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Gettysburg National Cemetery

Coordinates: 39°49′2″N 77°13′55″W / 39.81722°N 77.23194°W / 39.81722; -77.23194
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Gettysburg National Cemetery
The Soldiers' National Monument at the center of Gettysburg National Cemetery[1] with 18 Union states' areas, one U.S. Regulars area, and three areas for graves of the unknown
Map
Details
Established19 November 1863; 161 years ago (19 November 1863)
Location
CountryUnited States
Coordinates39°49′2″N 77°13′55″W / 39.81722°N 77.23194°W / 39.81722; -77.23194
TypeNational Cemetery
Owned byNational Park Service
Size17 acres (6.9 ha)[2]
Find a GraveGettysburg National Cemetery

Gettysburg National Cemetery is a United States national cemetery in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, 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.

The land of the cemetery was part of the Gettysburg Battlefield, and the cemetery is within Gettysburg National Military Park, which is administered by the National Park Service of the U.S. Department of Interior.[3]

Originally called Soldiers' National Cemetery, U.S. 16th President Abraham Lincoln delivered his Gettysburg Address at the cemetery's consecration on November 19, 1863. That day is observed annually at the cemetery and in the town as "Remembrance Day" with a parade, procession, and memorial ceremonies by thousands of Civil War reenactor troops representing both Union and Confederate armies and descendant heritage organizations led by the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War (SUVCW) and the Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV).

The cemetery contains 3,512 interments from the Civil War, including the graves of 979 unknowns.[4] It also has sections for veterans of the Spanish–American War (1898), World War I (1917–1918), and other wars, along with graves of the veterans' spouses and children. The total number of interments exceeds 6,000.[4]

Battlefield monuments, memorials, and markers are scattered throughout the cemetery, and its stone walls, iron fences and gates, burial and section markers, and brick sidewalk are listed as contributing structures within Gettysburg Battlefield Historic District.[5]

Description

[edit]
Gettysburg National Cemetery on the 50th anniversary of the battle in July 1913

The centerpiece of Gettysburg National Cemetery is Soldiers' National Monument (1869), a 60-foot-tall (18 m) granite monument designed by sculptor Randolph Rogers and architect George Keller. It is surrounded by concentric semicircles of graves, divided into 18 sections for Union states (1 each),[4] a section for United States Regulars, and 3 sections for unknown soldiers.[4]

Battlefield monuments within Gettysburg National Cemetery include those of the 1st United States Artillery Battery H, the 2nd Maine Battery, the 1st Massachusetts Battery (Cook's Battery), the 1st Minnesota Infantry, the 1st New Hampshire Light Battery, the 5th New York Independent Light Artillery, the 136th New York Volunteer Infantry, the 1st Ohio Battery H, the 55th Ohio Infantry, the 73rd Ohio Infantry, and the 75th Pennsylvania Infantry; and markers for the 1st Ohio Battery I and the 3rd Volunteer Brigade Artillery Reserve (Huntington's Brigade). Other monuments include the New York State Monument (1893), the Kentucky State Monument (1975), the Lincoln Address Monument (1912), the Friend to Friend Masonic Memorial (1994), the Major-General John F. Reynolds Statue (1872), and the Major-General Charles Collis Memorial (1906).

History

[edit]

In 1863, William Saunders was selected by a committee of Union governors to design the Soldiers National Cemetery. Saunders' radial plan of "simple grandeur," grouped the Union dead by states and focused on a central monument. The graves were marked with simple, unadorned, rectangular slabs of gray granite inscribed with the name, rank, company, and regiment of each soldier. Saunders noted in his description of the design that this repetition of "objects in themselves simple and common place" was meant to evoke a sense of "solemnity" which "is an attribute of the sublime." Officers and enlisted men were buried alongside one another to symbolize the egalitarian nature of the Union Army, which consisted mostly of volunteer citizen soldiers.[6]

Reinterments

[edit]

Union remains were transferred from the Gettysburg Battlefield burial plots,[7] local church cemeteries, field hospital burial sites, including Camp Letterman, Rock Creek-White Run Union Hospital Complex, USA General Hospital,[8] and the "Valley of Death" below Little Round Top, where unburied soldiers decomposed in place.[9] Samuel Weaver, as "Superintendent of the exhuming of the bodies", personally observed the contractor's workers opening graves, placing remains in coffins, and burying them in the cemetery,[8]: 158  and at least one reinterment from neighboring Evergreen Cemetery.

