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Charles A. Rubright
By Lou Hunsinger Jr.
Williamsport Sun-Gazette
There were numerous Lycoming County
soldiers held prisoner by the Confederates during the course
of the Civil War. Charles A. Rubright is one of the most
notable examples.
Rubright was born in Prussia on May 14, 1842. He and his
family moved to America in 1845, settling in Jarrettsville,
Maryland. Rubright's father died in 1850 and his mother
re-married to Daniel Dorman and in December of 1856 and
they moved to Williamsport. Rubright was apprenticed to
the bricklaying trade in the spring of 1857 to the bricklaying
firm of Phillip Hoffman.
When Lincoln called for troops in the spring of 1861, Rubright
was among the first to answer Lincoln's call. He enlisted
as a private and eventually promoted to the Chief of Engineers
of the 106th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry Regiment. He
and his regiment saw action at the Battle of Gettysburg.
He commanded a brigade of engineers of the Second Brigade,
Second Division, Second Corps. During one engagement during
this fateful battle, Rubright and his men were cornered
and captured, but in a short time fought their way out.
Rubright participated in all subsequent engagements of the
Second Corps.
Rubright's luck ran out on June 22. 1864 when he was captured
during Grant's siege of Petersburg. He would be held in
several of the Confederates' most infamous prison camps.
He was first held at Libby Prison in Richmond, Virginia.
Libby Prison was a former cotton warehouse that held 1,200
men in eight crowded, vermin-infested rooms. He was also
held at Belle Island, another camp near Richmond. On July
10, 1864 he was transported to the most notorious of all
Confederate prison camps, Andersonville, located in Sumter
County Georgia.
Andersonville was a virtual hell on earth for its prisoners.
At its height, Andersonville held almost 40,000 prisoners.
13,705 prisoners never made it home. Andersonville's commandant,
Henry Wirz was executed after the war for war crimes.
Rubright was liberated from Andersonville on April 28, 1865.
At the time of his release Rubright weighed a staggeringly
small eighty-five pounds. His normal weight was twice that.
He returned from the war with his constitution shattered
and his health seriously hampered.
He did not let his ill-health and horrible war experiences
deter him from being successful. He became an architect
and builder and opened a successful brick works. According
to the "Lycoming Atlas" Rubright was responsible
for designing and building several of Williamsport's most
notable public and private buildings, including two railroad
depots and "are monuments to his skill and enterprise."
Rubright was also in business for a time as a successful
grocery wholesaler, running "Rubright-Hill and Company.
He suffered severe financial reverses during the "Financial
Panic of 1873." He bounced back from this experience
with perseverance and skill. In the words of the "Atlas,"
"he stands in the front rank of the solid and honorable
citizens of Williamsport." No doubt these financial
troubles paled compared to the horrors he experienced at
Andersonville.
One infamous Civil War prison camp was located only seventy
miles from Williamsport, in Elmira, New York. The Elmira
Prison Camp was opened on July 6, 1864 and the last prisoners
departed from there on September 27, 1865. According to
an article from the Chemung County Historical Journal by
Thomas Byrne. 12,123 Confederate prisoners were held at
Elmira Prison during its existence, of this, 2,963 died.
Ironically, an ex-slave named John W. Jones was in charge
of the burial of all of the Confederate dead.
Hundreds of the prisoners held at Elmira passed through
Williamsport on their way to the prison camp. On one occasion
in 1864 a train carrying prisoners passed by Dickenson Seminary
(now Lycoming College). There were a number of students
there who came from wealthy southern families to shield
them from the dangers of war. Some of these students broke
out long-hidden Confederate flags and waved them from their
rooms at the passing prisoners. The prisoners were heartened
by this display but unfortunately, the students stirred
passions on the campus and the campus of Dickenson Seminary
"resembled a battlefield" as numerous fights broke
out between the southern students and their pro-Union counterparts.
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