Tag Archives: Pennsylvania

Gettysburg National Military Park

Gettysburg National Military Park

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

Gettysburg National Military Park is over 5700 acres and contains 1328 monuments, memorials, markers, plaques to commemorate and memorialize the men and women who fought and died here on the Gettysburg Battlefield.

There is no way for me to cover all of it in a few blog posts. I highly recommend visiting if you are interested and if you can!

I took hundreds of photos and I have had a difficult time culling through them and choosing what to share. This post will be long as I share what I have chosen from my photos.

Gettysburg National Military Park

Jacob Hummelbaugh was a widower and a shoemaker. He owned the small Hummelbaugh Farm (constructed in the 1840s as a one story log house) located on the western side of Taneytown Road (now called Pleasonton Avenue).

On July 2, the men of the 148th Pennsylvania of the Union 2nd Corps arrived nearby. Union General Alfred Pleasonton used the farm house as a headquarters and Regimental Surgeon Alfred Hamilton set up a field hospital here.

The wounded Confederate General William Barksdale of Mississippi was treated here before he died on July 3rd and was buried in the yard. Captain Robert H. Forster of the 148th recalled that Barksdale was “mortally wounded, his breast torn and one leg shattered by grape shot.” Dr. Hamilton had given him morphine, and Robert Cassidy, a drummer in the 148th assisting with hospital duties, had spoon-fed the enemy officer sips of water.

The wounded filled not only the farm house, but the grounds and out buildings as well. There is an excellent YouTube video describing the field hospital and the medical practices during the civil war. It is 32 minutes long, but well worth the time to watch. Click here.

The Gettysburg Battlefield Memorial Association purchased the farm in 1887.

Gettysburg National Military Park

The Pennsylvania State Memorial, dedicated in 1910, is the largest monument on the Gettysburg Battlefield. Union artillery held the line alone here on Cemetery Ridge late in the day as Major General George Gordon Meade called for infantry from Culp’s Hill and other areas to strengthen and hold the center of the Union position.

Gettysburg National Military Park

There are ninety bronze, name-covered tablets embedded in the granite surface. Each plaque represents a Pennsylvanian regiment, and each name belongs to one of the 34,530 Pennsylvanian fighting men who served his family and his country in the Battle of Gettysburg. Those who were killed in the line of duty are marked with stars beside their names.

Eight portrait statues, two facing in each direction, depict the heroic leaders who took part in the battle. Seven are Pennsylvanians, including General George Meade, who commanded the Army of the Potomac, and Pennsylvania Governor Andrew Gregg Curtin, who delayed Lee’s troops in Virginia and put together a state militia. The eighth statue is of President Abraham Lincoln, whose Gettysburg Address is among the nation’s most famous speeches.

Crowning the monument is a 21 feet tall statue made with the bronze of melted-down cannons, known as The Goddess of Victory and Peace. This was modeled by sculptor Samuel Murray, who also did some bas-relief scenes and detail work on the monument.

Gettysburg National Military Park

Gettysburg National Military Park

At 1 p.m. Major General Robert Emmet Rodes‘ Confederates attacked from Oak Hill, threatening Union forces on McPherson and Oak ridges. Seventy-five years later, on July 3rd, 1938, over 1,800 Civil War veterans helped dedicate the Eternal Light Peace Memorial to “Peace Eternal in a Nation United.”

Gettysburg National Military Park

Gettysburg National Military Park

Gettysburg National Military Park


In the third year of the civil war, on July 1st, 1863, the Battle of Gettysburg began about 8 a.m. to the west beyond the McPherson Barn as United States cavalry confronted Confederate infantry advancing east along Chambersburg Pike. Fierce fighting spread north and south along this ridgeline as additional forces from both sides arrived.

Gettysburg National Military Park

Gettysburg National Military Park

The State of North Carolina Monument depicts a wounded officer pointing the way forward to the enemy while a veteran and younger comrade lead a color bearer in the charge. The statue was sculpted by Gutzon Borglum using photographs of Confederate veterans as models. Orren Randolph Smith of North Carolina, the model for the color bearer, claims that he was the designer of the Confederate national flag.

Gettysburg National Military Park

North Carolina provided 14,147 men to the Army of Northern Virginia at Gettysburg, the second largest state contingent after Virginia. It lost over 6,000 casualties, more than 40% of the men engaged. It is the largest number of casualties at Gettysburg from any Confederate state and represents over one fourth of all Confederate casualties in the battle.

Gettysburg National Military Park

Gettysburg National Military Park

The 11th Mississippi Monument features a bronze statue of Color Sergeant William O’Brien. The statue was created by sculptor William Norwood Beckwith. Sergeant O’Brien was the first of eight color bearers from the regiment who were killed or wounded during the charge.