Consecration

[edit]
President Lincoln (seated, left of center) at the cemetery's consecration, November 19, 1863
1863 map of Soldiers' National Cemetery

Chronology

[edit]
Chronology
Date Event
Symbols: †-interments  ۩-structures  §-superintendents
1863-07-01 Union artillery in the summit's cornfield[10] at the subsequent cemetery site counterfired on Confederates west of Gettysburg at the seminary and railway cut.[11] On July 2, Confederate sharpshooters in Gettysburg were "picking off" Federals on the hill.[12]
1863-07-04 8,900 dead soldiers were on the battlefield,[13] and townspeople and farmers buried some of them at battlefield sites (e.g., along fences and stone walls).[14]
1863-07-07 The local Provost Marshal solicited "Men, Horses, and Wagons…to bury the dead" in various Gettysburg Battlefield plots.[15]
1863-07-10 The last "Rebel dead" were interred on the battlefield (horse carcasses remained to be buried).[16]
[when?] Battlefield land preservation began by August 5[17] with attorney David McConaughy's purchases including "the heights of Cemetery Hill"[18] which he planned for a soldiers' cemetery where lots could be purchased for reinterring soldiers.
1863-07-20 "Peter Thorn", [sic] who was deployed from Gettysburg in a combat unit, began weekly newspaper ads for "removals into Ever Green Cemetery".[19]
1863-07-24 David Wills, a Gettysburg attorney, recommended a state-funded cemetery at the south slope of East Cemetery Hill "on the Baltimore turnpike, opposite the Cemetery"[20]: 4 —the open, sloped tract of 8 acres (3.2 ha)[21] was sold by Peter Thorn in 1899.[22]
1863-07-28 State funds regarding "Pennsylvanians killed [were for] furnishing transportation for the body and one attendant" to home cemeteries[23] (600–700 coffins were used.)[24]
1863-08-14 Wills, after being designated Pennsylvania Governor Andrew Curtin's agent, purchased McConaughy's summit tract and a day or so later[who?] a 2nd tract "between Evergreen and the five-acre tract of Miller's apple orchard"[20]: 6  totalling 17 acres (6.9 ha) for $2,475.87[25] ($61,270 in 2023 dollars).
1863-08-21 Wills had contacted William Saunders about designing the cemetery.[26]
1863 The reinterment contract was issued and required wooden boards nailed to the head of the coffins to protrude from the ground for displaying identities.[27]
1863-10-17 † In a former cornfield of the battle,[28] the first reinterments (Cpl Story & Pvt James) were from the 1804 "United Presbyterian Burying Ground".[8]: 140  The "Associate Reformed Graveyard" closed in 1899[29] (at least five others are identified as reinterred from that graveyard.)
1863-11-16 ۩ A flagpole[30] was erected "near the stand prepared for the world-renowned Orator, Hon. Edward Everett".[31] The 12 ft × 20 ft (3.7 m × 6.1 m)[32] "platform" was "on the spot where the monument is to be built[1]…"fronting away from the cemetery [toward the subsequent] vast audience" (in Evergreen Cemetery).[33]
1863-11 Joseph Becker sketched the flagpole, the "grand stand"[34] ("speaker will face this way"), and East Cemetery Hill graves.[7]
1863-11-19 ¶ President Abraham Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address after the Everett oration at the Consecration of the National Cemetery at Gettysburg.
1863-11-24 † 1188 remains, including 582 unknown, "had already been interred in the Cemetery".[14]
1863-12-07 Wills advertised for farmers to report graves on their property.[35]
1863-12-17 The Board of Commissioners of the Soldiers' National Cemetery at Gettysburg was organized at Harrisburg and incorporated on March 25, 1864.[36][37][38]
1864-02-03 Michigan appropriated the first payment from a state for the cemetery. By the federal turnover in 1872, 18 states had contributed $129,523.24.[20]: 26 
[when?] The "city of Boston" exhumed 158 soldiers' remains for reinterment in Massachusetts.[8]: 161 
1864-03-19 † Samuel Weaver reported 3,512 total Union bodies "taken up and removed to the Soldiers' National Cemetery" October 27-March 18.[8]: 161 
1864-03-21 † Wills identified the cemetery had 3,564 total burials, including those buried directly in the cemetery (not exhumed)[8]: 175  (e.g., Major George Tate's leg amputated at a hospital was buried in the cemetery which he annually visit from Massachusetts.)[39]
