Buried at Devil's Punchbowl
AlexanderRhea
あらすじ
Buried at Devil's Punchbowl: America's Forgotten Concentration Camp for Freed Slaves uncovers one of the most disturbing and least-told chapters in American history. After the Civil War, thousands of newly freed Black men, women, and children were forced into brutal labor camps under Union control-most infamously at Devil's Punchbowl near Natchez, Mississippi. What was promised as freedom quickly became confinement, starvation, disease, and mass death. Drawing on historical records, firsthand accounts, and modern scholarship, this book exposes how freedom was systematically denied to formerly enslaved people through forced labor, neglect, and silence. It challenges the sanitized narrative of Reconstruction and confronts the uncomfortable truth that concentration camps existed on American soil long before the 20th century. This is not just a history book-it is an act of remembrance. What's Inside This Book The true history of Devil's Punchbowl and how it became a mass grave How freed slaves were rounded up, confined, and exploited after emancipation The role of Union authorities and federal policy during Reconstruction Daily life inside the camp: hunger, disease, forced labor, and death Why this history was buried-and who benefited from forgetting it The lasting impact on Black communities and American historical memory Who This Book Is For Readers seeking untold or suppressed American history Students and educators studying Reconstruction and post-Civil War America Scholars of African American history and racial justice Readers interested in systemic oppression and historical truth Anyone who believes history must be confronted-not concealed Buried at Devil's Punchbowl forces readers to reckon with a painful reality: freedom delayed is freedom denied. By bringing this forgotten tragedy into the light, this book asks a powerful question-what does justice look like when the dead were never acknowledged, and the truth was deliberately buried? Remembering is the first step toward accountability, and silence is no longer an option.