T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
97.1 | Memory Fails Me... | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Tue Jun 01 1993 17:57 | 17 |
| RE .0:
(A suggestion, Dave: a better title for your note would have been
"Gettysburg", which would give other readers searching the file a clue
to your main subject.)
My last visit to Gettysburg was (too long ago!) in about 1967, and
I don't remember if I walked Little Round Top or not. I _vividly_
remember standing on Cemetary Ridge looking out over the ground
Pickett's men covered, and wondering how on earth they did it.
I _think_ the site of the cavalry battle is preserved, but of
course it is some distance from the rest of the field - unless you are
thinking of Farnsworth's battle?
MikeR
|
97.2 | Visit to Gettysburg | JGO::BS_FIFIS | | Wed Jun 02 1993 07:57 | 12 |
|
Hello Dave, as a Civil War Buff here in Holland I never been on that
famous battle field. But in august I'm coming over to that side of the
ocean and planning to visit off course Gettysburg.
When i come back I'll write inthis notesfile I complete report off what
I saw and how it feels. Liitle Round Top is one of those places I
wouldn't miss for anything in the world, so wait for my experiences.
At home I have a book with a list of all the Civil war battlefields and
there todays status. I'll look it over today and will write to you as
soon as possible about the Custer fight aroud Gettysburg.
greetings from the Netherlands, Jean-G�rard Fifis
|
97.3 | | CPDW::PALUSES | Bob Paluses @MSO | Wed Jun 02 1993 09:53 | 10 |
|
There's a marker for the 20th Maine at the site where they
battled on/for Big Round Top. It's not that far off of the park road.
Re the Stuart and Custer Cavalry battle, I think that took place
further away (perhaps outside the park itself ?)
Bob
|
97.4 | great experience, enjoy! | DEVMKO::BLAISDELL | Rick, dtn 264-5414 | Wed Jun 02 1993 13:18 | 8 |
|
Went to Gettysburg in April. You have to keep an eye out for the
20th Maine marker. It is set off to the left flank of the Little
Round Top summit and is off the road in the woods. Loved every minute
of the visit. See Devil's Den and the Wheatfield when you are in the
vicinity of the round tops.
-rick
|
97.5 | Marker question | NYEM1::PLOCK | | Wed Jun 02 1993 15:52 | 5 |
| Hope this won't create another note,when I answered the other guys I
inadvertently created new notes, how far in is the marker it's not 3mi
is it?
Dave of NJ
|
97.6 | Gettysburg Battleground and 20th Maine | CPDW::PALUSES | Bob Paluses @MSO | Wed Jun 02 1993 15:54 | 6 |
|
If I recall, the 20th Maine marker wasn't more than 30 yds or so off
the road ???
Bob
|
97.7 | RE:Stuart/Custer Marker | UNYEM::YANUSC | | Wed Jun 02 1993 16:03 | 7 |
| Dave, First time replying to a Note, so hopefully it is readable.
In regards to your original question around a marker or such to
determine the area of the Stuart/Custer fight, I don't believe there is
one. The action was quite a ways off (to the northeast, I believe). I
have been to Gettysburg often, including the tours, and have never seen
anything to steer people to that portion of the conflict.
Chuck
|
97.8 | | XCUSME::MACINTYRE | | Fri Jun 04 1993 14:12 | 22 |
| ONe of the best things to do when you get to Gettysburg is to pay the
$4 or $5 and go to the top of the observation tower just outside of the
park. The elevation (over 400ft I believe) gives a great panarama and
shows the distance relationships between the various points of action.
The marker for the 20th ME is indeed off the "back side" of Little
Roundtop below the summit. The top of LRT has a memorial/tower and a
nice statue of Gen. Warren, the man who first recognized the value of
that site to the Union and rushed reinforcements into the area, just
beating a Georgia regiment (I think) to the punch.
During my visit we brought along our bikes and toured the area much
easier and more thoroughly.
Devil's Den is a nasty place and it is very easy to visualize muskets
and rifles poking around corners and bayonets thrusting into cracks in
the rocks. The fighting must have been incredible intense.
It is a very sobering place.
Marv
|
97.9 | | CUPMK::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Fri Jul 09 1993 22:29 | 7 |
| If somebody served in Co. E of the 20th Maine from 29 August 1862 to 4
June 1865, how can I find out if he was at Gettysburg?
He had been wounded in the hip at the Wilderness 5 May 1864, but his
pension record does not indicate that he was an invalid from that
point.
|
97.10 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Mon Jul 12 1993 10:26 | 8 |
| Since Gettysburg was fought 1-3 July 1863, being wounded at the
Wilderness a year later wouldn't bear on that. He was almost surely at
Gettysburg unless he was home on leave.
The US Park Service is installing computer terminals at the major
battlefields, and these terminals, when the system is finished and the
databases completed, will allow you to find out who was where when.
That's not much help now, though, I know.
|
97.11 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Thu Oct 21 1993 16:41 | 7 |
| I lucked out a couple of years ago. Some distant kin of my
wife live in Carlisle, PA. Back in October of 1991, we had
a family reunion. Of course, a couple of us drove to Gettysburg
and scoped out the territory. Very pretty, too, with the leaves
changing, etc.
Scott
|
97.12 | question on memorial site | FCCVDE::REINE | | Mon Sep 19 1994 13:55 | 11 |
|
Question on the Gettysburg Memorial;7 On television recently,
they discussed the burial of the bodies after the battle. They
mentioned that there was a distinction made between soldiers
from the North and South. The bodies were buried after the
battle, then dug up and re-interred some time later, and this
was done on a state by state basis, but it was implied that
this was only done for northern soldiers. Were southern soldiers
buried at this site, or was there a separate burial site. This
leads to the question; was the memorial originally intended as
a monument to northern soldiers only?
|
97.13 | Confederate Dead Moved | TNKVS3::RMUMFORD | | Thu Sep 22 1994 08:13 | 24 |
| The battlefield after the fighting was done, was a mess. The dead were
hastily and poorly buried where they lay, or in trenches, mostly
separated into Union/Confederate. In the days immediately following the
battle, friends and relatives roamed the fields, digging up graves,
desparately trying to locate loved ones. They left a lot of new graves
open. Hundreds of bodies were shipped home. Land was purchased for a
cemetarty on Cemetary Hill, next to the Evergreen Cemetary, and in Oct,
a contract was let to move the union dead to the new site. The contract
paid $1.59 per body for removal, and another $1.59 for reburial in the
new cemetary, in coffins supplied by the union army. When Lincoln gave
his address there, the work was only about 1/3 done. More than a fourth
of these are marked "unknown". About 3,564 were reburied in this way,
and others lie in the evergreen cemetary, and others were shipped home.
The confederate dead were moved to somewhere in the South in 1870.
I believe that I once read where they are now, but I can't recall.
This is from GETTYSBURG, c 1981 by Eastern Acorn Press, a collection of
articles and Maps. Info from articles by Robert D Hoffsommer, and Dr.
Harry J. PFanz.
Later,
Robert
|