1864-12 † 37 more bodies had been located and reinterred, the stone walls had been completed (the lodge nearly so), and the "main avenue" was "ready for macadamizing".[20]
1865 Wills had iron fencing erected between the Soldiers' and Evergreen cemeteries[40] contrary to the condition when Pennsylvania purchased McConaughy's tract.[17]
1865-03-06 ۩ The cemetery's 3 stone walls[41] and the brick "gate house" (lodge) were complete, and the gate was ready to be erected.[8]
1865-05 § Daniel K. Snyder was appointed the cemetery superintendent, and was replaced in November by Sgt John McAllister.[20]: 21 
1865 ۩ The wooden marker boards for each grave were replaced with gravestones[42] (the CCC reset gravestones into concrete in 1934).[43]
[specify] † A Union soldier buried July 5, 1863, at South Mountain's Monterey toll house was reinterred at the cemetery (his wife visited both sites for the 1913 reunion).[44]
1865-07-04 ۩ The "Exercises Incidental to the Laying of the Corner Stone" for the Soldiers' National Monument were conducted[45] after designs had been requested in 1864.[46]: 35 
1867-06-19 To plan the transfer to the federal government, the "Board of Managers" appointed a committee[47] (Blake, Carr, Ferry, Hebard, McCurdy, Selleck, and Wills).[48]
1867-06-20 The Committee of Arrangement of the Board of Commissioners of the National Cemetery met Governor Geary, who with General Grant visited the cemetery.[48]
1867 ۩ The marble urn in the National Cemetery was dedicated to the 1st Minnesota Infantry.[49]
1869-07-01 ۩ The Soldiers' National Monument was dedicated[38] after the crowning statue of the Genius of Liberty had arrived in October 1868.[50] On August 26, the "Plenty" statue was added to the monument,[51] and the "Peace" statue was added between[specify] August 30, 1869,[52] and September 21, 1887.[2]
c. 1870 ۩ The 2nd floor of the stone "gatehouse" (Greek Revival architecture) was expanded with a Mansard roof.[53]
1870-07-14 "A Resolution Authorizing the Secretary of War to take charge of the Gettysburg and Antietam National Cemeteries" passed.[54]
1871-07-22 The commissioners met ""to close up the business of the Board preparatory to its transfer to the National Government".[55]
1872-05-01 Pennsylvania ceded the cemetery to the Department of War[46] (the board of commissioners expired.)[56]
1872-08 § Charles Stambaugh became the superintendent until July 1873.[20]: 26 
1872-08-31 ۩ The Reynolds statue cast from bronze cannon tubes[20]: 25  (Robert Wood & Co. foundry, J. Q. A. Ward design) was erected on a dark Quincy granite pedestal.[45]: 17 
1878-10 ۩ 50 new iron settees were placed in the cemetery.[57]
1879-05 ۩ The 1st rostrum of 20 ft × 40 ft (6.1 m × 12.2 m) was being completed by P. J. and J. J. Tawney,[58] with 12 brick columns and a 5-foot-high (1.5 m) high floor.[59] In addition to Decoration and Dedication days' observances, the building was used during military camps (e.g.,1882 Camp Burnside)[60] and 1890 Camp Abe Patterson).[61]
1881-06 † 20 skeletons plowed up on the Gelback Farm along the Emmitsburg Road were reinterred.[62]
1882 ۩ 17 tablets were erected to display stanzas of Bivouac of the Dead (only 8 remain).[5]
1882-05-10 † During Grand Central Avenue (now Hancock Avenue) construction, remains of a US soldier found on the Leister Farm were interred in the Cemetery.[63]
1884-11-08 † First and only African-American veteran of the Civil War, Henry Gooden of the 127th Regiment United States Colored Troops, is buried among U.S. Regulars in the Civil War section.
1887-10-01 § Battlefield guide[64] and assistant superintendent William Holtzworth replaced Supt. Nicholas G. Wilson who resigned to become the GBMA superintendent.[63]
1889 † Remains found during avenue construction were reinterred in the cemetery,[65] and the cemetery gate to the Taneytown Road was planned.[66]
1889-09 Joseph H. Smith constructed the "grand stand…for use on Thursday, Pennsylvania Day – on the large lawn in front of the rostrum".[66]
1890 ۩ Two "Act of Congress Tablets" were placed in the cemetery to commemorate[5] the February 22, 1867 "act to establish and perfect National Cemeteries"[67] (the congressional reburial program had been resolved on April 13, 1866).[68]
1891-02 ۩ The cemetery's Taneytown Road (west) entrance was built at the summit curve of the Gettysburg Electric Railway.[69]
