Showing posts with label Gettysburg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gettysburg. Show all posts

11/21/2012

November 9, 2012 – Washington DC At Night

We left our little spot at Gettysburg this morning and headed south into:

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Past some beautiful farms:

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Not good news for this barn:

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And the wind was still blowing – check out the flag:

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Beltway traffic – yikees:

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We made it safe and sound to our spot at Cherry Hill RV Park in College Park, MD where we will be for a few days:

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After setting up, we took a little drive to check out our immediate area and then got ready for our tour of Washington, DC at night.  The nice thing about being in this park is that the bus for the tour picks us up right here – :-)).  So we did not have to drive.

Our DC at night tour took us past the US Capitol, The White House, Iwo Jima Memorial and a few other places.  It was very difficult to get pictures thru the bus window – Sorry.  However, we did make a few stops:

The Jefferson Memorial with a great view of the Washington Monument:

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The Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial which consisted of 4 open rooms.  This sculpture was in Room 2 – it was done by George Segal to depict a 1939 breadline and the hunger that many Americans felt in the Depression years.

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The Martin Luther King Memorial:

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Our last stop was the Lincoln Memorial, The Korean War Memorial, and the Vietnam Veterans Memorial – no night pictures but I will have more tomorrow.

Lincoln Memorial – I have been to the Lincoln Memorial many times in my life and still love to see it.  In school, I was not much of a history buff but Lincoln just fascinated me.  And now just coming from Gettysburg – what a treat to see this memorial again.  (Yes, we are going to see the new movie when we can.)

Korean War Memorial – OH MY!  This is my first time for seeing this – Breathtaking!

Vietnam Veterans Memorial – This is my third time here and still makes me cry.  They have started the reading of all the names on the wall (more about that later).

This part of the tour was very emotional for us!

Until tomorrow…..

Stats:

Miles Traveled: 79 Miles

Routes Traveled:

Pennsylvania: SR-134; US15

Maryland: US15; I-270; I-495; US-1

11/09/2012

November 8, 2012 – Hanging Out in Gettysburg

After finding out the forecast in Washington, DC, we decided to stay here for one more day and then head to DC tomorrow.

So after doing some wash and cleaning up, we took a walk on the horse trail which leads into the National Park.  (We did not realize we were so close until we went to the diorama.)

The horse trail:

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The Pennsylvania Monument:

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Two more New York Monuments:

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Those NY monuments are impressive!

Our little home:

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So I spent the rest of the day getting caught up with pictures and the blog.  I am about to work on my emails next – :-)))

Have a great day and stay tuned for our next adventure.

11/08/2012

November 7 , 2012 – Gettysburg Diorama, Ghost Lab, Eternal Light Peace Memorial

The Artillery Ridge Campground gave us complimentary tickets to the Gettysburg Diorama so that is where we headed today. 

This diorama is the largest military diorama in the United States and it is very impressive.  I wished we had done this the first day because it gives the whole layout of Gettysburg and the outlying areas.  The show was okay but just seeing the diorama and the location of all the landmarks (many that are still here) is well worth the show.

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We also got tickets to the Ghost Lab and all I can say is “hokey.”   Gettysburg is known as being one of the most haunted places in the world and there are many “haunted tours”.   With haunted places comes lots of history and other stories and since the latter is my interest I usually don’t do the haunted tours unless they include the real history and stories.

 

Our next stop was the Eternal Light Peace Memorial.

“Veterans of the Union and Confederate armies from across the nation converged on Gettysburg in 1938 – 75 years after the battle – for their last great reunion.  All Civil War veterans were invited with expenses paid, and nearly 2000 attended.  The majority were in their 90’s and many were over 100.

On the warm evening of Sunday, July 3, they gathered here with others to dedicate a monument to peace and national unity.  President Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered the dedication speech to a crowd estimated at 200,000.

The monument, designed by Paul Philippe Cret, is built of Alabama limestone and Maine granite, topped by a natural gas touch to be lit eternally to symbolize the unity of the United States.”

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More information at:   http://www.gettysburg.stonesentinels.com/Other/Peace.php

“The memorial's $60,000 cost was provided by donations from states both north and south. Its base is made of Maine granite, while the shaft is of a lighter colored Alabama limestone. The gas-lit eternal flame burned until 1979 when it was replaced by electricity, but it was restored in 1988. The monument was the inspiration for the eternal flame on President Kennedy's grave at Arlington National Cemetery. “

Views from the memorial:

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And more monument views:

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We relaxed the rest of the afternoon/evening by watching the movie “Gettysburg” (which I picked up this past summer at a book sale).  This movie was filmed here at the National Park and throughout Adams County.  Great movie – :-)!

