Grants Cottage in NY Named National Historic Site

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Albany NY - News 10

by: Isabella Colello

Posted: Jan 21, 2021 / 12:43 PM EST / Updated: Jan 21, 2021 / 12:43 PM EST

WILTON, N.Y. (WWTI) — A historic site in Saratoga County, New York has been named a national landmark. The 19th century residence where United States President Ulysses S. Grant completed his memoirs, the Grant Cottage Historic site, has officially been named a National Historic Landmark by the United States National Park Services.

According to the New York State Department of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation, Grant Cottages was acquired by State Parks in 1957 where it was deemed a State Historic Site, but was first opened to the public in 1890. The 43-acre property in Saratoga County includes a four-story residence where President Grant went to complete his memoirs for six weeks prior to his death in July 1885.

At the time, President Grant was terminally ill with throat cancer, but wrote on his service as the general leading the U.S. Army during the Civil War and his two terms as president. His memoirs were published with the help of his friend and prominent author Mark Twain.

The property is located immediately below the summit of Mount McGregor in Saratoga County and the cottage is kept as it was during the Grant family stay. It is also open to the public seasonally for tours of its original furnishings, decorations and personal items belonging to the family.

State Parks Commissioner Erik Kulleseid said this National designation is well deserved.

“This well-deserved federal designation brings more public awareness to the important role this place played in the life of one of our most famous national leaders,” said Kulleseid. “State Parks is grateful for the years of work invested in obtaining this designation by our Regional Commissioners and the Friends of Ulysses S. Grant Cottage that operates and cares for this site.”

Additionally local lawmakers commented on this national designation following the approval from the U.S. Secretary of the Interior David Berndardt.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer released a statement regarding the national naming.

“Finally, the Grant Cottage in Saratoga County, where one of our greatest generals and an influential presidents wrote one of the finest pieces of American literature – while terminally ill – will become a National Historic Landmark.  I was proud to have gone in person to push for this hidden gem to receive resources from the National Park Service. Ulysses S. Grant is having a deserved resurgence in appreciation lately, and this well-deserved distinction will encourage more people to visit this beautiful spot.”

Congresswoman Elise Stefanik stated the following.

“I am proud to have helped ensure the U.S. Grant Cottage in New York’s 21st Congressional District received it’s well deserved designation as a National Historic Landmark. Grant Cottage is a historically significant place in American history – during the summer of 1885, former President and Civil War hero Ulysses S. Grant wrote his memoirs in the cottage before his death on July 23, 1885. The Personal Memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant was the second best-selling book in the 19th century, and has inspired generations of writers ever since. I extend my sincere congratulations to the Friends of Grant Cottage Trustees and Staff for their commitment to preserving and promoting this beautiful historical landmark in the North Country.”

New York Parks stated that the site plans to continue tours of the Grant Cottage in May of 2021.

3D Building Tours Available at Gettysburg NMP and Eisenhower NHS

3D cutout view of Eisenhower Home

3D cutout view of Eisenhower Home

News Release Date: January 14, 2021
Contact: Jason Martz

Gettysburg National Military Park and Eisenhower National Historic Site have launched new 3D tours of five of the park’s historic buildings. These tours provide a new and unprecedented level of access to iconic structures on the Gettysburg battlefield and the Eisenhower farm.

Whether you use your home computer, smartphone or virtual reality headset; a visitor has full and unique access to explore all of the following five historic buildings: 1) David Wills house, 2) Lydia Leister house, 3) Abraham Brian house, 4) Eisenhower house, and 5) Eisenhower show barn. These 3D tours can be found on the Gettysburg NMP website (www.nps.gov/gett) and the Eisenhower NHS website (www.nps.gov/eise).

Superintendent Steven D. Sims says, “We are thrilled to be able to bring these 3D tours to our visitors. Thanks to this new technology, these historic buildings can be experienced and enjoyed by all our visitors at any time. These amazing tours put the visitor in control of an up-close and personal experience with the stories of each of these structures.”

