Bomb squad safely detonates Civil War cannonball found in Maryland

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By Alaa Elassar, CNN
Click here for original story
Sun March 28, 2021

(CNN)Bomb squad technicians have safely disposed of a Civil War-era ordnance found in Frederick County, Maryland.

The technicians identified the unexploded ordnance as a live cannonball round used during the Civil War and determined its fusing mechanism was still intact, the state's Office of the State Fire Marshal (OSFM) said in a statement on Tuesday.

A resident of Glen Hill Court in Jefferson contacted the state fire marshal after receiving the cannonball from a family member who had found it while metal detecting near Monocacy National Battlefield, Senior Deputy State Fire Marshal Oliver Alkire told CNN. The cannonball sat in the resident's home for several months before it was reported.

The technicians removed and transported the cannonball on Monday to Beaver Creek Quarry in Hagerstown, where it was safely detonated, Alkire said.

The cannonball was powerful enough to have caused significant damage.

"It could have easily killed someone or multiple people if mishandled," Alkire said.

Maryland was the site of some of the Civil War's fiercest battles.

Union and Confederate armies clashed in the summer of 1864 at Monocacy, according to the National Park Service (NPS). Union soldiers fought to prevent a Confederate takeover of Washington, DC.

The Confederates ultimately won the battle, but Union solders were able to delay them long enough for reinforcements to reach Washington and safeguard the capital. An estimated 2,200 men were killed, wounded, captured or listed as missing during the Battle of Monocacy, according to NPS.

"The finding of military ordnance from the Civil War is not uncommon in Maryland, and these devices pose the same threat as the day they were initially manufactured," OSFM said in its statement on Facebook.

Alkire encouraged Maryland residents who find ordnance to "follow the three Rs -- recognize the device, retreat to safety and report it to 911."

Gettysburg NMP Plans Prescribed Fires at Little Round Top and Munshower Field

2017 Prescribed Fire

2017 Prescribed Fire

Gettysburg National Military Park plans prescribed fires at Little Round Top and Munshower field in early to mid-April 2021 

Contact: Jason Martz, Jason_Martz@nps.gov, 717-338-4423  

GETTYSBURG, Pa. – Gettysburg National Military Park is preparing to conduct a prescribed fire in early to mid-April, weather permitting. The park plans to burn portions of the west slope of Little Round Top (52 acres) and the Munshower field (36 acres) immediately north of Little Round Top. Prescribed fire activity will be completed no later than April 30. 

Park’s overall objectives are to maintain the conditions of the battlefield as experienced by the soldiers who fought here; perpetuate the open space character of the landscape; maintain wildlife habitat; control exotic invasive species; reduce shrub and woody species components; and reduce fuels in wooded areas to reduce fire hazard. The park contains over 1,000 acres of open grassland and prescribed fire is a successful tool in managing invasive plants and promoting native species, especially when used in conjunction with other treatments. Several national parks in Pennsylvania and Civil War battlefields regularly utilize prescribed fire, including Valley Forge National Historical Park, Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area, Monocacy National Battlefield, Antietam National Battlefield, and Manassas National Battlefield Park. 

Field and weather conditions will ultimately determine the exact dates and duration of the operation, as we only conduct prescribed fires under specific parameters to ensure public safety. Vehicle traffic in the area may experience delays due to smoke, but fire operations will be scheduled to minimize impacts. Some visitor facilities, trails, and public roads will be temporarily closed during the prescribed fire. 

Temporary Road Closures 

To ensure the safety of all firefighters and park visitors, multiple roads will be closed to all traffic for the day(s) of the prescribed fires and possibly for multiple days after the fires. These will include: 

·       South Confederate Avenue. 

·       Sykes Avenue. 

·       Warren Avenue. 

·       Crawford Avenue. 

·       Wright Avenue. 

·       Sedgwick Avenue. 

·       Wheatfield Road will be closed to all vehicles from the Peach Orchard at Sickles Avenue to Taneytown Road.  

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·       Additional roads and trails may need to close temporarily if smoke conditions reduce visibility to ensure firefighter and public safety.  

·       See attached map for more details.  

