Andrew Reeder - An Eastonian in Pre-Civil War Kansas

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An Eastonian in Bleeding Kansas

Andrew Reeder had been appointed governor of the violence-wracked territory of Kansas

From WFMZ
Written by CWRT Board Member Frank Whelan
Jul 18, 2020 

If it hadn’t been that it was a matter of life and death - his, in particular - Andrew Reeder might have found the events almost comical.

Here he was, one of the leaders of the Northampton County, Pennsylvania bar and territorial governor of Kansas, with a shawl thrown over his head and a bucket in his hand, following a small group of women, tiptoeing around the prone, passed-out, snoring bodies of the Missouri lynch mob who just hours before were ready to hang him from the nearest tree.

But this was just one of the events that had become a part of the Easton native’s life since, at the request of President Franklin Pierce and at the suggestion of then-Congressman Asa Packer, he had been appointed governor of the violence-wracked territory of Kansas.

When it was over, Reeder, previously an ardent Democrat with a laissez-faire attitude toward slavery, had become a Republican, a supporter of Lincoln and a vigorous champion of the "peculiar institution" of abolition.

Andrew Horatio Reeder was born in Easton in 1807. His father Absalom Reeder’s roots in America went back to 1656, roughly when they arrived from England, landing at Long Island. His mother, Christina Smith, was from Easton.

Reeder attended high school in Lawrenceville, N.J., at what later became a well-known prep school. From here, he read law in the office of a prominent local attorney, Peter Ihrie, who was active in Democratic party politics, serving as a representative in the Pennsylvania House and the U.S. Congress.

Reeder was admitted to the Northampton County bar in 1828. Unlike Ihrie, he had no interest in running for office himself. When the Democratic Party asked for his support, he gave it but always privately. When asked by.. CLICK HERE TO READ ENTIRE ARTICLE

Eisenhower National Historic Site – Green Phase - Limited Reopening

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Following guidance from the White House, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and state and local public health authorities, Eisenhower National Historic Site will be increasing access and services. The National Park Service (NPS) is working service-wide with federal, state, and local public health authorities to closely monitor the COVID-19 pandemic and using a phased approach to increase access on a park-by-park basis.
Beginning July 6, 2020, Eisenhower National Historic Site, in response to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania’s move to Phase Green for Adams County, will begin implementing plans for limited temporary onsite parking to allow free access to the grounds of the Eisenhower Farm and Farm 2 (Brandon Farm), access to the Audio Tour, and access to the interpretive waysides present on the site. The Eisenhower Home and Reception Center will continue to be closed during the Phase Green operations. Special park uses are to comply with state reopening guidance and public health guidance which include limiting gatherings to less than 250 people and maintaining social distancing. Park Rangers will provide informal interpretation services through intermittent roves, or visits, to different areas of the site. Public restrooms, located in the lower level of the Eisenhower Bank Barn and Show Barn, will begin to reopen on weekends. A temporary restroom will be available at the east end of the temporary parking lot.
Driving directions and temporary parking lot location are located below.
The health and safety of our visitors, employees, volunteers, and partners continues to be paramount. At Gettysburg National Military Park and Eisenhower National Historic Site, our operational approach will be to examine each facility function and service provided to ensure those operations comply with current public health guidance and will be regularly monitored. We continue to work closely with the NPS Office of Public Health using CDC guidance to ensure public and workspaces are safe and clean for visitors, employees, volunteers, and partners. 
While these areas are accessible for visitors to enjoy, a return to full operations will continue to be phased and services may be limited. When recreating, the public should follow local area health orders for Pennsylvania State Phase Green, practice Leave No Trace principles, avoid crowding and avoid high-risk outdoor activities.
The CDC has offered guidance to help people recreating in parks and open spaces prevent the spread of infectious diseases. We will continue to monitor all park functions to ensure that visitors adhere to CDC guidance for mitigating risks associated with the transmission of COVID-19 and take any additional steps necessary to protect public health. 
We have amazing virtual tours of Gettysburg NMP and Eisenhower NHS available on our web site for people who are still home schooling or not traveling at this time.
Details and updates on park operations will continue to be posted on our website and social media channels. Updates about NPS operations will be posted on www.nps.gov/coronavirus.