Through this new technology visitors can virtually walk in the footsteps of Dwight and Mamie Eisenhower, explore the room where Abraham Lincoln finished his immortal Gettysburg Address, or stand at the southern facing window of the Abraham Brian house and ponder what it must have meant to be an African American citizen of Gettysburg on the eve of the battle. Whether in the park or in the comfort of your own home, in a traditional classroom or on a virtual visit, we invite you to immerse yourself in these historic battlefield homes.


American Battlefield Trust - 2020 in Review (YouTube Video)

Preserve

  • We transferred a 35-acre tract at Barlow’s Knoll in Gettysburg to the National Park Service, land that had long been considered one of the park’s top priorities.

  • In the heart of the Stones River Battlefield in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, we saved 48 acres that had once been considered lost to industrial use.

  • We also saved 9 acres at Brown’s Ferry in Chattanooga, Tennessee, a property that saw the pain of both the Civil War and the Trail of Tears.

  • We completed two major acquisitions to nearly complete the preservation of the Perryville Battlefield in Kentucky.

  • We secured important Civil War acquisitions at Shiloh, Antietam, Williamsburg, Cold Harbor, Cedar Mountain, Cedar Creek, and Parker’s Cross Roads.

  • We saved momentous Revolutionary War land at Bennington, New York, and Port Royal, South Carolina.

Educate

  • As Brown’s Ferry drew our attention to the Civil War’s Western Theater, so did our new map book.

  • Our digital offerings also proved an incredible asset for students and teachers, drawing more than 5 million student visits to the Trust's website.

  • To meet this hunger for quality content, we posted more than 300 new or overhauled articles, more than 300 videos and three new apps.

  • Our online Civil War curriculum was overhauled while an inquiry-based version debuted. Be on the lookout for our upcoming Revolutionary War curriculum!

Inspire
Our work is widespread and always pushes us and our supporters to expand upon the idea of what is possible!

  • Two different video productions, “Civil War 1864” and “Brothers in Valor,” won awards as they emphasized the power of perspective.

  • We surpassed 125,000 subscribers on our YouTube channel!

  • We continue to learn how valuable young voices are. We brought in a new cohort of Youth Leadership Team members and witnessed the publication of a former member’s ambitious audio drama on the Battle of Kings Mountain.

  • We launched a partnership with Ancestry, opening doors for content collaboration and encouraging multiple routes for the exploration of history!

  • We will soon be joining the National Park Service at Gettysburg to amplify the character-building Great Task Youth Leadership Program.

  • We also demonstrated our commitment to creating content that bridges the gap between modern service members and their forebearers by introducing The Warrior Legacy initiative.

While we made great progress in 2020, our work is far from done. We have big goals for 2021 and beyond, including our commitment to preserving the most important unprotected and twice-hallowed battlefield land at Gaines' Mill and Cold Harbor.

As we head into 2021, I'm excited to make even more impact, which we'll be able to accomplish thanks to your support. We couldn't do it without you.

With gratitude,


David N. Duncan
President

When Frederick Douglass Spoke in Allentown in 1870

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From WFMZ’s History’s Headlines - Jan 9, 2021
By CWRT Member Frank Whelan
Link to Original Article

As the editor of Allentown’s fervently Republican Lehigh Valley Register newspaper, Robert Iredell Jr. had long ago gotten used to seeing prominent figures of both political parties from across the state and nation come to the region to press the flesh and court voters. And there had been others, like showman like P.T. Barnum, for example, that came merely to offer entertainment. But the upcoming visit on April 8, 1870 of Frederick Douglass, the internationally known African American orator and anti-slavery champion, who had been an enslaved person until he escaped from bondage himself, had sparked an enthusiastic crowd the likes of which even Iredell was unfamiliar. His newspaper had this to say about Douglass’s appearance under the headline “Fred Douglass! Fred Douglass!”