July 3, 1863. The 11th Mississippi Infantry regiment, with its ranks growing thinner at every step, advanced with the colors to the stone wall near the Brian Barn.

The regiment was here ‘subjected to a most galling fire of musketry and artillery that so reduced the already thinned ranks that any further effort to carry the position was hopeless, and there was nothing left but to retire.’

– Report of Brig. Gen. Joseph R. Davis

Gettysburg National Military Park

The Louisiana Monument is entitled “Spirit Triumphant.” It was created by Donald De Lue. The sculpture represents a wounded gunner of New Orleans Washington Artillery clutching a Confederate battle flag to his heart. Above him the Spirit of the Confederacy sounds a trumpet and raises a flaming cannonball.

Gettysburg National Military Park

This memorial honors Louisiana’s sons who fought and died at Gettysburg July 1-2-3, 1863. It memorializes the 2300 infantrymen of Hays and Nicholl’s Louisiana Brigades, the cannoneers in the Washington Artillery of New Orleans, and those in the Louisiana Guard, Madison and Donaldsonville Artillery Batteries.

The Spirit of the Confederacy is also known as Saint Barbara, the patron saint of artillerymen. She holds a flaming cannon ball in her right hand. Saint Barbara lived in Asia Minor around 300 A.D. After she was converted to Christianity, her wealthy father had her condemned to death by beheading.

After returning from the execution, he was said to be struck by a lightning bolt which incinerated his body. Because of his fate, Barbara came to be known as the patron to be called upon to protect one in a storm. With the invention of gunpowder, and frequent accidental explosions because of its use, Saint Barbara also became known as the patron saint of artillery. Because of her muscular build, she is also known on the Gettysburg battlefield as “Barbara on Steroids.”

Gettysburg National Military Park

Gettysburg National Military Park

Gettysburg National Military Park

Gettysburg National Military Park

Gettysburg National Military Park

The Mississippi State Monument sculpture was created by Donald De Lue, who also worked on the nearby Louisiana Monument.

Gettysburg National Military Park

The color-bearer has fallen mortally wounded and his comrade steps over his body, using his clubbed musket to defend the fallen flag. It presents a very violent image of war, desperation and perseverance.

Gettysburg National Military Park

Inscription: On this ground brave sires fought for their righteous cause. In glory they sleep who gave to it their lives; To valor they gave new dimensions of courage; To duty, its noblest fulfillment to posterity, the sacred heritage of honor.

Gettysburg National Military Park

Gettysburg National Military Park

The Virginia Monument was the first Southern state monument placed on the Gettysburg Battlefield. Dedicated in 1917, it overlooks the large open field where Robert E. Lee watched the repulse of Pickett’s Charge on July 3, 1863.

Gettysburg National Military Park

The Virginia Monument stands 41 feet high, with the statue of Lee and his favorite horse, Traveler, standing 14 feet high. It is the largest of the Confederate monuments on the Gettysburg Battlefield, a tribute to the state that provided the largest contingent to the Army of Northern Virginia, its commander, and its name.

The statue was created by sculptor Frederick William Sievers from photographs and life masks of the General. Sievers went to Lexington, Virginia, to study Traveler’s skeleton, preserved at Washington and Lee University.

Gettysburg National Military Park


According to the marker at the base of the monument: The group represents various types who left civil occupations to join the Confederate Army. Left to right; a professional man, a mechanic, an artist, a boy, a business man, a farmer, a youth.

According to a description published at the time that the sculpture was completed, “the shattered cannon, broken wheel, discarded knapsack, swab and exploded shells which are scattered at the feet of the seven men would indicate that the place had been the scene of some desperate engagement, while the attitude of each of the character shows defensive, rather than offensive action.”

The design, inscription, and placement of this monument was highly controversial and hotly debated. The Contested Origins of Gettysburg’s Virginia Monument is a great read about the strong emotions of both the North and South several years after the war ended.

If you think the North and South have been united, think again.

Gettysburg Shriver House Museum

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Gettysburg National Cemetery

Gettysburg National Cemetery, originally known as Soldiers’ National Cemetery, is located in the Gettysburg National Military Park, Pennsylvania.

The cemetery was created for Union casualties from the Battle of Gettysburg in the American Civil War. The Battle of Gettysburg, which was fought between July 1 to 3, 1863, resulted in the largest number of casualties of any Civil War battle but also was considered the war’s turning point, leading ultimately to the Union victory.

This is the final resting place for more than 3,500 Union soldiers killed at Gettysburg.

