Sunday, April 5, 2009

OUR DAY AT GETTYSBURG

Mr. and Mrs. COMMON CENTS decided to do something we have been wanting to do for some time. Instead of standing in a book signing line for six hours, waiting to meet Mark Levin (last Sat), we road tripped 80 miles north to Gettysburg, PA. At Gettysburg we drove around some on our own, took a 2 hour narrated bus tour and visited their new visitor center. As you know Gettysburg was the turning point of the Civil War. Gen Robert E. Lee let his Army of Northern Virginia, 75,000 strong in an invasion of the North in June of 1863. He was opposed by some 90,000 soldiers of the Union's Army of the Potomac. For three bloody days July 1 - July 3 the two great armies clashed in the bloodiest battle waged in our hemisphere. Several times history hung on a razor's edge, literally minutes saved the Union Army at times. Some things I learned on the tour: There are over 1,300 monuments on the National Park, between 6 million and 9 million rounds of ammunition were fired, there were 51,000 causualites but only one civilian died, the park itself is over 6,000 acres and the reasont the two armies met at Gettysburg is Lee's army had heard there were shoes available there and despearatly needed them. Some pictures of the site:

The view from the top of Little Round Top. In the rear are the Union Lines

Little Round Top: Scene of some of the heaviest fighting on the 2nd Day.

The High Water Mark of the Confederacy: This is the focal point of Picket's Charge, where General Pickets Virginians broke through the Union Lines on the 3rd day and the spot where the fate of a nation hung in the balance. Confederate General Armistead was morally wounded at the spot where the granite monument is on the left.




For you History Fans two books that my friend Tom highly recommends:

5 comments:

Mel said...

I love Gettysburg!!! Wow so did you get to meet Mark Levin???

Steve: The Lightning Man said...

I haven't been to G-burg since about 1983 when I still lived in PG County. My favorite spot was always Devil's Den, and I recall in 11th grade US History class seeing a picture of a dead Confederate soldier and realizing it was taken at Devil's Den and that I'd stood in the exact spot where that soldier had died. It was creepy-ish.

Brooke said...

Very awesome. I'd love to go one day.

Sandy said...

Thank you for stopping in for a visit. It looks like you had a very interesting trip. I love to visit historical sites and learn more about them. Have a wonderful week.

Anonymous said...

Sounds like a great trip. We need to get over there.

I've added your blog to our blogroll. Would you link back, thanks.