 

Temporary Hiking and Horse Trail Closures 

·       All hiking and horse trails to the east of Sykes and Sedgwick Avenues will be closed for visitor and animal safety.  

·       The horse trail that runs south of United States Avenue from the Trostle farm to the intersection of United States Avenue and Sedgwick Avenue will also be closed. 

·       See attached map for more details.  

 

News Media Parking 

·       For interviews and coverage of the Little Round Top prescribed fire, the designated area will be on Ayres Avenue. Please park along Ayers Avenue only.  

·       See attached map for more details. 

 

Learn More 

Learn more about our long-range fire management plan and view photo albums and videos of past prescribed fires on our Prescribed Fire web page at https://go.nps.gov/PrescribedFires

National Park Service expands protected historic battlefields in Pennsylvania by 73 acres

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National Park Service expands protected historic battlefields in Pennsylvania by 73 acres

By Marcus Schneck | mschneck@pennlive.com

The National Park Service has announced $2,188,052.50 in grants from the American Battlefield Protection Program to protect 225.33 acres at three Civil War and Revolutionary War battlefields.

The grants will be used to acquire portions of Brandywine and Gettysburg battlefields in Pennsylvania and Shepherdstown Battlefield in West Virginia.

The Battlefield Land Acquisition Grant program, administered by the American Battlefield Protection Program, provides up to 50 percent in matching funds to state and local governments to acquire and preserve threatened Revolutionary War, War of 1812, and Civil War battlefield lands through fee-simple and permanent, protective interest acquisitions at eligible properties.

Eligible battlefields are listed in the Civil War Sites Advisory Commission’s 1993 “Report on the Nation’s Civil War Battlefields” and American Battlefield Protection Program’s 2007 “Report to Congress on the Historic Preservation of Revolutionary War and War of 1812 Sites in the United States.”

In Chadds Ford Township, $1,883,725 will be awarded to add 72.23 acres to the Brandywine Battlefield.

Here’s the history:

Late in the afternoon of Sept. 11, 1777, the American Army under General George Washington was desperately trying to form an effective rear-guard against the British Army along the Brandywine River in southeastern Pennsylvania. After enduring over 3 hours of constant attack, most of the American Army was in full retreat as British Grenadiers and troops of the British 4th Brigade attempted to cut off their escape. A counterattack of American cavalry, led by Count Casimir Pulaski, and the stubborn resistance of troops under Major General Nathaniel Greene slowed the British advance until nightfall, allowing Washington’s Army to withdraw and fight another day while the British Army marched toward Philadelphia and, two weeks later, captured the U.S. capital.

Grant funds will be used to acquire and preserve a significant portion of the battlefield where the 4th British Brigade began its attack against Greene.

At the Gettysburg Battlefield in Adams County, the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission will use $79,297.50 to buy 1.1 acres.

Here’s the history:

At twilight on July 2, 1863, James McKnight’s Gettysburg farmhouse was lit up by the intense artillery fire of Captain Greenlief Stevens’ 5th Maine Battery of the Union Army. Firing in support of Brig. General Adelbert Ames’ division on nearby Cemetery Hill, Stevens’ guns helped to slow a Confederate attack and allow time for Union reinforcements to arrive. Facing superior numbers, the Confederates were forced to withdraw from the sloping fields of the McKnight Farm.

Grant Funds will be used to protect the McKnight farmhouse and surrounding lands traversed by Union forces in defense of Cemetery Hill during the Battle of Gettysburg.

In West Virginia, the Jefferson County Farmland Protection Board will use $225,030 to preserve 152 acres of the Shepherdstown Battlefield.

Here’s the history:

Three days after the battle of Antietam, regular troops under the command of Major Charles Lovell crossed a shallow ford in the Potomac River to determine the whereabouts of the Confederate Army under General Robert E. Lee. The night before, lead elements of this Union force made contact with the Confederate artillery and captured 4 guns before being recalled back across the river. Returning to the ground they had gained only a few hours before on the morning of Sept. 20, 1862, the Union troops were attacked by a larger force of Confederates and forced to withdraw.

Grant funds will be used to increase acreage under preservation easement and maintain open-space and agricultural uses.