35 Acres of Barlow's Knoll transferred to Gettysburg NMP

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Civil War Trust donors rallied to raise $400,000 to secure the site and ensure its permanent protection

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July 1, 2020

Gettysburg, PA — Many of the events and activities that are typically scheduled to mark the anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg have gone digital in 2020, but there is at least one tangible and permanent legacy of the commemoration, as the American Battlefield Trust marks the occasion by transferring a critical 35-acre tract at Barlow’s Knoll to the National Park Service. Protection of this land had been a top park priority for decades when in 2016, the Trust had the opportunity to acquire it from Adams County.

“Among the dozens of battlefield properties that we protect each year, a small number rise above the rest because of their iconic nature,” said Trust President Jim Lighthizer. “Barlow’s Knoll at Gettysburg is certainly in that category. For years and decades to come our members will be able to walk this land and tell their children and grandchildren that ‘I helped do something special by saving this forever.’”

 

During the fighting on July 1, 1863, the area that became known as Barlow’s Knoll was the far right of the Federal line. This sector of the battlefield was commanded by Brig. Gen. Francis Barlow, whom celebrated historian Bruce Catton described as a “slim, clean-shaven young New York lawyer who had gone into the war as a militia private, and now commanded a division.” Barlow’s two brigades initially deployed in the fields before he made a controversial decision to advance them across the land protected by the Trust and now transferred to the Park, and onto a small rise about 700 yards distant. Barlow had hoped that the elevation would provide an advantage to his artillery, but he overextended his force and was dislodged from the position.

Retreating toward the Adams County Almshouse, again across the Trust-purchased property, Barlow attempted to rally his men, but was badly wounded. On the ground as the battle continued around him, Barlow’s location was overrun by Confederates. Although the popular tale that he was offered assistance by Gen. John B. Gordon is apocryphal, at least one Southern officer did tend to Barlow, likely on the transferred property.  

“Gettysburg National Military Park and the American Battlefield Trust have a long and successful history of partnership,” said Park Superintendent Steven Sims. “They are a constant ally and aid in our work, with this land transfer at Barlow’s Knoll being just the latest example. I look forward to many more instances of cooperative preservation”

Because the Barlow’s Knoll tract was entirely within the National Park’s boundary, it was ineligible for federal matching grants designed to create public-private partnerships for battlefield preservation. This meant that the Trust had to raise the full $400,0000 purchase price in private donations. But members quickly answered to the call, responding to the land’s tremendous interpretive value, which National Park Service Chief Historian Emeritus Ed Bearss summarized eloquently: “To me, this property is as important to understanding the first day at Gettysburg as Sickles’ position in the Peach Orchard is on the second day of the battle.”

 

Seeking the permanent preservation of the land was a meaningful decision according to County Commissioner Randy Phiel. “Adams County's heritage has two significant qualities that stand out —. our history and our agricultural traditions,” he said. “When Adams County sold this tract of land bordering Barlow's Knoll in 2017 to the American Battlefield Trust, the Board of Commissioners ensured that both of these qualities would be preserved for future generations in perpetuity on this historic tract. The National Park Service is an appropriate steward of this land preserving our Adams County and national history; while allowing agricultural practices to continue in the best tradition of Adams County.”  

The Battle of Gettysburg was the bloodiest engagement of the Civil War and widely considered a turning point of the conflict. In the summer of 1863, Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee launched his second invasion of the Northern states. Lee sought to capitalize on recent Confederate victories and defeat the Union army on Northern soil, which he hoped would force the Lincoln administration to negotiate for peace. Lee also sought to take the war out of the ravaged Virginia farmland and gather supplies for his Army of Northern Virginia. But after three days of intense fighting, culminating in the massive frontal assault known as Pickett’s Charge on July 3, and 51,000 combined casualties, Lee’s second invasion of the North collapsed in failure. Four months later, President Abraham Lincoln came to Pennsylvania to participate in the dedication of a cemetery for those killed in the battle, delivering his famed Gettysburg Address during the ceremony.

Today, Gettysburg National Military Park protects more than 6,000 acres of that battlefield and welcomes 1 million visitors annually. The American Battlefield Trust has preserved a total of 1,183 acres at Gettysburg, much of it subsequently transferred into the national park for permanent stewardship and interpretation. The Trust’s highest profile effort at Gettysburg has been the purchase and restoration of the site that served as Lee’s Headquarters during the battle, multimillion dollar project that included removing a hotel complex and subsequently returning the landscape to its wartime appearance.

