I’m not sure what it is that draws so
many people to the Gettysburg National Military Park every year. The history of
the place is enough for me, you understand, but there is probably more to it
than that.
Well, maybe.
The National Parks Service does a
tremendous job of keeping the place looking wonderful, so any visit is a treat
for the eyes. The place is well mapped, so finding locations is reasonably
easy. I have found that there is an easy camaraderie among park visitors, so
you meet plenty of friendly people.
The Visitors Center is a pleasurable
experience in itself. For one thing, the air conditioning is very nice. The
Rangers are friendly and knowledgeable, so they are helpful. The museum is
terrific (there’s that history thing again) and the Cyclorama painting of the
battle is unlike any painting you’ll ever see.
You have to pay to see the Cyclorama,
$12.50 I think. Worth the price.
The town itself is very nice. A lot of
the big name stores are there, so shopping is fairly easy. There are plenty of
neat restaurants and there is an outlet mall. Mrs. Leeway and I like to eat at
the Garry Owen Pub and at Hoss’s Steak and Sea House. Hoss’s is part of a large
chain, Garry Owen is not.
We’ve
always stayed at the same hotel when in Gettysburg so any reader here looking
for a hotel might find a better deal than at the place we stay. You will need
to plan far in advance if you want to stay in town during the early summer
months, particularly in late June and early July.
Gettysburg
College hosts summer sports camps, which helps load up the hotels, and the
college hosts the Civil War Institute conference every year. Your loyal blogger
is a regular at the CWI.
All of the above being said, what is
it that draws us to Gettysburg every year? Think about it: There are lots of
nice towns and cities in southern Pennsylvania. Harrisburg, the state capitol,
is a short distance away and Mechanicsburg, home of the legendary Williams
Grove Speedway, is right up the road. When we go to Williams Grove, we stay in Gettysburg.
So why Gettysburg? Why not visit
someplace else in the area?
Obviously, it’s the history.
When I go to a battlefield, unless I
am part of a CWI tour, I find the time to sit quietly and just listen. Nature
is usually pretty loud at such places and, well, you can hear a lot of other
stuff, too.
Your loyal blogger was sitting on a
rock at Little Round Top last week listening to the Park guys trimming whatever
they were working on with their weed whackers a few hundred yards away, when a married
couple came by. They were obviously looking for something. When they came by a
second time, I asked what they were looking for. As best I can recall now, the
conversation went something like this:
Them: “Isn’t this Little Round Top?”
YLB: “Yes it is.”
Them: “Wasn’t Chamberlain here?”
YLB: “Yes, but not right on this
spot.”
(Blogger note: We were
within a few yards of the statue of General Warren.)
Them:
“I thought for sure there would be a monument for him and the 20th
Maine.”
YLB:
“There is one.” (Gestures, gives
directions to a sign on the other side of the roadway.)
Them:
“Did you ever read ‘Killer Angels?’”
YLB:
“Yes I did. I don’t normally read Civil War fiction, but I read that one.”
Them:
“I read that book and now I have to see where Chamberlain was.”
You
meet lots of people at Gettysburg and other Civil War battlefield parks,
usually very nice people. You meet veterans of many, many visits and you meet
first-timers.
We
all come under the spell of the location and that goes back to the history.
There is a feel you get along Cemetery Ridge and up on Culp’s Hill that is
different from other places in the world.
If
you ever get to Gettysburg, try walking from the Virginia Memorial to the spot
where General Armistead was wounded. As you traverse that span of ground, look
to your right and see Little Round Top in the distance. Turn left and look at
the rooftops of the town. You’ll have a hard time spotting the Union line ahead
of you until you get close, so look for the Copse of trees or the trees that
mark the Bloody Angle.
If
you don’t mind cheating, look for some of the taller monuments that dot the
location of the Union line. Think about what those monuments mean.
Your
loyal blogger once stood in the Sherfy Peach Orchard and asked out loud,
“Exactly what the (heck) was Dan Sickles thinking?”
The
battlefield at Gettysburg is a different place, for lots of reasons. Your loyal
blogger highly recommends it.
Thanks
for reading.
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