 

Gettysburg NMP Winter Lecture Series - ONLINE!

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2021 Winter Lecture Series


Full details about our 2021 Winter Lecture Series can be found here.

We will make these programs available here as soon as they are ready.

  • 2021 Winter Lecture Series - Iron Hooks and Steel Constitutions

    Education Specialist Barbara Sanders presents "Iron Hooks and Steel Constitutions," examining one of the most poignant artifacts in the collection of Gettysburg National Military Park. Used to remove bodies from their temporary battlefield graves, a set of iron hooks currently on display reminds us of the grisly aftermath of Civil War combat. Join Barb as she presents from the galleries in the Gettysburg Museum of the American Civil War.

    DURATION:20 minutes, 52 seconds

  • 2021 Winter Lecture Series - Daniel Reigle's Colt revolver

    Carried home as a souvenir of war, a Colt revolver belonging to Adams County soldier Daniel Reigle is prominently displayed within the National Park Service Museum and Visitor Center. Who was this local soldier and what is the story behind the most famous sidearm of the conflict? Ranger Bert Barnett will explore this and more from the galleries of the Gettysburg Museum of the American Civil War.

    DURATION:14 minutes, 55 seconds

  • 2021 Winter Lecture Series - Emmor Cope Map

    In 1904 Gettysburg National Park Commission engineer Emmor B. Cope created a massive relief map depicting the Gettysburg Battlefield. Displayed at the St. Louis Exposition, all who saw it were "filled with admiration." Join Ranger Troy Harman as he chronicles this extraordinary artifact and the Gettysburg veteran who created it.

    DURATION:24 minutes, 15 seconds

  • 2021 Winter Lecture Series - Medical Kit

    Few artifacts in the collection of the Gettysburg Museum of the American Civil War garner more shocked fascination than the medical instruments on display. From bone saws to tenaculums and scalpels, they painted a chilling picture of the aftermath of Civil War combat. Join Ranger Tom Holbrook as he examines these instruments, and the men and women that used them.

    DURATION:35 minutes, 24 seconds

  • 2021 Winter Lecture Series - John Brown: Patriot or Seditionist

    More than a century and a half after his execution, John Brown remains a polarizing figure. Was he a murder and traitor, or a heroic aboloitionist and martyr? Join Ranger Matt Atkinson as he explores the legacy of John Brown, and highlights some of the priceless artifacts connected with this story.

    DURATION:21 minutes, 25 seconds

  • 2021 Winter Lecture Series - Tavern Chairs

    Did Union General John F. Reynolds spend the last night of his life stretched out across four chairs at a tavern south of Gettysburg? Join Historian Christopher Gwinn in the Gettysburg Museum of the American Civil War and separate fact from fiction.

    DURATION:15 minutes, 6 seconds

  • 2021 Winter Lecture Series - Lt. Bayard Wilkeson's Sash and Kepi

    Among the treasured objects in the Gettysburg Museum of the American Civil War are a kepi and sash belonging to a young Union artilleryman, Bayard Wilkeson. Join Ranger John Hoptak as he explores the tragic story of Lt. Wilkeson and his father, newspaper correspondent Samuel Wilkeson.

    DURATION:35 minutes, 49 seconds

The Black Influence in Gettysburg - The Series Begins

Gettysburg Connection is pleased to publish today the first in a series of articles called The Black Influence. The series focuses on the African American experience in and around Gettysburg, traveling back to the 1780s and expanding to the present time, each article providing descriptions of local African American people and events that shaped Gettysburg and Adams County. 

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This week’s article is by Gettysburg Connection contributor Jenine Weaver.

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In 1780, Pennsylvania lawmakers passed “An Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery.” The Act stated people born into slavery in 1780 and after, would be freed when they turned 28 years old. However, people born into slavery before 1780 were still enslaved for life. For the time, this was a progressive step, but don’t let this cloud the view of the Black reality. Local people still owned slaves, those that were free lived restricted, segregated lives, and very few slave owners were willing to give them up, even when they turned 28. Slavery did not end in Adams County until the 1840s.