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

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

Confederate burials did not receive placement in the national cemetery. Efforts in the 1870s by Confederate veterans’ societies eventually relocated 3,200 Confederate remains to cemeteries to the South.

Between 1898 and 1968, the government added sections to accommodate the graves of veterans from the Spanish-American War, World Wars I and II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War. Today, more than 6,000 veterans lay at rest in the Gettysburg National Cemetery.

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

President Abraham Lincoln delivered his Gettysburg Address at the cemetery’s dedication on November 19, 1863.

He spoke for two minutes.

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

The Gettysburg Address was Lincoln’s attempt to rededicate the nation to finishing the war (“to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us”), and to define its larger meaning, (“that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom….”).

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

The bronze bust of Lincoln, by sculptor Henry Bush-Brown, reveals the heavy toll the war and the nation’s suffering had upon him. Inscribed in bronze on the right is the Gettysburg Address. On the left is the letter Lincoln received inviting him to speak at Gettysburg.

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

No one knows, however, modern scholars place the site where President Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address to a crowd of some 15,000 people about 40 yards east of the soldier’s monument.

Located in the center of the cemetery, the Soldiers’ National Monument honors the fallen soldiers.

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

The figure of Liberty mourning her dead appears on the pedestal.

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

The figures of War (an American soldier who recounts the story of the battle to Clio); Clio, the Muse of History (records, with stylus and tablet, the achievements of the battle and the names of the honored dead); Plenty (woman with a sheaf of wheat and the fruits of the earth that typify peace and abundance as the soldier’s crowning triumph) and Peace (American mechanic and his tools) surmount the base.

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

Plaques are dotted throughout the cemetery and contain lines from the poem, “Bivouac of the Dead”, written by Theodore O’Hara, a poet and an officer for the United States Army in the Mexican–American War. He was also a Confederate colonel in the American Civil War.

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

The New York State Monument was dedicated on July 2, 1893.

During the American Civil War, over 475,000 soldiers in the Union Army were from the state of New York, more than any other state. New York constitutes the largest state group in the Gettysburg National Cemetery.

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

The statue at the top is of a woman, resembling one of the women found in the Coat of arms of New York, holding flowers for the dead in one hand and a staff in the other. She stands approximately 13 feet (4.0 m) tall and faces towards the New York section of the National Cemetery.

Gettysburg Soldiers' National Cemetery

Above the base, wrapped around the start of the column is a ring of bronze tablets that depict four scenes from the battle: the wounding of General Daniel Sickles, the wounding of General Winfield Scott Hancock, the death of General John F. Reynolds, and a war council convened by General Henry Warner Slocum.

If you like American Civil War history, you should definitely add the Soldiers’ National Cemetery to your bucket list of places to visit. There is so much more than I can share in a blog post!

Gettysburg Shriver House Museum

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Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

During the heavy fighting late in the afternoon of July 1, 1863, Seminary Ridge became the final defensive position of the Union’s First Army Corps west of Gettysburg. Twenty-one cannons and thousands of battle-weary men crowned the heights with the aim of repelling Confederate forces ascending the ridge.

Schmucker Hall (Old Dorm), now known as the Seminary Ridge Museum is a must see stop if you are going to visit Gettysburg National Military Park.

The Museum houses displays of many different aspects of the battle, the seminary, the town, and the civil war, and the struggle among faith groups over slavery, as well as offering tours of the cupola.

The Lutheran Theological Seminary opened with 11 students on September 5, 1826, at the 1810 Gettysburg Academy building.

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

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

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

Old Dorm was used during the Gettysburg Campaign as an observatory and the surrounding area was used by both the Union artillery (morning of July 1st, 1863) and Confederate artillery (captured in late afternoon). Over 600 wounded Union and Confederate soldiers were treated inside and on the grounds.

“On every side the passion, rage and frenzy of fearless men or reckless boys devoted to slaughter or doomed to death! The same sun that a day before had been shining to cure the wheat-sheaves of the harvest of peace, now glared to pierce the gray pall of battle’s powder smoke or to bloat the corpses of battle’s victims.”
—Augustus Buell, “The Cannoneer” (1890)

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

For shattered bones of arms and legs, amputation was the most successful treatment available. Piles of amputated limbs accumulated on the floor or outside the windows of rooms used for surgery. At the Seminary, ten-year-old Hugh Ziegler helped the medical staff by carrying away severed arms and legs.

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

“It was a ghastly sight to see some of the men lying in pools of blood on the bare floor. Night and days were alike in spent in trying to alleviate the suffering of the wounded and dying,” wrote Lydia Ziegler (a teenager living with her family on the first floor.