The American Battlefield Trust is dedicated to preserving America’s hallowed battlegrounds and educating the public about what happened there and why it matters today. The nonprofit, nonpartisan organization has protected more than 52,000 acres associated with the Revolutionary War, War of 1812, and Civil War — including 1,183 acres at Gettysburg. Learn more at www.battlefields.org.

Ted Alexander - Antietam's 'legend' of a historian dies

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By Mike Lewis mlewis@herald-mail.com
https://www.heraldmailmedia.com/

Historian, author, teacher, preservationist and Elvis Presley fan Ted Alexander has died.

"He is a legend. There's not a lot of people I would say that about, but he was a legend at Sharpsburg," said John Howard, retired superintendent at the Antietam National Battlefield.

Alexander served for more than a quarter-century as chief historian at the Antietam grounds near Sharpsburg and became a nationally renowned historian.

He wrote books, including "The Battle of Antietam: The Bloodiest Day" and "Southern Revenge!: Civil War History of Chambersburg, Pennsylvania." He also wrote, edited and contributed to other books and more than 200 articles and book reviews.

He founded and coordinated the Chambersburg Civil War Seminars and Tours and raised thousands of dollars to preserve battlefields.

Family members acknowledged the death in posts to their Facebook pages, and posts by friends on Alexander's Facebook page indicated he died early Wednesday morning.

A native of Tupelo, Miss., Alexander also was known as an avid fan of another Tupelo product, Elvis Presley.

After coming to Maryland, Alexander graduated from Smithsburg High School in 1967, according to his Facebook page.

The next year he joined the Marines and served two tours in Vietnam. He was awarded the Navy Commendation Medal with Combat V, according to an online biography.

He received a bachelor's degree in history from the University of Maryland College Park and a master's degree in history from the University of Maryland Baltimore County.

He taught history at the Greencastle-Antrim High School and worked for the National Park Service during summers, according to fellow Civil War historian Dennis Frye, retired chief historian at Harpers Ferry National Historical Park.

Alexander eventually joined the park service full time and was a ranger at Fort Circle Parks, the Civil War defenses around Washington, D.C., and at Fort Washington Park.

In the 1980s, Alexander was sent to Antietam National Battlefield and became its chief historian.

"That was heaven on earth for Ted Alexander. ... He made quite a name for himself," Frye said.

Among his other accomplishments, Alexander was "the first National Park Service historian to really investigate minorities' roles during the Civil War, specifically the role of Hispanics during the war and the role of Native Americans during the war," Frye said.

Alexander also led other endeavors, including the Chambersburg academic seminars, working with the Greater Chambersburg Chamber of Commerce.

"That was a brilliant business stroke by Ted Alexander. That model has been extremely successful," Frye said.

Alexander brought nationally known scholars to those seminars, which attracted people to the area and helped raise money to preserve historic battlefields.

Frye, a co-founder and past president of the American Battlefield Trust and the Save Historic Antietam Foundation, saw the fruits of those labors.

"No other individual has raised as much money to preserve Civil War battlefields as Ted Alexander. Nobody. ... He told me that was his greatest contribution to history," Frye said.

Tom Riford, former president and CEO of the Hagerstown-Washington County Convention and Visitors Bureau, said he worked with Alexander on tours, talks and other initiatives, including the Chambersburg seminars.

In an email, Riford, who is now an assistant secretary in the Maryland Department of Commerce, wrote that Alexander brought "significant attention to the 1862 Confederate invasion of Maryland (the Antietam campaign), and could speak on several significant aspects of the America’s Bloodiest Day."

Riford and Alexander also shared stories as fellow Marines.

"We lost a great person," Riford wrote.

Howard recalled that Alexander was one of the first staff members he met when he became the superintendent at Antietam. At the time, Howard didn't know a lot about the history of the place.

"Ted provided me with a list of books I should read and things I should know," Howard said.

From time to time, Alexander would update that list. And occasionally the superintendent felt as if Alexander was quizzing him to make sure he'd read the books.

"That was Ted to a T," Howard said with a laugh.

Howard praised Alexander's dedication to providing "an honest, truthful account of what happened."

He also said Alexander helped countless others with their research.

"He wouldn't do your work for you, but he would steer you in the direction you needed to go so the work was accurate," Howard said.

157th Battle of Gettysburg anniversary commemoration with the  American Battlefield Trust

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Greetings!