“Fred Douglass has been pronounced one of the greatest living orators. In the Court House on Friday evening April 8th he will address the people of Allentown. Crowded audiences everywhere throughout the United States have been listening with delight to his eloquent utterances. Tickets have been sold in large numbers and only a few remain. Everyone should hear him who has the opportunity… Tickets 50 cents, reserved seats 75 cents.”

Iredell’s excitement came at least in part because Douglass was a strong supporter of the Republican Party. But even those who did not like Douglass or agree with what he said admitted that he was among the most well-known Americans. And that came at least in part from his compelling life story.

Frederick Douglass was born an enslaved person- Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey- in 1818 on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. He confessed later that he had no idea of the exact date. His birthplace was most probably his grandmother’s cabin. He was of mixed race including Native American and African as well as European. Douglass’s most recent biographer, Yale historian David W. Blight, states that his father was almost certainly white. “The opinion was whispered,” Douglass was later to note, “that my master was my father but of the correctness I know nothing.”

Separated from his mother as an infant, Douglass lived with his grandmother in her cabin. At a young age he was “given” to Lucretia Auld, who gave him in turn to her brother Hugh Auld who lived in Baltimore. It was Lucretia who took a special interest in him. In Baltimore Sophia Auld, Hugh’s wife, taught the 12-year-old the alphabet. She refused to teach him to read but he learned on his own. “Knowledge is the pathway from slavery to freedom,” he later wrote. Douglass’s pathway, however, was not an easy one. It was illegal to teach slaves to read and write. Several times he was beaten for the practice. And when he was sold to a particularly brutal slave master who beat him constantly, he rebelled and at last bested him in a fist fight. The brutal master never touched him again.

At this point Douglass decided to escape to the North. It was his future wife Anna Murray, a free Black woman in Maryland, who aided him. She provided Douglass with a sailor’s uniform and the papers of a free Black sailor. By a route that included travel by train and steamboat, Douglass eventually arrived at freedom in Philadelphia. From there he moved to New York and sent for Murray, who came to meet him and shortly thereafter in 1838 they were married. The couple moved on to New Bedford, Massachusetts. It was here they adopted the name Douglass after characters in a poem by Sir Walter Scott.

To perfect his speaking skills Douglass became a preacher. After working at several churches, he became involved in the abolitionist movement and worked with an anti-slavery newspaper publisher, William Lloyd Garrison. But Douglass’s reputation really took off after he published, in 1845, his autobiography, “Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave.” At first publishers were skeptical that a Black man and former slave could write so eloquently. But the public loved it, making the book a bestseller blockbuster and going through nine reprintings within three years. It was published in French and Dutch. He would publish two more books about his life and many articles that covered everything from the abolition of slavery to Home Rule for Ireland.

Douglass then traveled to Europe, touring Ireland and Great Britain. He was appalled at the horrors of the Irish potato famine and became close friends with Irish freedom fighter Daniel O’ Connell. Thanks to the money he raised from touring and giving lectures in England he was able to gather enough to buy his freedom. Douglass returned to an America where the anti-slavery movement was on the rise. As often happens with intense political movements, these were times of disagreements over what course the abolitionist movement should take. Douglass also took up at this time the cause of women’s rights.

Douglass became devoutly religious, but he had little time for the hypocritical Southern slave holders who worshiped God on Sunday and whipped their slaves the rest of the week. With the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861 Douglass quickly recognized that this was an opportunity to end slavery. He watched closely as the Lincoln administration moved toward the Emancipation Proclamation. He wrote:

“We were waiting and listening as for a bolt from the sky…we were watching…by the dim light of the stars for the dawn of a new day…we were longing for the answer to the agonizing prayers of centuries.”

Finally, with the war’s end eventually came the adoption of the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments that enshrined the end of slavery and citizenship rights for slaves.