“Major, Tell my father I died with my face to the enemy.” – I E Avery (written in a note)

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

On July 1st, 1863, as the men of the 151st Pennsylvania Volunteers made a final stand on the west side of the Seminary, Lieutenant Colonel George F. McFarland was struck by bullets in both legs. Private Lyman Wilson dragged his commander through the north door of the Seminary as Confederates rushed through the south end.

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

His wife, Addie, arrived July 10th with their young children, and stayed until the end of August. From September 7th to the 16th, 1863, McFarland was the only patient remaining at the Seminary. He was confined to bed for another 7 months. He resumed teaching and converted his school to an orphanage for the children of soldiers.

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

In 1800, there were 114 slaves in Adams County, Pennsylvania: most owned by farmers. By 1830, the number dropped to 45, and by 1840, there were just 2.

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

On June 30, 1863, Brigadier General John Buford climbed to the cupola of the Lutheran Seminary Building, where he saw the campfires of thousands of Confederate soldiers burning to the west.

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

Predicting a clash was imminent, this view helped him lay out his lines of defense to protect Gettysburg’s pivotal road network.

The next morning, as the largest battle in the Western Hemisphere erupted, Buford again ascended to the Cupola to watch for vital Federal reinforcements.

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

There is much more to Seminary Ridge than the museum. The following is a small sample of what you see when you take a walk (or a drive):

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

Gettysburg Seminary Ridge

See the world around you!

Gettysburg Shriver House Museum

Gettysburg Shriver House Museum

The Hubster and I drove to Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Here we toured the Shriver House Museum.

Nancie W. Gudmestad, Founder and Director, and her husband, Del, purchased the Shriver house in 1996. During restoration of the house, they made many discoveries that now give us insights into the civilian life and how the Battle of Gettysburg impacted civilians. It wasn’t only outlying fields that experienced the ravages of battle, but the entire town of Gettysburg as well.

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

Gettysburg Shriver House Museum

In 1860, George W. Shriver built one of the finest homes in town just months before the Civil War. The house served as a residence for his family, Hettie (his wife), Sadie (7), and Mollie (5).

The house also served as a business for George, called ‘Shriver’s Saloon & Ten-Pin Alley’.

Gettysburg Shriver House Museum

There are hundreds of items to see in the house/museum, including live Civil War ammunition, medical supplies, and more.

Gettysburg Shriver House Museum

Gettysburg Shriver House Museum

Gettysburg Shriver House Museum

Gettysburg Shriver House Museum

Confederate sharpshooters occupied the Shrivers’ home during the Battle of Gettysburg. Tillie Pierce, the Shrivers’ neighbor, recalled her father’s account of what he saw in the Shrivers’ garret (attic) during the fighting:

The south wall of this house, had a number of port holes knocked into it, through which the Rebels were firing at our men. All at once one of these sharp-shooters threw up his arms, and fell back upon the garret floor . . . afterward they carried a dead soldier out the back way, and through the garden.

Almost 143 years later, the residue of blood was still evident. Investigator Det. Lt. Nick Paonessa, a Crime Scene Investigator from New York, used a blood reagent called BLUESTAR® FORENSIC, to reveal the presence of blood directly underneath the portholes knocked through the Shriver’s attic wall during the battle. According to their website, “. . . the oldest blood discovered by BLUESTAR® FORENSIC was that of two confederate soldiers that were killed at the Battle of Gettysburg.”

Gettysburg Shriver House Museum

Medical supplies found hidden in the house testify that the house was also used as a hospital.

There was utter devastation left behind by the invading armies.

Gettysburg Shriver House Museum

Our wonderful tour guide showing us the saloon in the cellar.

Gettysburg Shriver House Museum

Numerous bullet holes scar the bricks. They can be seen when one walks in the alley.

Gettysburg Shriver House Museum

When battles and war happen, no one is left untouched in some way.

Gettysburg Shriver House Museum

George W. Shriver mustered into Company C, of Maryland’s Cole’s Cavalry in September, 1861, just months after the Civil War broke out. On New Year’s Day, 1864, George was one of 12 men captured in a skirmish with Mosby’s Raiders near Rectortown, Virginia. About that same time a stockade was being constructed in Andersonville, Georgia, to house Union prisoners of war.

George’s fate would be forever sealed in that small southern town.

*We did not have time to visit Jennie Wade’s House, but if you would like to learn more about the effect of the Battle of Gettysburg on civilians, then I suggest watching this excellent YouTube video – Jennie Wade: Gettysburg’s Lone Civilian Casualty

Jennie Wade was just 20 years old when a bullet struck her in the back while she was making bread for Union soldiers.

See the world around you!