We invite you to experience American history at the 157th Battle of Gettysburg anniversary commemoration with the American Battlefield Trust. From July 1-3, we will be online to engage you virtually with a series of events, tours, and Q&A sessions with historians.

Join us on Facebook and YouTube as we traverse the battlefield to bring you videos and broadcasts featuring special guests, Civil War artifacts, and stories of this epic battle. Whether you are a Gettysburg novice or a full-on Civil War nerd, expect to learn things you didn't know before, and see places both familiar (Reynolds Woods, Little Round Top, the fields of Pickett’s Charge) and off the beaten path (Berdan Avenue, the Timbers Farm, the D-Shaped Field, and more!).

We will be joined by Licensed Battlefield Guides, historians, and friends of the Trust. Times and topics are subject to digital connectivity, but look for us on our Facebook and YouTube pages from 9:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on July 1, 2, and 3.

For a primer, check out all of our videos from our 155th Gettysburg anniversary event and all of our other live video events. If you’re a beginner, I’d recommend checking out our 10 facts about the battle, watching our Animated Map or our brief In4 video, or taking a virtual tour to orient yourself on the battlefield.

To be clear, this is a virtual event and NOT an in-person tour. Please do not come to the battlefield for these broadcasts — just enjoy them on your computer, phone or tablet! When we are live on Facebook or YouTube, we welcome you to ask questions and post comments – maybe you’ll even get a live shout-out from the Trust! You do not need a Facebook or YouTube account to watch, but you will need one to post comments and the like.

See you on the battlefield (virtually!),

Garry Adelman
Chief Historian
American Battlefield Trust

P.S. Join us on Facebook or YouTube for the anniversary of battle of Gettysburg! We promise you plenty of cool experiences, great energy, fun, and lots of solid history — we plan to be anywhere and everywhere Gettysburg related from July 1-3.

As monuments are toppled nationwide, what should Gettysburg do with its 40 Confederate statues?

from Pennlive https://www.pennlive.com/news/2020/06/as-monuments-are-toppled-nationwide-what-should-gettysburg-do-with-its-40-confederate-statues.html

from Pennlive
https://www.pennlive.com/news/2020/06/as-monuments-are-toppled-nationwide-what-should-gettysburg-do-with-its-40-confederate-statues.html

from Pennline
Updated Jun 27, 2020; Posted Jun 25, 2020
By Nolan Simmons | nsimmons@pennlive.com

Editor’s note: This story was updated to add a statement from the National Park Service.

Across the country, monuments to Confederate soldiers, slaveholders and others who espoused views now considered repugnant are coming down, some toppled by protesters, others removed by local government leaders.

But in Gettysburg, site of the pivotal Civil War battle, there are few calls to remove the 40 or so Confederate monuments that stand on the battlefield

Furor over the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police has focused attention on issues of racial inequality, including monuments that glorify those who fought to support the institution of slavery. But the National Park Service said it hasn’t received any complaints about monuments such as the towering Virginia monument, topped by a figure of Robert E. Lee, or statues that memorialize troops from Louisiana, Mississippi and other Confederate states.

Jane Nutter, president of the Gettysburg Black History Museum, thinks that’s entirely appropriate.

“If it’s history and it’s on a battlefield that’s recognizing the history. Not honoring, we’re recognizing what is history, something very pivotal that happened. We can’t ignore that,” said Nutter, whose great-grandfather and great-uncle fought in the U.S. Colored Troops during the Civil War, and whose family owned land off Confederate Avenue in Gettysburg.

“[But] placing a statue of a Confederate in a public space in a town? That’s not where it belongs, because they lost. I mean, they lost and no matter what, they lost.”

But others, such as Scott Hancock, professor of Africana Studies at Gettysburg College, says the monuments are a sign that the Confederacy is still winning.

“Obviously the Union won the military battle,” he said.”But in the 150-plus years since that [battle], in many ways, the Confederacy has won that sort-of mental and cultural battle because so many people have accepted the way in which Confederates, former Confederates, their descendants and supporters rewrote the history of the Civil War and rewrote the history of what the Civil War was about.”

Even if enough concerns were voiced about Gettysburg’s Confederate monuments to warrant a discussion about removing them, the reality is that the monuments are protected by a web of different laws that make getting rid of them a complicated matter, said Jason Martz, acting public affairs officer for the National Park Service.