Known as the first African American resident of Gettysburg, Sydney O’Brien was freed from slavery in 1833. She purchased a home on South Washington Street. She was born the slave of Isabelle & James Gettys Sr., the founder of the Borough of Gettysburg. Sydney is recorded as being “mulatto”, but her parentage is not traceable. It’s rumored she could be the child of James Gettys Sr. and his wife’s slave “Old Doll”. It is also rumored that her daughter, Getty Ann, could have been the child of James Gettys Jr. With limited records, the truth is not known. *Important note: do not romanticize a relationship between slave owners and their slaves. Most mixed race children born to female slaves were the result of rape and abuse of power by the slave owner.*

Although it is recorded that African American children in Gettysburg attended schools as early as 1824, the Pennsylvania Free School Act required schools for African Americans. The 5th school in Gettysburg was designated as the Colored school, on the corner of… Read article in The Gettysburg Connection

Op-Ed from National Parks Traveler ~ Confederate Memorials Serve A Role In National Parks

Op-Ed from National Parks Traveler - click here for link

NPT Editor's note: The following op-ed is from Harry Butowsky, who spent more than three decades working for the National Park Service as a historian. He's worked for a handful of directors and seen much change in the agency. Understandably, he has an interesting perspective on the current state of history in the National Park Service. 

Monument to Confederate Gen. Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson at Manassas National Battlefield Park/Kurt Repanshek

Monument to Confederate Gen. Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson at Manassas National Battlefield Park/Kurt Repanshek

The question of what to do with the many Confederate Memorials has come to the attention of the public recently. These memorials were originally established in National Military Parks. The War Department  designated four Civil War battlefields —Shiloh, Vicksburg, Gettysburg and Chickamauga and Chattanooga—as National Military Parks after 1890. These battles were considered by the War Department to be of exceptional political and military importance and interest, that had far-reaching effects, that were worthy of preservation for detailed military study, and that were suitable to serve as memorials to the armies engaged. They were marked and improved to indicate the lines of battle between the two armies. They were heavily monumented and served as lasting memorials to the men who fought there. They were designed for the student of military history and the historian who came to the park to study the battle. These parks have a strong educational value

If you knew nothing about the Battle of Gettysburg and visited the park, you would be exposed to the true history and meaning of one of the most pivotal battles of the Civil War. The value of these parks derives not from the size or the number of statues present, but from the interpretation we place of the history of the event that is marked.

The history of the Civil War is perhaps the most dramatic and significant event in the history of the United States as an independent nation. It was the climax of a half-century of social, political, and economic rivalries growing out of an economy half-slave, half-free. In the race for territorial expansion in the West, in the evolution of the theories of centralized government, and in the conception of the rights of the individual, these rivalries became so intense as to find a solution only in the grim realities of civil strife.

It was on the great battlefields of this war, stretching from the Mexican border to Pennsylvania, that these differences were resolved in a new concept of national unity and an extension of freedom. In the scope of its operations, in the magnitude of its cost in human life and financial resources, the war had few, if any, parallels in the past. Its imprint upon the future was deep and lasting, its heroic sacrifice an inspiring tribute to the courage and valor of the American people.

The national attention of the issue of Confederate monuments is giving Americans the opportunity to debate the intricacies of history and historic preservation and decide what course to support for the future. Through telling the stories of the Civil War battles and individual preservation struggles at our parks, we examine the complexity of the idea of historic preservation as it has been practiced during the 150 years since the end of the war.

These parks with their associated monuments, literature, films, and interpretive tours tell the story about previous generations of Americans and how they looked at their history and decided what to preserve and why the preservation of Civil War battlefields are important. The National Park Service is perfectly capable of interpreting the history of Gettysburg and the creation of the park without offending any visitors.

Just because Robert E. Lee was a slave owner does nothing to diminish his pivotal role in the war, and especially the battle of Gettysburg. If the statue to Lee is large and imposing, this tells us about how he was viewed by the generations of Americans who erected it. 

Park preservation is defined by its sometimes conflicting roles of protecting a resource and using the resource to educate the public about its significance. Park preservation and interpretation work because they require vigilance and commitment on the part of all Americans.

