- I keep all my school
papers on file. This is part of a report on the
"Ole Miss and the Confederacy" from history
class last year.
- --Rachel
When the Civil War
between the North and South began in America, many
students at Ole Miss got involved. A campus group
known as the University Greys are known for going
off to fight the war. They made it far north, all
the way to Gettysburg, but were beaten badly and
all died.
From 1861 to 1865, the
University of Mississippi was closed because the
school was more worried about fighting the Civil
War than going to class. Only four people enrolled
the first year of fighting.
After the nearby Battle
of Shiloh on April 6-7, 1862, wounded Confederate
soldiers were brought to Oxford and Ole Miss, where
a hosptial was set up. Wounded soldiers were put
up in the different buildings on campus. The
Magnetic Observatory was where they stored all the
dead soldiers. It was called the "Dead
House."
Also in 1862, General
Grant and his troops from the North marched into
Oxford. The wounded soldiers were evacuated from
the university. One of the professors persuaded
the Union army from burning the buildings at Ole
Miss because he said they could be used as a
hospital for Yankee soldiers. However, the
Northerners did burn the business end of Oxford,
including shops on the Square and the Courthouse.
General Grant and his men left Oxford on Christmas
Day of 1862.
The hosptial at Ole Miss
started again and lasted until the end of the war.
Approximately 1,850 patients stayed at Ole Miss,
and about 700 of them died. These men were buried
in a cemetery on the campus, near the C.M. "Tad"
Smith Coliseum today. The markers were destroyed
some years back, and there is no way of identifying
who is resting in this graveyard.
|