The untold stories

Hancock sees the monuments as a form of non-verbal discourse: They are testaments not only to the individuals who were memorialized but to their beliefs and ideas. But it’s a one-way conversation that ignores the flaws of the memorialized figures as well as the context of the moments in history when the monuments were placed.

If the monuments remain, he said, that conversation needs to be wider ranging.

“That story doesn’t get told very well, it doesn’t get told on the battlefield,” he said. “The Visitor Center tells that story really well, places slavery and African-Americans right at the center of the story, but the battlefield itself and the monuments do not tell that story.”

Understanding the history of the monuments themselves is as important as understanding the history they memorialize, Hancock said.

Most of the about 40 Confederate monuments — there are more than 1,300 monuments on the battlefield — were erected during the 20th century, many of them during or after the era of the Civil Rights movement, Hancock said.

The South Carolina monument, for instance, was dedicated in July 1963, marking the 100th anniversary of the battle. But one of the main speakers at its dedication was Alabama Gov. George Wallace, known for his staunch segregationist views and support of “Jim Crow” policies.

“You could say the primary motive [for building monuments] is honoring their ancestors, honoring the dead,” Hancock said. “But when you have people like Wallace making a speech and it says ‘The sacredness of the state’s rights’ on the monument, I think we need to be asking, ‘So what was the cause?’ In that context, I think, yeah, it’s the desire to protect a way of life that was built around a racial hierarchy that was central to what was going on [in the South].”

Earl Johnson Jr. says he thinks that the history of Gettysburg can be told without the use of Confederate monuments. Two weeks ago, after delivering a speech on Floyd’s death, he founded Take It Down!, a non-profit dedicated to the removal of Confederate monuments from public spaces.

“Whether it’s on the battlefield or the courthouse steps, these were placed by people who want to celebrate white supremacy — the white supremacy of the Confederacy,” said Johnson, whose father was an attorney for The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in the 1960s.

He said his organization has already recruited members from almost all 50 states and is helping organize grassroots efforts to remove Confederate monuments across the country.

“The notion that black Americans and others of goodwill would be forced to pay taxes to enshrine these racist traitors is an extraordinarily American thing,” he said. “We envision an America where no black child has to play under the shadow of a Confederate monument in her public park.”

A teaching opportunity?

Hancock says he would support removing Confederate monuments from Gettysburg if they continue to exist without context, as they do today. But he would rather see the park teach visitors about the history of the monuments and use them as a tool to educate people about the systems of white supremacy the Confederacy fought to protect.

“In Richmond, if you’re driving by that statue, you’re not going to stop and read signs or listen to an interpreter, but people come to the Gettysburg battlefield to learn,” Hancock said. “This is a wonderful opportunity to instruct people about our history in a more comprehensive way.”

Kevin Wagner, history teacher and program chair for social studies at the Carlisle Area School District, uses these representations of difficult moments in history as tools to teach what he calls “hard history.”

In his class, Wagner has students study the history of statues of Abraham Lincoln, including the Emancipation Memorial on display in Washington, D.C. The statue features Lincoln standing over a freed African-American who is kneeling with broken shackles around his wrists.

The statue is currently the focus of a petition that calls for its removal, citing its “degrading racial undertones.” But Wagner says that people would feel differently if they knew the history of the statue itself.

“That statue was paid for entirely by freed slaves with pennies and nickels and dimes,” Wagner said. “There needs to be a contextualization, or let’s add a marker beside it that explains the backstory. Any piece of art, much like a monument, is open to interpretation unless you know what the real story is.”

When studying physical representations of history like monuments, Wagner has his class examine the entire backstory in order to get the fullest understanding possible of that moment in time. Visitors to the Confederate monuments at Gettysburg should do the same, he said.

“You cannot bring one voice forward and suppress another one,” Wagner said. “They both have to equally have a conversation with one another.”

‘Never an easy conversation'

On Friday, the National Park Service issued a statement about Confederate monuments, that says, in part:

“Many commemorative works, including monuments and markers, were specifically authorized by Congress. In other cases, a monument may have preceded the establishment of a park, and thus could be considered a protected park resource and value. In either of these situations, legislation could be required to remove the monument, and the NPS may need to comply with Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act and the National Environmental Policy Act before removing a statue/memorial.