Yes, we can say that the previous generations of Americans were racist, xenophobic, and intolerant. But are we any better today? Have we created a perfect non-racial society, or is the march to equality and true history ended.

The removal of existing statues in our Civil War parks will not change our history, but make it more difficult to confront and examine our history. National parks are the great American classroom where American history is taught. As a nation, we need to remember our history with all of its warts, blemishes, and great achievements. The answer is not to take down statues, but to improve our interpretation and understanding of history. This is the great role for our national parks and one that is increasing in danger of being lost in what passes for education today in our schools and universities.

The national parks are for the American people—all the American people. They form the common bond of our shared heritage and should not be diminished to achieve political correctness. Our parks need to be preserved intact. The existing monuments and memorials need to be preserved.

To remove the Confederate statues would diminish the educational value and historic significance of the parks. Keep all the existing monuments intact. They have educational value. Improve the interpretation as needed to include information about slavery and secession, but keep the parks and monuments intact.

Relocating a Confederate Statue - One Town's Plan

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Posted on February 27, 2021 by Emerging Civil War
https://emergingcivilwar.com/

The following original press release was dated February 6, 2021, from Dalton, Georgia. It offers details about a solution found for moving and preserving a Civil War statue in a way agreeable to many in that local community.

On July 8, 2020, following 30 days of several marches and demonstrations, a town hall meeting in which a number of persons spoke to the Council of Dalton about the removal of the Joseph E. Johnston Statue from public property, a Facebook petition to move to statue and another Facebook petition to not move the statue, the City of Dalton notified the local Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy (hereinafter “UDC”) that the UDC needed to make arrangements to move the statue as any permissive easement to allow its continued placement on the public right of way of the intersection of Crawford and Hamilton Streets were no longer permitted.  The City of Dalton gave the UDC a reasonable time period within which to arrange to move the statue. Continue reading →

Gettysburg NMP preservation and rehabilitation continues through pandemic

The ruins of the Rose Barn were recently rehabilitated.

The ruins of the Rose Barn were recently rehabilitated.

Gettysburg National Military Park and Eisenhower National Historic Site began 2020 with high expectations. New permanent leadership had arrived, park staff were optimistic, and a host of dormant projects were given renewed energy and attention. Anticipating record visitation levels, we were eagerly working with our partners on a slate of new programming and park experiences for students, educators, and travelers. However, as we all know too well, we quickly found ourselves navigating the challenges presented by a global pandemic.

Despite the unprecedented nature of 2020, the National Park Service achieved many successes. At Gettysburg NMP, historic park structures received much-needed preservation and rehabilitation work. These include the Pennsylvania Memorial, the ruins of the Rose Barn, and perhaps most notably, the complete rehabilitation of the James Warfield house, home to a member of Gettysburg’s African American community. To better tell the story of the battle and battlefield, over 90 new interpretive waysides were created and are now beginning to be installed throughout the park. With updated text, new graphics and improved accessibility, these interpretive waysides will help a new generation of park visitors explore the history of the battle and introduce them to new stories, individuals, and locations on the field. At Eisenhower NHS, a temporary parking lot was opened, enabling visitors to explore the site while ensuring social distancing.

Because of COVID, in-person park programming was cancelled, and longstanding and popular park events had to be reimagined. Almost immediately the teams at Eisenhower and Gettysburg switched to an all virtual model. Thousands of students learning from home connected with Park Educators via Facebook, Zoom, and Skype. World War II weekend and the Battle Anniversary events found new audiences online. By working with valued partners and volunteers we were able to expand the traditional boundaries of both parks. In one of the ironies of 2020, park staff reached more visitors virtually than would have ever attended these events in-person.

If the month of January is any indication, the new year appears to be one of promise and progress. Already the parks have released an immersive 3D experience, offering virtual visitors unprecedented access to some of the iconic structures in the park, including the David Wills House and the Eisenhower Home. Virtual ranger programming is scheduled to continue with robust social media content, the popular Winter Lecture series, and education programming. We are eager to build on our successes of last year with continued work alongside Adams County Historical Society, Civil War Trails, the Gettysburg Black History Museum, the Civil War Institute at Gettysburg College, the Eisenhower Society, the American Battlefield Trust and the Gettysburg Foundation.