On April 5, 1870, three days before he was to speak in Allentown, Douglass wrote a letter about his joy at the 15th Amendment’s passing. It was later reprinted in the Lehigh Register saying, in part:

“I view it with something like amazement…when we think through what labors, tears, treasures and precious blood it has come…Equal before the Lord, equal at the ballot box and the jury-box, the glory or shame of our future condition falls upon ourselves.”

On April 6, two days before the lecture, the Lehigh Register noted the local sale of Douglass tickets “has been immense and, it is scarcely necessary to say, the demand for them is very great…Crowded audiences have everywhere testified to his powerful eloquence and listened with admiration to the born slave’s exposition of the glorious truth, that all men are born free and equal.”

Of course, there were plenty of people in Allentown and across the country who hated Douglass and his views and had no desire to hear him speak. Blacks, they said, were inferior beings of lower intelligence created so by God to serve white men as “hewers of wood and drawers of water.” None of them could ever be equal to whites and should certainly not have equal rights with whites. The slogan of the Democratic Party in the presidential campaign of 1868 summed it up this way: “This is a White Man’s Country; Let White Men Rule.”

This point of view was expressed most strongly locally by the Allentown Democrat and its editor, Benjamin Franklin Trexler, Iredell’s rival. The Civil War, he argued, could have been avoided if slaves had not run away from their masters. The war was therefore all the fault of disobedient slaves. Trexler mockingly called Lincoln’s Gettysburg address, “one of his famous jokes in the form of a speech.” In 1864 when Washington D.C. horse car lines were instructed to admit Black passengers, the Democrat, making generous use of a common racial epithet, mocked the very idea of these “inferior beings” being admitted to public transportation.

The Register noted Douglass’s lecture would be on a relatively new topic. It was called “Our Composite Nationality,” and had been given in Boston on the previous December. He had given an address on the same topic in Reading three days before. It was a little after 8:00 pm when Douglass stepped up to the front of what is known as the Gold Courtroom of the Lehigh County Courthouse. His long mane of hair had gone gray and he had a full beard. For the next two hours (the Lehigh Register said he finished precisely at 10:00) he spoke to the audience.

Douglass’s lecture was not directly about slavery or the Civil War. Its focus was an issue that is with us to this day: immigration, including the admission of all nations to the U.S. with no restrictions. He began with the idea of a nation as ”a composite idea of people” that “marks the point of departure for a people, from the darkness and chaos of unbridled barbarism to the wholesome restraints of public law and society.” Douglass moved on quickly to the things that distinguish the United States from other nations. The U.S. is a young nation and, “the dawn is fully upon us, it is bright and full of promise.” He opposed, he said, those that claimed the Civil War had destroyed the country who stated, “you will never see the Negro work without a master.”

He pointed out that what made America great was “the concept of equal justice under the law for the principle of absolute equality.” Douglass noted that America was already a land of many nations, “in races we range from black to white, with intermediate shades which…no man can name or number. Europe and Africa are already here, and the Indian was here before either.” Douglass then went to the burning issue of the day, immigration from China. The Chinese had been drawn to California to build the Central Pacific Railroad and Douglass estimated that there now 100,000 Chinese in the country. Douglass went through all the reasons why many thought they could never become American- their race, their culture, and just their way of life. He said these are false and that Chinese who come here will become American just as the Irish and Germans who have come before. He argued that to keep out any people and attempt to stop the free flow of peoples into America is a violation of human rights.

Douglass went on to offer many more examples, concluding that all people would be transformed by an America that was true to the core value of equal rights for all. It need not fear the immigration of any people to its shores.

