Cross Country Vacation Sept./Oct. 2025-Post 11

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site, Four Oaks, North Carolina

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

“The Battle of Bentonville, fought March 19-21, 1865, was the last full-scale action of the Civil War in which a Confederate army [led by General Joseph E. Johnston] was able to mount a tactical offensive. This major battle, the largest ever fought in North Carolina, was the only significant attempt to defeat the large Union army of General William T. Sherman during its march through the Carolinas in the spring of 1865.”

The result was a Union victory with an estimate of Union 1,527 casualties and 2,606 Confederate casualties.

“Visitors to the battlefield can tour a restored Harper House, used as the field hospital for the Union’s Fourteenth Army Corps, and includes a reconstructed kitchen and enslaved people’s quarters. Exhibits at the park’s visitor center focus on the battle, and include interactive maps, artifacts and displays about soldiers and commanders from both armies. There is also a 15-minute audiovisual program about the battle. Outdoor exhibits in the park include the Federal XX Corps reserve trenches, the Harper family cemetery, a Confederate cemetery, several monuments, and a 10-mile driving tour with 8 tour stops. The site also features nearly 5 miles of walking trails along original trenches built during the battle.”

John Harper Farmhouse

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

The separate kitchen:

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Slave Quarters

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Yes, there is a lock on the outside of the door to the slave’s living space.

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

There are many helpful signs of all kinds to keep you oriented.

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Levi Phillip Creech’s original family home. It was moved and restored and is now adjacent to the Bentonville Battlefield, and owned by Mr. Larry Laboda. Creech was a private in Company C, 50th North Carolina Infantry, Confederate States Army.

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site

I was glad to have visited Bentonville (I only wish I had more time to explore), since it put together more pieces of American history for me. On a previous cross-country road trip, the Hubster and I visited Bennett Place where General Joseph Johnston surrendered his army to General William Sherman on April 26, 1865.

After the war, Joseph Johnston and William Sherman became friends. Johnson died of pneumonia in 1891, which was contracted at Sherman’s funeral for which he was a pallbearer.

See the world around you!

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Skeleton Hoop Stitchery 2

Remember this?

Patterns and Stitches Spooky Skeleton

I shared about this skeleton stitchery in this post.

I finally have the my second version finished…plenty of time for Halloween.

Next year.

Patterns and Stitches Spooky Skeleton

Have fun and carry on!

Cross Country Vacation Sept./Oct. 2025-Post 10

Albemarle and Chesapeake Canal

Great Bridge Battlefield Museum

The fam took the Hubster and I to see the Albemarle and Chesapeake Canal.

This man-made waterway connects Chesapeake Bay in Virginia and the Albemarle Sound in North Carolina.

The idea for the canal was proposed initially by William Byrd II in 1728. William Byrd II was an American planter, lawyer, surveyor and writer, politician and statesman, and considered the founder of Richmond, Virginia.

Albemarle and Chesapeake Canal

*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!

Albemarle and Chesapeake Canal

Albemarle and Chesapeake Canal

Albemarle and Chesapeake Canal

We enjoyed watching the bridge open up and let waterway traffic through.

Albemarle and Chesapeake Canal

Albemarle and Chesapeake Canal

Albemarle and Chesapeake Canal

Albemarle and Chesapeake Canal

Albemarle and Chesapeake Canal

The waterway project was authorized by Virginia fifteen years before the Dismal Swamp Canal, but work was not begun until after a series of delays.

The first delay, caused by the Revolutionary War, was the first land battle on Virginia soil at Great Bridge.

Albemarle and Chesapeake Canal

Great Bridge Battlefield

“The Great Bridge Battlefield & Waterways History Foundation protects, preserves, and promotes the history of the Battle of Great Bridge, December 9, 1775, and the region’s Revolutionary War and canal history to educate the public about the importance of these events in the creation and growth of America.”

Great Bridge Battlefield

“The primary approach to Norfolk was over Great Bridge, which spanned the Elizabeth River. The bridge was surrounded on both sides by the Great Dismal Swamp and was accessible only by narrow causeways on both the north and south sides. Both the Patriots and the British recognized the bridge’s importance.”

The battle lasted less than an hour.

It is estimated that at this battle, the British suffered 102 casualties and the Patriots suffered 1.

There is an overview of the Great Bridge Battle here.

Great Bridge Battlefield

Great Bridge Battlefield

“Colonel William Woodford, reporting on the 2nd Virginia Regiment’s service at the battle, wrote in a letter published in Purdie’s Virginia Gazette, December 15, 1775: “This was a second Bunker’s Hill affair, in miniature; with this difference, that we kept our post, and had only one man wounded in the hand.”

Great Bridge Battlefield

Great Bridge Battlefield

There is an admission cost to the museum, but it is worth the visit.

“Experience life in 18th century Virginia, learn about the water that defined the landscape, visit a Three Tun Tavern and find yourself in the middle of the Battle of Great Bridge! Visitors can explore eight galleries with interactive displays showcasing the battle and waterway history.”

Great Bridge Battlefield

Great Bridge Battlefield

Great Bridge Battlefield

Great Bridge Battlefield

Great Bridge Battlefield

Great Bridge Battlefield

I know I have a lousy photo of the flag. It was difficult not to get reflections from the glass.

The museum’s website has much better photos than I do.

Great Bridge Battlefield

They also have a very nice gift shop and the park has a historic interpretive pathway, an outdoor amphitheater, a recreation of the causeway from 1775, and a family picnic area.

See the world around you!

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