Across the Gettysburg battlefield and Eisenhower farm, work is underway that will transform and improve the visitor experience, while also ensuring these singular places remain preserved for future generations. On Culp’s Hill 18 acres of battlefield will be rehabilitated to its 1863 appearance. New trails, an improved cultural and natural landscape, and enhanced interpretation will give new relevancy to one of the most historically significant areas on the battlefield. At the Eisenhower home, a new air conditioning system will be installed to help protect the priceless artifacts on display. Soon a rehabilitated Reception Center, with new exhibitory, will welcome visitors to the farm of Mamie and Dwight. The long-awaited rehabilitation of Little Round Top is planned to begin in the late fall requiring the hill to be closed for 12-18 months. With nearly a million visitors exploring the hill each year, the fragile historic landscape of Little Round Top is being loved to death. This project will provide improved parking and an enhanced trail system. Gathering areas will allow visitors to safely explore the hill, while at the same time safeguarding the defensive works, monuments & memorials, and boulders that make a visit to Little Round Top an unforgettable experience.

In the Museum and Visitor Center, Gettysburg NMP and the Gettysburg Foundation are working collaboratively on a new exhibit slated to open in the Fall of 2021. Titled “Treasures of the Battlefield,” this exhibit will feature select artifacts from the collection of the Gettysburg Museum of the American Civil War that are seldom seen by the public, and offer a lens into the experiences of Civil War soldiers in camp and on campaign.

The themes that are at the heart of our two parks are uniquely American, and as 2020 demonstrated, perennially relevant. President Lincoln understood that we can’t simply rest on our nation’s Founding Principles in times of uncertainty but that we each have a responsibility to act, to do our part and to continue the unfinished work. Like that of the nation, the work of the National Park Service remains unfinished. We are grateful to the community and our partners for their support in helping us in the unending work of preserving and protecting these American treasures.

Jason Martz is the acting visual information specialist and public affairs officer for Gettysburg National Military Park.

The Future of Confederate Monuments

The Future Of Confederate Monuments

As the nation reckons with its racist history, legislation calling for the removal of Confederate commemorative works from national parkland is likely to be reconsidered this year. 

By Kim O'Connell
National Parks Traveler

R E Lee Statue at Gettysburg NMP

R E Lee Statue at Gettysburg NMP

If you knew nothing about the U.S. Civil War and traveled to Gettysburg National Military Park, you might be forgiven for believing the South won, based on a reading of the monuments alone.

The statue of Southern commander Robert E. Lee on horseback, which also serves as the monument to the fighting sons of his home state of Virginia, stands at 41 feet tall, including both statue and pedestal. It’s more than double the height of the similar equestrian statue of Union Gen. George Gordon Meade that sits across the field, despite the fact that Meade was the victor at Gettysburg, helping to turn the tide of the war.

Lee’s prominence at Gettysburg, along with the estimated 1,700 Confederate commemorative works that still stand across the United States, is now under scrutiny. In recent years, the nation’s racist history has been debated and confronted in a variety of ways, with Confederate names and symbols being removed from public squares, schools, and flagpoles across the South and elsewhere. And yet, the Confederate battle flag is still hoisted aloft and visible in places like the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, and at the U.S. Capitol insurrection last month, not to mention on countless car bumpers, t-shirts, and gift shop tables.

Last summer, Democratic lawmakers in the fiscal 2021 spending package included language that would have required the National Park Service to remove Confederate monuments from all National Park System sites within six months. Although that language didn’t make it into the final bill, it’s likely to be reintroduced this year.

The proposal is raising a debate not only between those who support Confederate symbols and those who say they prop up a legacy of hate, but between those who say the Park Service needs more time to inventory and consider these works and those who say the Confederacy has been given time enough. 

At issue, too, is the crusty legacy of the “Lost Cause,” the mythologizing of the Southern warriors that recast them as fighting not to support slavery but to maintain states’ rights (overlooking, of course, that those "rights" included enslaving other human beings). Most of the Confederate monuments erected on national parklands were placed there in the early 20th century, well after the war, during the height of Jim Crow segregation. They are not interpretive historical markers, opponents say, but symbols of white supremacy and oppression. 