Finally, Douglass’s address reached its conclusion:

“I close these remarks as I began. If our action shall be in accordance with the principles of justice, liberty and perfect human equality, no eloquence can adequately portray the greatness and grandeur of the Republic. We shall spread the network of our science and our civilization over all who seek their shelter whether from Asia, Africa or the Isles of the Sea. We shall mold them all, each after his own kind, into Americans; Indian and Celt, Negro and Saxon Latin and Teuton, Mongolian and Caucasian, Jew and Gentile, all shall bow to the same law, speak the same language, support the same government, enjoy the same liberty, vibrate with the same national enthusiasm and seek the same national ends.”

Unfortunately, the audience reaction has been lost to history, but it is hard to imagine it was anything less than thunderous applause. The rest of Douglass’s life was a combination of achievement and disappointment. He watched as the Union troops were withdrawn from the South and whites restored themselves to power by violence, creating by the time of his death in 1895 a regime of legal segregation that was not removed until the 1960s. He witnessed the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and other acts designed to keep Asians out of America. He fought and spoke against it with all his might even as he grew old. He saw his house in Rochester, New York destroyed by arson and his business ventures fall apart.

Douglass died in deep disillusion that the bright promise he saw in 1870 for the United States was not accomplished. He left his vision to the future.

America’s last known Civil War widow has died at age 101

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America’s last known Civil War widow has died at age 101.

Helen Viola Jackson, who had been living in Webco Manor Nursing Home in Marshfield, Missouri, died on Dec. 16, the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War said in a statement on Saturday.

She married Private James Bolin — who fought with the 14th Missouri Cavalry and F Company — when she was 17 and he was 93 in September 1936.

Their relationship began when Jackson’s father volunteered her to help Bolin with his chores on her way to school.

Bolin didn’t want to accept charity so he decided to ask Jackson to marry him in order to provide for her future and for her to collect his Union pension, according to the organization.

Bolin died in June 1939. Jackson never remarried, didn’t have any children, and also never collected her husband’s pension.

Jackson didn’t publicly share she was married to a Civil War veteran until 2017.

“Mr. Bolin really cared for me,” she said in an interview with “Our America Magazine” in Missouri. “He wanted me to have a future and he was so kind.”

Farmers Sought to Maintain Manassas Battlefield's Landscapes

Brawner Farm at Manassas NBP

Brawner Farm at Manassas NBP

As part of its mission, the National Park Service at Manassas National Battlefield Park in Virginia strives to maintain the historic look of some of its landscapes. Since many of those acres were farmed when the Civil War arrived at Manassas, the Park Service is offering for lease 13 parcels for agricultural use.

The application process opened Monday and will continue through February 15. The park maintains more than 1,300 acres of agricultural land to preserve historic agricultural landscapes and viewsheds. In an effort to preserve the agricultural nature of the historic landscape, the park manages these lands through a leasing program for this historic property with local agricultural operators.  

Agricultural leases will be awarded for a 10-year period beginning in April. Applicants may apply to lease multiple properties or portions of properties. Those interested in applying should contact Bryan Gorsira at 703-754-1861 ext. 1109 or bryan_gorsira@nps.gov for forms, property maps, and additional information.

Applicants will be evaluated on experience in agricultural operations and their ability to achieve park conservation goals. Preference will be given to applicants who can demonstrate knowledge and experience in sustainable agriculture and conservation practices. In a continuing effort to protect the Chesapeake Bay and local watersheds, applicants will work closely with National Park Service staff to ensure best conservation management practices.

Manassas National Battlefield Park currently manages agricultural land through short-term permits. The transition to historic leases will allow lessees to maintain agricultural properties for longer periods of time. This will allow farmers and the park to collaborate more closely to achieve environmental stewardship goals, and provide farmers with more financial stability.

Christmas Stories from the American Battlefield Trust

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The following is from the American Battlefield Trust

Website: https://www.battlefields.org/

As Christmas dawns, our thoughts turn to how the soldiers of America's first century weathered each winter in the field during times of war.

Winter was bleak during our country's earliest conflicts. Hundreds of thousands of troops toiled in the cold or huddled in canvas-roofed huts while many died of disease in camp. Leaders generally tried to avoid operations due to the trying conditions. But for the soldiers engaged in battle, there was little rest over the holiday.