1891 § Calvin Hamilton[70] resigned as[71] local school board president[72] and became the cemetery superintendent after 2 years as assistant to W. D. Holtzworth.[73]
1892 ۩ William H. Tipton photographed the cemetery's summer house[53] near the west gate.
1893-07-02 ۩ After an October 1890 objection by Wills had been resolved, the Ionic[56] New York State Monument[5] was unveiled[74] with the "statue of “Victory” in the presence of at least 12,000 persons".[75] The ceremony concluded with an artillery salute by Battery C.[76]
1899 † Remains found at the United Presbyterian Cemetery during construction of the shirt factory were reinterred in the cemetery.[29]
1899-09-23 † Remains of 18 soldiers found on Culp's Hill were reinterred in the cemetery.[77]
1900 † Remains found by fence builders on a farm were reinterred in the cemetery.[78]
1903 ۩ A larger Gettysburg Rostrum was built[79] 36.8 ft × 22 ft (11.2 m × 6.7 m) with a sod platform[5] to replace the original 1879 rostrum.
1904-05-30 ¶ President Theodore Roosevelt delivered the Decoration Day address[80] after detraining near the McPherson Ridge railway cut.[81]
1905 The lodge at the Baltimore Pike entrance was dismantled[82] (teacher Ruth Hamilton at the High Street School had lived at the lodge).[83]
1906 ۩ $6000 was appropriated for a new lodge for the superintendent[84] (Wm. H. Johns was the contractor).[85]
1908 First placement of memorial flags on graves.[86]
1912-01-24 ۩ The Lincoln Address Memorial was erected on the cemetery grounds "near site of original summer house".[5]
[specify] "A 205' macadam roadway [was] graded and piked around the Lincoln Memorial in 1909 [sic]."[26]
1914-04 § Major M. M. Jefferys succeeded Calvin Hamilton as superintendent[87][88] and the Jefferys family moved into the lodge.[89]
1915-05 The "Three-Mile Picture Show" named for the length of film recorded wreath-laying at the Lincoln Address Memorial by local "colored residents".[90][91]
1915-05-06 † Remains of a soldier discovered at Menchey's Spring on the base of East Cemetery Hill were reinterred in the cemetery.[91][92]
1915-05 § Acting superintendent Harry E. Koch replaced[93] Major Jefferys who resigned during illness while at "Johns Hopkins hospital".[91]
1915-09 § Superintendent Austin. J. Chapman (1915 to 1918)[94] prohibited hackmans' jitneys from carrying more than 15 persons into the cemetery.[95]
1928 ¶ President Calvin Coolidge delivered the Memorial Day address in the rostrum.[96]
1928-09 ۩ The brick comfort station at the cemetery opened.[97] It was closed in 1931.[98] (The 1st Gettysburg Parkitecture comfort station was built in 1933.)[99]
1930 ¶ President Herbert Hoover delivered the Memorial Day address at the rostrum that had been temporarily extended by Army Quartermasters.[100]
1930-08-31 § James W. Bodley retired after serving as superintendent since 1918.[101]
1933-06-10 Executive Order 6166 combined management of the cemetery and military park with the Department of the Interior[20]: viii  (Nine other cemeteries were transferred on July 28.)[68]
1933 ۩ Lafayette Square fencing was moved to the cemetery[102] after 1888 legislation had moved it[58] to East Cemetery Hill in 1889[103] (installed by Calvin Gilbert).[63]
1936 † A U.S. Colored Infantry soldier who died after the Civil War was reinterred from Yellow Hill Cemetery (Biglerville) into the cemetery.[104]
1938 The National Park Service planted 200 rhododendron plants in the cemetery.[40]
1942 § Captain Earl Taute was the cemetery superintendent.[105]
1947/48 † 850 World War II dead were reinterred "from European and South Pacific theaters".[106]
1949 Federal appropriations of $10,000 was planned to add 5 acres (2.0 ha) to the cemetery.[107]
1955 ۩ The American Legion Tablet was placed in the cemetery to honor the "efforts of American fighting forces in preservation of freedom of all men."[5]
1955 The Oscar-nominated The Battle of Gettysburg documentary filmed the cemetery.
1963 ¶ President Dwight D. Eisenhower was a dignitary in the Remembrance Day activities at the cemetery.
1963-11-19 Bethlehem Steel deeded 5 acres (2.0 ha) "to enlarge the present cemetery"[108][109] during a luncheon for the Lincoln Fellowship's 25th anniversary.[110]