 

Enjoy today.

November 6, 2012 – Gettysburg Day Two

This morning we went back to the Battlefield to see some areas in depth.

Devil’s Den:

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And the monuments – WOW!

http://gettysburgmonuments.com/

http://www.gettysburg.stonesentinels.com/index.php

 

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We went back to the top of Little Round Top:

The New York Monument – 44th Infantry – Impressive:

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Inside the monument – on the right is the list of all the men in the 44th NY Infantry.

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The view from the top of the monument:

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Touching Colonel O'Rorke's nose for courage – LOL:

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An original cannon:

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Those numbers/letters stamped on the outside is how we tell original from replica.  The reproductions do not have any numbers/letters.

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From there we went to the Pennsylvania Monument – IMPRESSIVE!

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The tablets contain the name of each Pennsylvania soldier who participated in the Battle of Gettysburg.  It is said that Maya Lin got her inspiration of the Vietnam Veteran Memorial from this Monument.

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The view from the top of the monument – this is where Day 3 of the Battle took place:

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Pickett’s Charge Monument across the Battlefield:

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From there we went to:

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“The Soldiers’ National Cemetery is famous throughout the world today as the site of Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, delivered at the cemetery’s dedication four and a half months after the battle.

The recovery efforts began almost immediately following the battle.  While relief for the wounded began to trickle in, the dead were hastily buried in shallow graves across the battlefield within one week of the battle.  These crude graves were seen as a temporary solution for the disposal of the dead and were completed quickly for fear that an epidemic might spread in the hot, humid summer conditions.  The markings of these burials were also very rough and temporary, typically a wooden board with the solder’s name written in pencil, placed at the head of his grave.  Not surprisingly, many of these identifications were lost when exposed to the weather and other elements.  It would be the effort to give these men proper and permanent burials that eventually led to the creation of the Soldiers’ National Cemetery.

A committee was formed, consisting of representatives from all of the Northern states who lost soldiers here.  Headed by David Wills, a Gettysburg attorney and the Pennsylvania state agent, the committee decided upon a plan to create a common burial ground for the Union dead.  The natural eminence of this hill, coupled with its importance to the Union victory, led the committee to select this 17 acre site as the location for the new soldiers’ cemetery.  The land was purchased and the reburial of the Union soldiers began on October 27.”

Lincoln gave his famous address on November 19, 1863.  (It is still commemorated here every year – this year’s speaker will be Stephen Spielberg because of the new movie on Lincoln due to be released.)

There are three types of stones that make up the state sections and individual graves.

Larger grey stones serve as state section markers and indicate the number of fallen from each state:

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Long rectangular granite stones set at ground level serve as gravestones for the remains of soldiers buried in the state sections, and mostly are marked by names.

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This is one of three areas of the Unknown soldiers marked only by small marble squares bearing numbers:

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Since this is also a National Cemetery, these are the graves of our military from the Civil War thru the Vietnam War

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And what about the Confederate Soldiers? Well, “ A few Confederate soldiers were mistakenly interred in the cemetery alongside their former foes.  Although they fell under different flags, they now rest under one.  However, in the bitterness sown by the war, the remainder of the Confederate dead remained buried on the battlefield.  Between seven to ten years after the battle, these Southern remains, over 3200, were returned home to four primary locations – Richmond, VA; Raleigh, NC; Savannah, GA; and Charlestown, SC.”

On our bus tour of the Battlefield, we were told that they do find human remains every so often, the latest being in 2010 at the railroad cut.  How sad.

Next stop was a few places downtown.  We found out that if a house had this plaque on it, the house was standing during the Battle of Gettysburg.

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More Civil War houses:

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And some of those homes still have bullet holes:

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Our last stop was Lincoln Square to see the statues of Lincoln and David Wills.  President Lincoln stayed in Mr. Wills home where he finished the Gettysburg address.   (The locals think the statue of Mr. Wills looks like Perry Como or Andy Williams – :-))

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Since it was a nice sunny day, we decided to see some of the countryside and we came upon:

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The Thomas Brothers Historic Country Store in Biglerville where we met Marion who told us some really great stories about the store and her visitors, especially Ike and Mamie Eisenhower.

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More information at http://www.thomasbroscountrystore.com/Home.html 

What a Hoot – :-)))

Back home, we were entertained by this little guy who tormented the cats – LOL!

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What a wonderful day.  We have decided to stay put here for a few more days because of the storm coming in.  Gettysburg should be okay but our next stop is Washington DC and we really do not want to tour in the rain/snow. 

So stay tuned and enjoy today.