The National Park Service was a willing participant in this effort, allowing groups like the United Daughters of the Confederacy to sponsor monuments on its battlefields that helped to elevate and equalize the losing side. Hence, the existence of the Lee monument at Gettysburg, erected in 1917, and the Robert E. Lee Memorial, as his former home in Arlington, Virginia, is designated — despite the fact that Lee was an often-brutal slaveowner who took up arms against his own government.

“This is not about erasing history or denying anyone’s heritage,” said U.S. Rep. Betty McCollum, Democrat from Minnesota and a key advocate of the removal legislation, during a Congressional subcommittee debate last July. “This is about whether we’re willing to do the hard work needed to confront the truth of our history and to work to right past wrongs. In order to do that, it means ending the use of Confederate symbols which continue to be used today to intimidate and terrorize millions of our American citizens.”

McCollum isn’t sure yet what form the removal requirement might take, but she plans to support it, and she thinks the NPS is well positioned to move quickly. “As to whether or not I’ll do formal legislation, I’ll still be making sure I continue to work on removing these symbols of discrimination and oppression on public lands,” McCollum said in an interview with the Traveler. “People at the Park Service are smart enough and well-trained enough that they probably have a good idea what they have [in terms of Confederate monuments]. The people who work on our public lands -- they are professionals. I’m sure many have been thinking about it already.”

Other park advocates argue, however, that the Park Service needs far more time to consider the monuments and their specific roles in their particular landscapes, noting that some monuments might be historically significant in their own right, perhaps because of the artist who sculpted or designed them or some other reason. The ground disturbance from monument removal could also trigger federally required archaeological assessments or other studies to discern impacts on the historic landscape.

“This is not an issue to be resolved by an act of Congress,” says former NPS Director Jon Jarvis, now the chair of the board for UC-Berkeley’s Institute for Parks, People, and Biodiversity. “There are literally thousands of monuments to the soldiers of the North and the South on the various Civil War battlefields maintained by the NPS. Many are important because they mark a particular battle, a skirmish, victory or loss, on the actual ground where people died. These monuments are used by the NPS staff in their interpretation of the events and are often important for context. That is very different from a bronze guy on a horse in the middle of a traffic circle placed there to intimidate.”

Jarvis encourages President Biden to request that Congress commission a study, led by prominent and diverse historians, to evaluate the monuments against a set of agreed-upon standards to help determine which ones get removed or put in some other context, such as a museum or warehouse.

“A better symbolic measure by Congress would be to direct the Park Service to complete an analysis of its monuments and report back in two years and then they would get to work on it,” Jarvis says. “What is needed to respond to those who were disenfranchised during the Civil War and during Reconstruction is a reinterpretation of the Civil War, and we stated that during the sesquicentennial. Rather than focus on taking down this or that monument…provide the platform for the telling of a broader story and to not respond to a quick fix.”

Although the National Parks Conservation Association hasn’t released an official policy on this yet, the organization generally supports giving NPS the time and resources to assess its Confederate works. “We want the Park Service to have the opportunity to inventory their commemorative works,” says NPCA’s Mid-Atlantic Senior Regional Director Joy Oakes. “We want the professionals to have a thoughtful and informed process.”

NPCA Advisory Board member Edwin Fountain, a historic preservation expert, adds that some monuments, such as the Lee statue at Gettysburg, are more than 100 years old and are therefore considered “contributing features” on the historic landscape, to use preservation parlance. “So on what grounds do you just start saying, ‘Oh, we're going to start removing contributing features from national parks.’ I'm not saying that ends all debate, but it's got to be part of the debate.”

Others believe, however, that these symbols are keeping a significant segment of people away from these parks. It's worth noting that only an estimated 7 percent of national park visitors are Black.

“The Park Service needs to ask, ‘Who’s coming to your site and who’s not coming to your site?’” says Denise Meringolo, a professor of public history at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, and author of Museums, Monuments, and National Parks: Toward a New Genealogy of Public History. “Those monuments are a barrier to significant portions of the audience, for whom they are not simply inaccurate or annoying. They are traumatizing.”