Soldiers preparing for the bloody Battle of Stones River in late December 1862, or shivering in the trenches outside of Petersburg in 1864, found little respite on Christmas or New Year's Day. In 1776, Continental soldiers braved bitter conditions and moved across the icy Delaware River under the command of George Washington to launch a surprise attack against Hessian soldiers and disrupt their traditional German Christmas celebrations.

Soldiers who were not on active campaign struggled against the weather and the boredom of life in winter quarters. They sought to bring some semblance of home and comfort to the holiday season. They relished letters from their loved ones, shared special meals, felt loneliness and longing, and even engaged in epic snowball fights. There are records of Civil War soldiers bringing traditional holiday customs like caroling, gift exchanges, and decorating, to camp.

One soldier from the 17th Maine recorded that he and his fellow troops eagerly awaited the "sundry boxes and mysterious parcels" directed to them "with feelings akin to those of children expecting Santa Claus." Another soldier, Alfred Bellard of the 5th New Jersey Infantry, recalled a small tree, "decked off with hard tack and pork, in lieu of cakes and oranges," that added festivity to life in a winter camp.

Soldiers often let their folks at home know what kind of food they craved. One Confederate soldier from North Carolina wrote his mother, "I wish you would send me a big cake and some dried apple pies or 'slapjacks,' I believe they call them, some molasses, dried fruit, lard, vegetables &c any thing you choose. Please send me a bottle of brandy and some sugar and I will make an eggnog from Christmas if I can manage to get some eggs. Please send me a pound or two of butter for we very seldom get any up in these diggings."

Yet, despite troops' best efforts to partake in holiday celebrations on the front, the season also served as a reminder that soldiers were separated from their loved ones and the comforts of home.

As we count our blessings, let us also deepen our appreciation for our soldiers' devotion and how they shaped - and continue to shape - the country we call home, often far away from their families. Thank you for doing your part to help ensure that their memory is never forgotten.

Searching for a last-minute gift?

This holiday, make a gift to preserve historic land in someone else's name. When you make a donation, you have the opportunity to send an ecard notifying them of your gift on their behalf. It's a wonderful way to spread cheer.

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Christmas Bells

Did you know that Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's 1863 poem "I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day" had its origins in the American Civil War? Longfellow wrote the piece on Christmas Day in 1863. Nine months earlier his son, Charles Appleton Longfellow, snuck away from home and enlisted in the Federal army in Washington, D.C.

Learn more

Christmas in the Confederate White House

Varina Davis, wife of Confederate President Jefferson Davis, wrote this article describing how the Davis family spent the Christmas of 1864 in the Confederate White House. It was published in The New York World, December 13, 1896 and has since been reprinted often. This excerpt was obtained via the website "The American Civil War, 1861-1865."

Learn more

Christmas in Wartime

Learn more about how Americans experienced the Christmas holiday during the wars that defined the United States. Our collection includes a look at warfare in wintertime and the battles that were shaped by the season.

Explore the collection

"Christmas Night of 62"

Confederate soldier William Gordon McCabe sat down on Christmas night 1862 to write his thoughts and remember his family far away. One hundred and fifty five years later, his words are still poignant.

Read his poem

Clara Barton

Clara Barton was born on December 25, 1821, and spent several Christmases in Washington. Although she had twice the reason to celebrate the day, she did not find it very exciting during adulthood, particularly during the trying years during the Civil War. Learn more about the life and legacy of the "Angel of the Battlefield."

Read more

Washington’s Crossing

On Christmas night 1776, General George Washington moved his troops across the icy Delaware River to launch a surprise attack against Hessian soldiers encamped in the British garrison at Trenton, New Jersey. Washington's plan was a bold one, but the commander knew that such an endeavor was necessary to prevent the revolution from crumbling. On Dec. 26, Washington and his men achieved a stunning victory, capturing 900 Hessian prisoners and setting the stage for the 10 Crucial Days to come.

