Major Henry Wirz, the superintendent of the…
November 1865 CE
Major Henry Wirz, the superintendent of the prison camp in Andersonville, Georgia, is hanged on November 10, 1865, becoming the only American Civil War soldier to be executed for war crimes.
He is one of two men tried, convicted, and executed for war crimes during the Civil War (the other being Confederate guerrilla Champ Ferguson).
His conviction remains controversial today.
Residents of the town of Andersonville annually march to a Wirz memorial, along with supporters of a congressional pardon for Wirz.
Even some of his former prisoners conceded that the low support he had received from Confederate government in terms of food, water, and medical supplies made the conditions at Andersonville beyond his scope of responsibility.
The trial, one of the nation's first war crimes tribunals, creates enduring moral and legal notions and establishes the precedent that certain wartime behavior is unacceptable, regardless if committed under the orders of superiors or on one's own.
Eleven days after the execution, it will be revealed that the star witness from the trial had perjured himself.
He is not Felix de la Baume from France, but Felix Oeser, born in Saxony, Prussia.
He is actually a deserter from the 7th New York Volunteers.
With his real identity revealed, he will quickly disappear.