The
Gettysburg National Military Park is a huge area around the town of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. The driving tour of the American Civil War battlefield takes two to three hours to complete. Our children were not interested in that, so we let our eldest guide us. His scout troop has been to the battlefield many times, lighting luminaries on the weekend before Thanksgiving at the cemetery.
Our tour started at the Visitor Center.
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That's MUSEUM and Visitor Center to you |
Outside is a statue of Abraham Lincoln getting ready for the Gettysburg Address. I was the only one brave enough to get a picture with Honest Abe.
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Maybe I should have taken my hat off too? |
After gathering some info (and a map), we headed back to the car, which had a celebrity next to it.
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Unimpressed child |
The troop typically sets up camp on Friday night right next to the battlefield and then in the morning hikes to Devil's Den. Devil's Den is right next to Little Round Top, a very famous part of the battle. Unfortunately, Little Round Top was closed to foot and vehicle traffic so we had to admire it from afar.
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Little Round Top |
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A construction or two on Little Round Top |
We saw the first of many cannons in the area, a fun piece of equipment to see.
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Posing by the cannon |
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Walking on nearby rocks (not Devil's Den) |
The battlefield has dozens of monuments to various unit that fought, as well as to leaders and states. Our first sighting was this memorial to the Fourteenth Infantry from the Army of the Potomac.
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Fourteenth Infantry |
We walked across the field to a memorial for a New Jersey unit.
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Jumping from rock to rock |
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New Jersey memorial |
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Unit's history |
We saw Devil's Den in the distance and decided to get a move on.
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On the way to the Devil's Den |
The Fourth Maine Infantry has a monument close to the Den.
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Fourth Maine Infantry |
The path up into the Den is rather innocuous. The boulders made for a lot of fun climbing.
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Slaughter? Do we really want to go here? |
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Ready to climb |
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Where to go next? |
While the kids were defying death, I looked at the memorial to the 4th New York Independent Battery.
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NY Battery memorial |
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The plaque |
A more abstract memorial is dedicated to the Pennsylvania 99th Infantry.
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PA 99th |
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Details about the unit |
A geocache points out a name carved in a nearby rock. The story they tell is that a headless girl wanders the battlefield at night looking for her head (though she lost it in a carriage accident before the war even started). Supposedly she burned her first initial and last name into the rock with her ghostly finger. If you trace the letters you will be cursed. The geocacher says there are other stories. Online, we found a more mundane explanation--a monument carver left his mark during a break.
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P. Noel, who are you? |
One of the crannies shows a photo from after the battle where a Confederate sharpshooter lay dead near an improvised wall. The text explains that the photographer staged the body, moving it a few hundred yards into position. I guess fake news is not a new phenomenon.
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War photography |
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At the bottom of the den |
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One son runs by |
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Another son climbs in |
Across the road is more boulders, which meant more bouldering for our children.
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Trees grow in the boulder |
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Enjoying the landscape |
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Top of the mountain? |
We returned to our car and drove around the battlefield to the big Pennsylvania Monument. We stopped at the monument to the Irish Brigade, three infantry and one battery (artillery) units.
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Irish NY monument |
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Getting ready to fire |
Across the road is a monument to the Michigan Fifth Infantry and the New York Sixty-Sixth Volunteer Infantry. The field hospital for the Massachusetts Thirty-Second Infantry was also set up nearby, ministering to the wounded practically on the front lines.
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Michigan 5th Infantry |
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NY 66th Infantry (maybe also Irish?) |
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Memorial to a medical unit |
Further down the road is the memorial to the Minnesota fighting men at Gettysburg.
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Minnesota Monument |
The largest monument is the State of Pennsylvania Monument near Cemetery Ridge. The impressive structure is crowned by a statute of Nike, the Greek goddess of victory and peace. Each corner has a pair of statues of generals and statesmen involved in the battle.
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PA Memorial |
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Governor Curtain and General Hancock |
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Nike |
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Lincoln |
A stairway leads to the base of the dome where an observation deck lets visitors see a good deal of the battlefield.
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Our car is one of those |
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More of the battlefield |
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North of the monument |
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Picture of a guy taking our picture |
We went to
Tommy's Pizza for lunch since that's where the scout troop usually gets dinner after they light the luminaries.
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Headed for lunch |
Across the street from the pizza joint is the Gettysburg National Cemetery Annex, a continuation of the burial ground for the battlefield.
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Cemetery |
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Mason-sponsored memorial |
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Some of the graves |
The cemetery also has a lot of memorials to the soldiers based on soldiers, states, and units.
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General Reynolds memorial |
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NY memorial |
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Detail from the NY memorial |
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Marker for soldiers from Maine |
The largest and most impressive here is the Soldiers National Monument. Surmounted by a statue of the Genius of Liberty, the pedestal has four statues around the base: History, War, Peace, and Plenty.
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Soldiers National Monument |
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The back of the monument |
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Another angle on the monument |
We said some prayers for those who died for their country before we left. It's a very sobering place but well worth seeing.
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