Watch the video

Christmas on the Rappahannock

This story was published in Harper's Weekly in 1886 by the Rev. John Paxton, a veteran from the 140th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry. Paxton's account takes place on Christmas Day, just weeks after the Battle of Fredericksburg, while performing often miserable picket duty.

Read the story

Year-End Giving

This year’s CARES Act allows cash charitable deductions up to 100% of adjusted gross income (up from 60%) if itemizing and up to $300 if taking the standard deduction. Consult your tax advisor for details. Please make your year-end gift to preserve our threatened hallowed ground. Your tax-deductible gift will help us to preserve irreplaceable hallowed ground — forever.

Make your year-end gift today

Gettysburg Winter Lecture Series Goes Virtual

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On Saturday, January 16, 2021 Gettysburg’s popular Winter Lecture series begins. These free digital programs will be broadcast every Saturday at 9 am from January 16 through March 27 via the Gettysburg National Military Park Facebook page. All presentations will also be archived on the park’s website at www.nps.gov/gett.

Featuring National Park Service rangers and historians from both Gettysburg National Military Park and Eisenhower National Historic Site, the 10-week Winter Lecture Series will examine some of the treasured artifacts on display at Gettysburg NMP and Eisenhower NHS. Together, the two parks have one of the largest museum collections in the National Park Service, featuring compelling artifacts that serve as a window into the past.

“This is a challenging time for visitors to be able to explore the Gettysburg National Military Park Museum of the American Civil War and the Eisenhower Home,” notes Christopher Gwinn, Chief of Interpretation and Education at Gettysburg National Military Park. “Through this lecture series we hope to offer virtual visitors a chance to see some of the amazing artifacts that are on display and highlight the powerful stories they help illuminate.” From Dwight D. Eisenhower’s personal library, to the iron door from John Brown’s prison cell, the blood-stained sash of a Union artillery officer, and many more, these artifacts are priceless links to America’s turbulent past.

 

Photo caption: Items in the museum collections of both parks include a Spencer repeating rifle and Ike and Mamie Eisenhower's personal chairs.


Adams County Historical Society to Build New Building

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Pennsylvaina’s Adams County Historical Society launches multi-million-dollar campaign to build state-of-the-art facility to protect irreplaceable relics

(Gettysburg, Pa.) — The Adams County Historical Society (ACHS) preserves some of Gettysburg’s rarest treasures, and many of national significance—a program from Lincoln’s famous address, thousands of relics gathered from the battlefield, personal belongings of esteemed abolitionist Thaddeus Stevens and First Lady Mamie Eisenhower, Native American projectiles, dinosaur footprints, and so much more. To ensure that these priceless, tangible links to the past survive for future generations to study and appreciate, ACHS has launched a bold, $5-million-dollar campaign to construct a new Exhibit Gallery, Archives, and Education Center.

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“For more than 80 years, we’ve amassed a collection that tells the story of one of America’s most famous communities,” said ACHS executive director Andrew Dalton. “Now is the time to create a worthy home for our unparalleled collection. Without the Historical Society, the memory and legacy of this incredible place would cease to exist.”

The only downside of being blessed with such robust holdings is that the society has long outgrown its current home, which was always meant to be temporary. The building itself, an aging Victorian home in Gettysburg, also poses immediate risks to the collection it houses.

“Our current facility lacks important temperature and humidity controls, and there is no fire suppression system,” said ACHS Capital Campaign Chair Jacqueline White. “We worry every day that these incredible resources—the very soul of Gettysburg and Adams County—could deteriorate further or be lost if we don’t act now.”