“Still other monuments, while lacking legislative authorization, may have existed in parks long enough to qualify as historic features. A key aspect of their historical interest is that they reflect the knowledge, attitudes, and tastes of the people who designed and placed them. Unless directed by legislation, it is the policy of the National Park Service that these works and their inscriptions will not be altered, relocated, obscured, or removed, even when they are deemed inaccurate or incompatible with prevailing present-day values. The director of the National Park Service may make an exception to this policy.

“The NPS will continue to provide historical context and interpretation for all of our sites and monuments in order to reflect a fuller view of past events and the values under which they occurred.”

Martz, the National Park Service spokesman, said the park service and its rangers answer visitors’ questions about the thousands of monuments on Civil War battlefields every day, trying to explain the nuances of history and put the monuments into proper historical context.

To the NPS, the monuments represent the story of the men who fought and died on those battlefields, Martz said.

“It’s every shade of black, every shade of white and every shade of gray in-between,” Martz said. “It’s definitely never an easy conversation, but it’s the necessary conversation to have.”

Confederate Monuments at Gettysburg NMP

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Confederate Monuments
Link to NPS webpage

Gettysburg National Military Park preserves, protects, and interprets one of the best marked battlefields in the world. Over 1,325 monuments, markers, and plaques, commemorate and memorialize the men who fought and died during the Battle of Gettysburg and continue to reflect how that battle has been remembered by different generations of Americans.

Many of these memorials honor southern states whose men served in the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia. These memorials, erected predominantly in the early and mid-20th century, are an important part of the cultural landscape.

Across the country, the National Park Service maintains and interprets monuments, markers, and plaques that commemorate and memorialize those who fought during the Civil War. These memorials represent an important, if controversial, chapter in our Nation’s history. The National Park Service is committed to preserving these memorials while simultaneously educating visitors holistically about the actions, motivations, and causes of the soldiers and states they commemorate. A hallmark of American progress is our ability to learn from our history.

Many commemorative works, including monuments and markers, were specifically authorized by Congress. In other cases, a monument may have preceded the establishment of a park, and thus could be considered a protected park resource and value. In either of these situations, legislation could be required to remove the monument, and the NPS may need to comply with Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act and the National Environmental Policy Act before removing a statue/memorial.

Still other monuments, while lacking legislative authorization, may have existed in parks long enough to qualify as historic features. A key aspect of their historical interest is that they reflect the knowledge, attitudes, and tastes of the people who designed and placed them. Unless directed by legislation, it is the policy of the National Park Service that these works and their inscriptions will not be altered, relocated, obscured, or removed, even when they are deemed inaccurate or incompatible with prevailing present-day values. The Director of the National Park Service may make an exception to this policy.

The NPS will continue to provide historical context and interpretation for all of our sites and monuments in order to reflect a fuller view of past events and the values under which they occurred.

Confederate Flags

In a June 25, 2015 statement, then National Park Service Director Jonathan B. Jarvis said, “We strive to tell the complete story of America. All sales items in parks are evaluated based on educational value and their connection to the park. Any stand-alone depictions of Confederate flags have no place in park stores.”

Jarvis said the murders of nine church members at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina, which is near Fort Sumter National Monument, galvanized a national discussion that includes symbols and relics from our nation’s past such as the Confederate Battle Flag.

“As that discussion spread across the country,” Jarvis said, “one of our largest cooperating associations, Eastern National, began to voluntarily remove from the park stores that it manages any items that depict a Confederate flag as its primary feature. I’ve asked other cooperating associations, partners and concession providers to withdraw from sale items that solely depict a Confederate flag.”

This affected 11 out of 2,600 items in the bookstore at Gettysburg National Military Park’s Museum and Visitor Center.

In the telling of the historical story, Confederate flags have a place in books, exhibits, reenactments, and interpretive programs. Books, DVDs, and other educational and interpretive media where the Confederate flag image is depicted in its historical context may remain as sales items as long as the image cannot be physically detached. Confederate flags include the Stainless Banner, the Third National Confederate Flag, and the Confederate Battle Flag.

Previously Unknown Map Showing Engagement's Aftermath Amounts to 'Rosetta Stone" for Battle of Antietam

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Mary Koik, mkoik@battlefeilds.org
Andrew Dalton, director@achs-pa.org

June 17, 2020

(Sharpsburg, Md.) — Without a doubt, the battlefield at Antietam, site of the September 17, 1862, clash that still represents the bloodiest day in American history, is hallowed ground. Antietam National Battlefield protects landscapes associated with the Union victory that gave Abraham Lincoln the opportunity to issue his Emancipation Proclamation. Now, a period map, uncovered by happenstance by researchers primarily concerned with a different engagement, is shedding new light on the human toll of war by showing the locations where more than 5,800 Americans were buried on that field, often just feet from where they fell.