1967-04-15 A design for the annex between the north wall of the cemetery and Steinwehr Avenue had plans for 1666 graves.[111]
1968-02 † The first burial was completed at the annex (a 22-car parking lot had been contracted on January 23, 1968).[112]
[when?] † The last interment was made in the original cemetery area[112] (closed October 27, 1972, except for spouse interments).
1972 The last formal speaker for a Decoration Day ceremony at the cemetery was in the rostrum.[113]
1976–08 The National Park Service acquired the 4th of 6 houses along Steinwehr Avenue east of the Taneytown Road for the cemetery annex.[114]
1980 ۩ The cemetery's 1864 stone walls were reconstructed.[115]
1993-08-21 ۩ The Friend to Friend Masonic Memorial in the annex was dedicated by the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania.
1997-07-01 † Remains of a soldier discovered in 1996[116] during Seminary Ridge excavation[117] were interred in the cemetery.[118]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Reid, Whitelaw. "title tbd". Cincinnati Daily Gazette. The stand was erected on the spot where the monument is to be built, in front of which are two semi-circular sections. (cited by Tilberg 1970) Klement pp. 186–67, reference 23 cites Tilberg's "summary of study of location of Gettysburg Address platform" – perhaps referring to Tilberg's newspaper article:
  2. ^ a b "Soldier's National Cemetery" (Google News Archive). The Wayne County Democrat. September 21, 1887. Retrieved February 25, 2012. …slain in the first day's battle and had lain for days [behind enemy lines] in the sun and rain until recognition was impossible.
  3. ^ National Park Service. "National Cemetery Walking Tour" (PDF). Retrieved June 12, 2012.
  4. ^ a b c d "Soldiers' National Cemetery at Gettysburg". CivilWarWiki.net. Archived from the original on July 9, 2020. Retrieved June 16, 2011.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g "GETT List of Classified Structures". www.hscl.cr.nps.gov. National Park Service. Archived from the original (NPS.gov HSCL[specify] website) on September 24, 2015. Retrieved March 22, 2012.
  6. ^ Rainey, Reuben (1995). "Saunders, William b. 1822, d. 1900". In Birnbaum, Charles A. (ed.). Pioneers of American Landscape Design II: An Annotated Bibliography. U.S. Department of the Interior. pp. 132–137. ISBN 0-16-048060-4. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  7. ^ a b Becker, Joseph (November 1863), sketch of Cemetery Hill
  8. ^ a b c d e f g "Report of David Wills". Revised Report. pp. 4–tbd.
  9. ^ Wert, J. Howard (1886). A Complete Hand-Book of the Monuments and Indications and Guide to the Positions on the Gettysburg Battle-Field (Google Books). B.M. Sturgeon & Co. p. 93. Retrieved March 2, 2012. The heavy rains that followed the battle washed down and lodged in these [Valley of Death] places other corpses from positions higher up the flat. These bodies were never recovered, but gradually decomposed, whilst the bones were washed away or covered with rubbish.
  10. ^ Adams, II, Charles J. (June 29, 2000). "National cemetery a somber stop" (Google News Archive). Reading Eagle. Retrieved March 22, 2012. the Soldiers' National Monument now towers over the well-manicured lawn of what was once a cornfield and apple orchard.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ Dreese, Michael A. (2002). The Hospital on Seminary Ridge at the Battle of Gettysburg (Google Books). McFarland. p. 130. ISBN 9780786412242. Retrieved February 25, 2012.
  12. ^ "Battle of Gettysburg" (Google News Archive). The Compiler. July 20, 1863. Retrieved February 26, 2012. The Federal soldiers in the [Evergreen] Cemetery laid many of the tombsones on the ground to prevent injury… Thursday [July 2] Confederates…had their sharpshooters…picking off Federal soldiers on the hills [sic] to the north of the cemetery.
  13. ^ "Care of wounded after Battle of Gettysburg". The Gettysburg Times. July 14, 1986. p. 8. Retrieved March 12, 2012.
  14. ^ a b "Consecration of the Soldiers' National Cemetery at Gettysburg" (Google News Archive). The Adams Sentinel. November 24, 1863. Retrieved March 10, 2012. …rows of graves ranged along the line of the stone or wooden fences
  15. ^ "The Adams Centinel" – via Google News Archive Search.