Meringolo says that people should reconsider the prevalent assumption that monuments are permanent. “If a goal of a monument is to represent some kind of civic culture that we believe is worth discussing, and if we want to put up these things to represent common values, when someone says, ‘This doesn’t represent the values we hold dear,’ maybe it’s time to take them down. They’re not doing the work that we think they are doing. A monument is always an assertion of power and authority. It’s staking a claim.”  

Historian and educator Kevin Levin, author of Searching for Black Confederates: The Civil War’s Most Persistent Myth, says it’s worth listening to those whose voices have long been silenced and to use this moment as an opportunity for more context and interpretation.

“Many of these monuments went up at a time when African Americans were simply disfranchised,” Levin says. “They were, for legal reasons, for political reasons, just unable to voice their own view about how the war should be commemorated in public spaces. And so I think for that reason alone, this has to be taken seriously. But at the same time, I draw a distinction between Park Service sites like Gettysburg and, say, Richmond's Monument Avenue.”

Whether all or just some of the monuments stay or go, Levin believes there is enough NPS battlefield land to provide additional context about the Confederate monuments so that visitors can get a more complete picture of how and why they got there, and what their existence says about who we are. 

“I do think there's an opportunity at places like Gettysburg, acknowledging that the Confederate monuments are problematic to many people,” Levin continues. “The Park Service has a responsibility to face that."

 

'The Black Civil War Soldier' by Philadelphia's Deborah Willis honors freedom fighters

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Photos in ‘The Black Civil War Soldier’ by Deborah Willis remember a quest for freedom

The eminent scholar, who grew up in North Philadelphia, says Black soldiers’ Civil War photos were sending a message: “That there was and will be a Black future.”

by Cassie Owens
Philadelphia Inquirer
Published Feb 23, 2021

At a time when some monuments are falling, Deborah Willis is considering the statues that still haven’t been built.

The venerable artist, curator, and researcher of photographic history says her archival work for her new book, The Black Civil War Soldier: A Visual History of Conflict and Citizenship, has made her see monuments differently than some folks.

Alexander Herritage Newton (left) as a quartermaster sergeant with the 29th Connecticut Infantry, circa 1865. Standing next to him is Daniel S. Lathrop (1846-1924), who served at the same rank in the regiment.James Horace Wells and David C. Collins …

Alexander Herritage Newton (left) as a quartermaster sergeant with the 29th Connecticut Infantry, circa 1865. Standing next to him is Daniel S. Lathrop (1846-1924), who served at the same rank in the regiment.James Horace Wells and David C. Collins / Courtesy Yale University

“People were angry with me, thinking that ‘Oh, [monuments] should be torn down.’ I’m saying ‘No, we need more,’” Willis says. A monument to Alexander Herritage Newton, to name one.

A photograph of Newton is one of many slices of history Willis revives in the book. He was in his early 20s when the Civil War broke out, and at that point, it was illegal for Black men to enlist in the Union army. Newton found Brooklyn’s 13th Regiment and joined it regardless, later continuing his service with the 29th Connecticut Infantry.

A son of the South who’d been born free to a free mother and an enslaved father, Newton wrote letters to Black newspapers and eventually his own autobiography. “The way that he describes his experiences were just poetic and meaningful,” Willis says.

He later settled in Philadelphia and Camden and was a noteworthy abolitionist. He’s one of the many hidden figures with local ties in the book, something that gives Willis, who grew up in North Philadelphia, a lot of pride, she says. “We need to give this man a monument.”

Willis, department chair for photography and imaging at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts, had noticed a dearth of images of Black servicemen from the era. For The Black Civil War Soldier, she pulled together photographs, letters, and diary entries to shed light on not only what Black servicemen were experiencing, but also what Black teachers, Black doctors, Black children, and other members of the community were. .

“The letters humanize the experience of war and personalize it in a way that guided me to focus on families. The experience of mothers writing a letter to Abraham Lincoln to say, you know, ‘I’m worried about my son, please…. CLICK HERE FOR THE LINK TO THE INQUIRER ARTICLE