“Looking at this map, there can be no doubt in the truth of the statement that a battlefield is ‘hallowed ground,’ made so by the blood of soldiers,” said American Battlefield Trust President Jim Lighthizer. “The landscape at Antietam was turned into one vast cemetery, sacred to the memory of those who lost their lives in the struggle.”

More than this symbolic value, the map unleashes a host of interpretive opportunities for historians. “This discovery reveals truths about the Battle of Antietam lost to time” said Trust Chief Historian Garry Adelman. “It’s like the Rosetta Stone: by demonstrating new ways that primary sources already at our disposal relate to each other, it has the power to confirm some of our long-held beliefs — or maybe turn some of our suppositions on their heads.”

Although residing in the collection of the New York Public Library and digitized by that organization nearly two years ago, this map was wholly unknown to experts in the field, including the National Park Service staff at Antietam National Battlefield, until this spring, when researchers from the Adams County Historical Society (ACHS) in Gettysburg, Pa., happened upon it. They were looking for information on the mapmaker, Simon G. Elliott, who is renowned in Civil War history circles for a similarly detailed and often cited study of the Gettysburg Battlefield. ACHS Executive Director Andrew Dalton had begun looking for more details about the somewhat mysterious cartographer, who has a checkered reputation from his work on railroads in California and Oregon. As Dalton looked into what, precisely, brought Elliott east, his colleague Timothy H. Smith scoured other digital collections to compare minor differences in printed copies of the Gettysburg map, hoping to determine the original versus subsequent revisions.

“The New York Public Library has an excellent map collection,” said Smith. “I searched for ‘S.G. Elliott’ and ‘Gettysburg,’ then downloaded the results, so I could look at them in detail. When I opened up the file, I was utterly taken aback and knew I was looking at something extraordinary.”

In addition to alerting his colleague, Dalton, Smith swiftly reached out to the Trust’s Adelman, a close friend and longtime collaborator, looking to corroborate the significance of the discovery. Adelman confirmed the instincts of ACHS’s Gettysburg experts and shared word of the find with Antietam National Battlefield park ranger historian Brian Baracz, who was, likewise, totally unaware of the map’s existence.

“One of the beauties of working with the public is that you never know what’s going to come in the door,” said Baracz. “We have visitors bring us new letters and diaries from participants on a regular basis and those enrich our understanding. But this find exceeds all that — it is on a fundamentally different level.”

The Antietam Elliott Map, like its Gettysburg counterpart, shows significant detail about how the battlefield appeared in the aftermath of fighting. The two maps were likely made at approximately the same time — autumn of 1864, when Elliott came east to lobby Congress on a railroad bill. Although they were recorded a year (in the case of Gettysburg) or two (in the case of Antietam), after the battle, they show precise locations for burials of Union and Confederate soldiers (differentiated by the icon used), as well as horses, because they were based on surveys done immediately following the fighting.

The Battle of Antietam saw some 23,000 total casualties, with the National Park Service interpreting that between 4,000-5,000 of those are individuals who died on the day of the battle. Although historians are still performing analysis of the map, more than 5,800 soldier burials are individually recorded, typically in groups associated with a particular regiment, also noted on the map. Field burials often saw soldiers interred by comrades, very close to where they fell, meaning that the map confirms the locations where units were engaged on the field.

“In some ways, this Antietam map is even better than the Gettysburg one,” said ACHS’s Dalton. “On the latter, Elliott identified 18 soldiers by name when he marked their graves, but at Antietam, he was able to do that for more than 50. And for each of those, we can tell a story.”

This type of detail opens up remarkable interpretive opportunities, especially when paired with other documentation of the battle, like diary entries describing the work of burial crews and the aftermath photographs taken by Alexander Gardner, the echoes of which can be found in the Elliott Map. Likewise, the visual representation of exactly where men died and were buried — although the number of burials made at Antietam National Cemetery demonstrates the vast majority of these internments have been moved off the field, occasional discoveries of human remains do occur at Antietam and other sites — have major implications on battlefield preservation initiatives. The Elliott map shows that dozens of men were once buried in the immediate vicinity of the national park’s visitor center. The 461 acres that have been protected by the American Battlefield Trust show evidence of more than 600 burials.   