  16. ^ "OUR GETTYSBURG CORRESPONDENCE; the Last of the Dead Buried – Condition of the Wounded – The Battle-field and Relic Gatherers". The New York Times. July 15, 1863.
  17. ^ a b McConaughy, David (August 5, 1863), [letter to Governor Andrew Curtin] (negative photocopy), Gettysburg Museum and Visitor Center vertical files: David Wills correspondence{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) (cited by GDG.org: The Development of the National Cemetery)
  18. ^ "More Exempts from the Draft". The Baltimore Sun. September 16, 1863. Retrieved January 23, 2011. the heights of Cemetery Hill and the granite spur of Round Top … purchased by Mr. D. McConaughy.
  19. ^ "The Compiler" – via Google News Archive Search.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h Unrau, Harlan D (July 1991) [December 1865 complete draft]. administrative history, Gettysburg National Military Park (PDF) (Report). Denver, CO: National Park Service. OCLC 24228617. Archived from the original ("B&W Scan" of copy D-44) on October 20, 2012. Retrieved March 10, 2012. McConaughy, who held key topographic features of the battlefield in trust for the GBMA, was reimbursed for his prior purchases from commonwealth appropriations in 1867–68 (cf. HAER No. 485 p. 43 claims McConaughy was paid in 1868 when the GBMA received $6,000 from the state.) (This report is also available at Google Books.)[hyperlink needed]
  21. ^ Cross, Rev. Andrew B. (July 25, 1863), letter for newspaper publication (letter republished in report), retrieved March 9, 2012, Shall the bones of those who turned the battle from the gate in that fearful struggle of three days at Gettysburg be left for men to plough up in their fields and to wagon over on the roads around that town? (letter included in report, p. 60)
  22. ^ "For Sale or Rent" (Google News Archive). The Star and Sentinel. January 2, 1900. Retrieved March 6, 2012. For Sale or Rent. – My Property on Baltimore pike, below Evergreen Cemetery, right hand side; 10 acres, improved with 2-story House, Stable, Hog Pen, &c. Lot of Fruit, never-failing well of Water at Kitchen door. Peter Thorn, Residence on Middle St., next door Dr. Diehl's office. 12-12-4f.
  23. ^ "The Adams Centinel" – via Google News Archive Search.
  24. ^ "This Grand National Enterprise".
  25. ^ Murphy, Jim (1992). The Long Road to Gettysburg. New York: Clarion Books. pp. 98–9. ISBN 0-395-55965-0.
  26. ^ a b Gettysburg National Military Park Tour Roads (PDF). Historic American Engineering Record (Report). Archived from the original (PDF) on May 16, 2014. Retrieved March 22, 2012.
  27. ^ Wills request for proposals from contractors to reinter the dead[full citation needed]
  28. ^ "Gettysburg: Tiny Pennsylvania Town Teaches a Powerful Lesson in History". Deseret News. Salt Lake City. June 25, 2000. A cornfield was turned into a cemetery for 3654 known Union soldiers.
  29. ^ a b Amrhein, Elizabeth (Fall 2009). Hidden in Plain Sight…Ice House Complex (PDF) (Report). Archived from the original (PDF) on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 22, 2012. In 1899, [sic] soldier remains were unearthed in preparation for construction of the new shirt factory.14 These remains were moved to the National Cemetery
  30. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved March 22, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  31. ^ "→A beautiful Pole…" (Google News Archive). The Adams Sentinel. November 17, 1863. Retrieved March 12, 2012.
  32. ^ Selleck, W. Y. ("purported to have been written by"), holograph text, The stand on which President Lincoln stood…was 12 ft. wide and 20 ft. long, and facing to the North West. It was located 40 feet North East of the outer circle of Soldiers' Graves as shown by pencil mark (cited by Tilberg 1970)
  33. ^ Carr, Clark E. Lincoln at Gettysburg: An Address. Chicago: A. C. McClurg. Retrieved March 1, 2012. I was able to have placed the Illinois section… On one side of our Illinois section is a large one, containing the graves of the unknown, and on the other that of the State of Virginia. It was upon the ground in the centre reserved for the monument that the platform from which the addresses were delivered was placed. This platform fronted away from the cemetery proper, giving room for the vast audience of people in front of and facing it.
