, as the war intensified, the population ballooned to more than 32,000 at one point. The prison stockade covered roughly 26 acres of open land enclosed by a 15-foot-high pine log wall. The prison was overcrowded and there were unsanitary conditions. There were no barracks inside and no real shelter. Prisoners were left to construct makeshift tents using scraps of cloth, blankets, and whatever materials they could salvage. Many had nothing at all. Of the approximately 45,000 Union prisoners who passed through Andersonville, nearly 13,000 perished from disease, starvation, and exposure.

Photo by S. Resendez

Dysentary, scurvy, gangrene, and typhoid fever ran rampant in the overcrowded conditions. The prison’s only water source was a small stream that ran through the stockade. It quickly became polluted with human waste and runoff from Confederate camps located uphill. For prisoners already weakened by starvation, drinking that water was often a death sentence. Andersonville’s mortality rate, roughly 29%, made it one of the deadliest prisoner-of-war camps in American history.

After the war, the burial grounds became Andersonville National Cemetery, established in July 1865, which today continues as an active National Cemetery interring veterans and their families.In recognition of its profound historic importance, Congress designated the site as a National Historic Site on October 16, 1970, and it became part of the National Park System. One of the most important aspects of the site today is the National Prisoner of War Museum, which opened in 1998. Andersonville is unique in the National Park System because it serves as a memorial to all American prisoners of war, not just those from the Civil War. This shifts the narrative from one tragic Civil War prison to a broader reflection on the experience of captivity in American history.

The National Prisoner of War Museum is located at 760 POW Road in Andersonville, Georgia. The park is open from 8 am to 5 pm and the National Prisoner of War Museum is open daily from 9:30 am to 4:30 pm. Park grounds, including the National Cemetery, are open daily from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM. On Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Day, and New Year’s Day, the National Prisoner of War Museum and prison site are closed but Andersonville National Cemetery is open from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM pending staff availability. As usual, it’s a good idea to check the website for updated information before you go.

Photo by S. Resendez

Andersonville National Historic Site is comprised of three main components: the National Prisoner of War Museum, the historic Civil War prison site and Andersonville National Cemetery. Be aware that the Cemetery is active and a funeral may occur during your visit.

Today, Andersonville National Historic Site is quiet—grassy fields stretch under the Georgia sky, marked by monuments and the memories of those who suffered here. It’s hard to reconcile the peaceful landscape with the hardship once endured inside the prison walls. But that’s exactly why places like Andersonville matter. They remind us not only of the cruelty war can bring, but also of the resilience people show even in the darkest circumstances.

Photo by S. Resendez

MILE MARKER: In 1865, Clara Barton, the founder of the American Red Cross, teamed up with a former Andersonville prisoner named Doronence Atwater. While imprisoned, Atwater had secretly kept a list of the names of men who died in the camp and where they were buried. He risked severe punishment if the Confederates discovered what he was doing. After the war, Barton and Atwater traveled to Andersonville with that list. Using it, they were able to identify and properly mark over 13,000 graves in what is now Andersonville National Cemetery. Because of their efforts, Andersonville became one of the first national cemeteries where most of the graves had names attached to them.

HIKE IT!: While there are no actual hiking trails, the park’s 514+ acres include open field landscapes, tree-lined edges, and quiet burial grounds that evoke both the starkness of the prison environment and the reflective mood appropriate for memorial space. The natural setting supports wildlife, walking paths, and contemplative spaces that contrast dramatically with the site’s brutal history, offering visitors a meaningful connection to place.