“I have no doubt that this is going to change the way we understand and preserve Antietam,” said Tom Clemens, president of the Save Historic Antietam Foundation, one of the country’s top battlefield friends organizations. “Knowing where that sacred ground lies is vital to us as preservationists. It underscores the urgency of our task”   

Those interpretive shifts will become evident, as the National Park Service is making plans to integrate the Elliot Map, both visually and interpretively, into exhibits at the Antietam National Battlefield Visitor Center.

Organized in 1888, the Adams County Historical Society preserves over one million historic items from the Gettysburg area. Its headquarters is also home to the Battle of Gettysburg Research Center, a library and archive assembled by and for students of the Civil War with an emphasis on the roles played by local civilians before, during, and after the Battle of Gettysburg. Learn more at https://www.achs-pa.org.

The American Battlefield Trust is dedicated to preserving America’s hallowed battlegrounds and educating the public about what happened there and why it matters today.  The nonprofit, nonpartisan organization has protected more than 50,000 acres associated with the Revolutionary War, War of 1812, and Civil War. Learn more at www.battlefields.org.

New Preservation Efforts At Elmira Civil War Prison Camp

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June 13, 2020 by Emerging Civil War

This week Friends of the Elmira Civil War Prison Camp announced two new successes for their preservation and interpretation efforts in New York. Two vacant houses adjacent to replicated prison and near the original site had recently been purchased, and this Tuesday the structures were safely removed, free of charge by a local demolition company.

Martin Chalk, president of the Friends of the Elmira Civil War Prison Camp, spoke enthusiastically in an interview about getting access to the lots and open fields while helping the community by removing the two houses which were in bad condition.

Although most of the prison camp buildings were dismantled after the war, one was disassemble and saved. It was been reassembled and completed in 2016. The following year the preservation friends group constructed a replica barracks building and has been pursuing opportunities for historical education and more preservation moments. Further expansion and fundraising efforts are planned for the future, but details have been delayed due to the Coronavirus pandemic.

The original news article is available here: https://www.stargazette.com/story/news/local/2020/06/09/elmira-civil-war-prison-camp-plans-major-expansion-facility/5325849002/

To learn more about Elmira Prison Camp and the Confederate soldiers who were held there, check out Derek Maxfield’s new book in the Emerging Civil War Series: Hellmira

GBPA Announces Summer Event Schedule Including Reenactment

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The Gettysburg Battlefield Preservation Association (GBPA) has announced new dates for several of the historic events held in Adam’s County, including the 2020 Battle of Gettysburg Reenactment.

The Gettysburg Reenactment, an annual event that has attracted over 500,000 visitors, has been scheduled for August 22-23, and will be held at the historic Daniel Lady Farm on Hanover Street. The house and barn was converted into a field hospital during the historic battle of Culp’s Hill, and will also be open for tours on event weekends. Campsites on the farm will also be open for scout groups and reenactors, as permitted under state orders and guidelines. 

The Fall Skirmish, as well as the Battle of Antietam/Sharpsburg, is still scheduled for September 12-13 on the Daniel Lady Farm. The Annual Civil War Artifact Show, typically held in June, has been rescheduled for September 26-27 at the Eisenhower All Star Complex. The event is being closely monitored by Brendan Synnamon, GBPA Vice President of Administration and show coordinator, in order to enforce state COVID-19 health guidelines. Other events are being planned for Fall 2020, in addition to the current lineup.

All events and activities continue to depend on the reopening status of Adams County, as well as any orders and guidelines issued by Governor Tom Wolf. the Pennsylvania Department of Health, and the U.S. Center for Disease Control.

“We are aware of the multiple cancellations of Civil War events around the country and are doing everything possible to provide reenactors and the public with Civil War events as we begin to recover from the COVID 19 crisis,” said GBPA President Michael Cassidy.

While managing the reenactments will require additional planning, Kirk Davis, GBPA Vice President of Operations, says that “The fact that these events are being held outdoors on the Lady Farm’s 148-acre site, gives us confidence that we can offer enough room to adhere to social distancing regulations and hold these events as safely as possible.”

For further information, reenactors, ticket holders, and the general public can visit www.gbpa.org/events. The GBPA is a 501c3 non-profit organization that serves to educate the public through the preservation of its battlefield and other historic monuments.