  34. ^ "Digitool | Becker Collection". Archived from the original on November 28, 2010. Retrieved January 29, 2019.
  35. ^ "The Dead on the Battle-field" (Google News Archive). The Compiler. December 7, 1863. Retrieved February 25, 2012.
  36. ^ "The Providence Evening Press" – via Google News Archive Search.
  37. ^ "The Compiler" – via Google News Archive Search.
  38. ^ a b Own, Our (June 26, 1869). "Gettysburg: Preparations for the Dedication of the Soldiers' Monument" (PDF). New York Times. Retrieved June 16, 2011.
  39. ^ c. 1916 local Gettysburg newspaper item reporting Major Tate's annual visit (e.g., Gettysburg Times)[full citation needed]
  40. ^ a b "The Development of the National Cemetery". GDG.org – Gettysburg Discussion Group website. Retrieved March 12, 2012. citing for quotation:
    • "David McConaughy to Governor Andrew Curtin, August 5, 1863 (negative photocopy, David Wills correspondence, GNMP vertical files): "We agree to sell to the state or states nine acres between the Cemetery and the Taneytown road, at $200.00 per acre – the states to enclose this land on that Road, and on North and South, but not on side adjoining the Cemetery – the grounds to be used for burial of the soldier dead of all the states."
  41. ^ "List of Classified Structures". Archived from the original on September 17, 2012.
  42. ^ Eicher, David (May 1, 2003). Gettysburg Battlefield: The Definitive Illustrated History. Chronicle Books. ISBN 9780811828680.
  43. ^ "Plan $50,000 Battlefield Project Here" (Google News Archive). Gettysburg Times. July 16, 1934. Retrieved March 2, 2012. work on the re-setting of 5,200 feet of head stones in the National cemetery will ge under way within a week … many of which are either leaning or have fallen over altogether, will be reset in concrete. … The work will be done by enrollees of the two civilian conservation corps camps on the battlefield
  44. ^ "Baltimore American" – via Google News Archive Search.
  45. ^ a b Bartlett, John Russell, ed. (1874). "Oration of Governor O. P. Morton". The Soldiers' National Cemetery at Gettysburg…the Monument…dedication (Google Books). Providence, Rhode Island. for distribution to the Board of Commissioners of the Cemetery.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  46. ^ a b Sellars, Richard West (Winter 2005). Pilgrim Places: Civil War Battlefields, Historic Preservation, and America's FirstNational Military Parks, 1863–1900 (PDF). CRM (Report). Retrieved March 22, 2012.
  47. ^ "Monuments and Entertainments" (Google News pay-per-view)). Detroit Free Press. June 21, 1867. Retrieved February 25, 2012.
  48. ^ a b "Visit of Gen. Grant and Gov. Geary & Meeting of the Board of Managers of the Soldiers' National Cemetery" (Google News Archive). The Star and Sentinel. June 26, 1867. Retrieved March 12, 2012.
  49. ^ "1st Minnesota".
  50. ^ "The Star and Sentinel" – via Google News Archive Search.
  51. ^ "Gettysburg: The Reunion on the Field…" (PDF). New York Times. August 27, 1869. visited the apple orchard,[where?] peach orchard, wheatfield, Round Top… The positions of the above-named corps were fixed. … Over one hundred stakes were driven at important points. … and the places where General Sickles, Hancock and Graham were wounded… General Hll…fixed the position…which opened the battle… The hop at the Springs Hotel…netted about $200, which is to be devoted to the Soldiers' Home, near Cemetery Hill. Retrieved July 7, 2011.
  52. ^ "Gettysburg" (Google News Archive). The Pittsburgh Gazette. August 30, 1869. Retrieved February 25, 2012. The battle monument is not yet finished
  53. ^ a b "Photographs".
  54. ^ 16 Stat. 390[full citation needed]
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External media
Images
image icon Saunders diagram
image icon Illustration of consecration
image icon 1st lodge as modified & 2nd flagpole
image icon 1882 cemetery image on interpretive display
image icon Tipton images
image icon 1913 reunion flags on gravestones
Video
video icon 1955 helicopter footage (minute 9)

Further reading

[edit]
  • Fuoss, Jarrad; Frederick, Jared (Forward) (2020). Soldiers National Cemetery at Gettysburg. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Press (Images of America). ISBN 978-1467104852.
[edit]