## Deadline: The Line of Death
The word *deadline* has an origin far darker than its modern office usage suggests. It began as a literal line — a boundary drawn in the dirt around a military prison camp, beyond which any prisoner who stepped would be shot dead on sight. The word was born in the American Civil War and carries the memory of one of the conflict's most notorious atrocities.
### Andersonville
The most infamous deadline in history was at Camp Sumter, the Confederate prisoner-of-war camp near Andersonville, Georgia. Operational from February 1864 to April 1865, Andersonville held up to 45,000 Union soldiers in a stockade designed for 10,000. Conditions were catastrophic: starvation, disease, exposure, and contaminated water killed nearly 13,000 prisoners.
A line of wooden posts was erected approximately 19 feet inside the stockade wall. This was the *dead line*. Any prisoner who crossed it, touched it, or reached over it would be shot by the sentries posted on the walls above. The line existed to prevent escape attempts — the 19-foot gap kept prisoners too far from the wall to tunnel or climb — but its enforcement was often arbitrary and brutal.
The term appeared in the official Congressional investigation into Andersonville in 1864, and the camp's commandant, Captain Henry Wirz, was tried and executed after the war for the conditions there — the only Confederate officer executed for war crimes.
### The Compound
The word is a straightforward English compound: *dead* (causing death, fatal) + *line* (a boundary, a mark). Both elements descend from Old English — *dēad* (dead, from Proto-Germanic *\*daudaz*) and *līne* (rope, line, from Latin *līnea* via Old English). The compound was new in 1864, but its components are among the oldest words in the language.
The figurative leap from 'lethal boundary' to 'time limit' happened in American journalism in the early twentieth century. By the 1920s, newspaper editors used *deadline* to mean the latest moment at which copy could be submitted for the next edition. The metaphor was apt: miss the deadline and your story was dead — it would not appear in print.
The journalistic sense rapidly generalized. By mid-century, *deadline* was used for any time limit in any context — tax deadlines, project deadlines, application deadlines. The prison camp origin faded from public awareness, and the word lost its violent edge entirely.
### The Metaphor We've Forgotten
Modern English treats *deadline* as a mild word — something stressful, perhaps, but routine. 'I have a deadline Friday.' 'Can we push the deadline?' The casualness is remarkable given the origin. A *deadline* was a line that killed you. The guards did not negotiate extensions.
This kind of semantic bleaching — where a word's violent or extreme original meaning fades through metaphorical extension — is common in English. *Decimate* (to kill one in ten), *fiasco* (a failed bottle-making that shattered), and *disaster* (a bad star) have all lost their literal force. But *deadline* may be the most dramatic example: from execution by rifle fire to an item on a project management dashboard.
*Deadline* belongs to two completely different worlds. In one, it is a line scratched in Georgia clay, patrolled by armed guards, beyond which lies death. In the other, it is a date circled on a calendar, beyond which lies a stern email from a manager. The distance between these two meanings is the distance between war and peace — but the word is the same word, carrying