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The new facility—set to open by fall of 2022—will be built  just north of Gettysburg near a portion of the First Day’s battlefield. The 29,000-square-foot complex will house artifact-driven exhibits that explore centuries of Gettysburg and Adams County history through the eyes of ordinary citizens of all ages and backgrounds.  According to ACHS historian Timothy Smith, “the interactive galleries will draw heavily upon hundreds of incredible, first-person accounts of events like the Battle of Gettysburg and Lincoln’s Address.”

In addition to exhibits, the new facility will feature hands-on programming, a stunning event space overlooking Barlow Knoll on the battlefield, and a first-class archive where visitors can conduct research on a variety of topics ranging from genealogy to Gettysburg, Adams County, and Civil War history.

On Dec. 16, the Historical Society hosted a digital campaign event to announce over $2.7 million in gifts and pledges made to date. Featuring filmed endorsements from documentarian Ken Burns, actor Stephen Lang, and historical novelist Jeff Shaara, the launch included a check presentation from Adams County’s Commissioners for an additional [amount to be announced on 12/16] in support of the project.

According to Burns, whose acclaimed film on the Civil War featured materials from the society’s collection, “the history of Gettysburg and Adams County is not just local historyit’s a microcosm of United States history.”

Shaara, author of Gods and Generals, a prequel to his father Michael’s Pulitzer-winning Killer Angels, added to Burns’ sentiment: “If we all do our part and protect our cherished past, the incredible stories of Gettysburg and Adams County will continue to inspire future generations of Americans just like they inspired my father, and just like they inspired me.”

Construction of the Historical Society’s new home will begin next year.

“Not only will we save this incredible collection, we are creating a home for this community’s remarkable story,” said Dalton. “From prehistoric times to the days of Eisenhower and beyond, this will be an experience unlike any other.”

To learn more about supporting the project, please visit www.achs-pa.org/campaign, or email info@achs-pa.org. Donations can also be mailed to the Adams County Historical Society at P.O. Box 4325, Gettysburg PA 17325. Naming and sponsorship opportunities are available for a limited time.

*     *     *

Since 1888, the Adams County Historical Society (Gettysburg, Pa.) has preserved over three centuries of remarkable local history. With millions of historic items in its care, ACHS inspires people of all ages to discover the fascinating and largely untold story of one of America’s most famous communities. Learn more at www.achs-pa.org

VMI Removes Stonewall Jackson Statue

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Monday December 7, 2020
NPR (link)

The Virginia Military Institute removed a statue of Confederate Gen. Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson on Monday morning. A small group watched as the bronze figure was hoisted off its pedestal in front of the VMI barracks.

The historic figure is being relocated from the campus in Lexington, Va., to its future home at the Virginia Museum of the Civil War and New Market Battlefield State Historical Park.

The statue was sculpted by Moses Ezekiel, a member of the class of 1866, and donated to VMI in 1912. And after standing for more than a century, VMI's board voted in favor of its removal in October.

Confederate statues across the U.S. came under attack over the summer as the nation wrestled with issues of racial injustice. VMI, the oldest state-supported military university in the country, was thrust into the spotlight after a Washington Post article alleged Black cadets and alumni endured "relentless racism."

The university was reluctant to remove the statue. Jackson was a professor at VMI before joining the Confederacy in 1861. Many of the institute's cadets served as drill instructors at Camp Lee when the Civil War started and others served and died in the name of the Confederacy.

The school's former superintendent, retired Army Gen. J.H. Binford Peay III, resigned shortly after an investigation into the allegations was announced. The interim superintendent, retired Army Maj. Gen. Cedric T. Wins, is the first African American to assume the position, The Associated Press reported last month.

"VMI does not define itself by this statue and that is why this move is appropriate. We are defined by our unique system of education and the quality and character of the graduates the Institute produces," Wins, a 1985 VMI graduate, said in a news release. "Our graduates embody the values of honor, respect, civility, self-discipline, and professionalism. This is how we will continue to be defined."

Dustin Jones is an intern with NPR's News Desk.