Friday, December 15, 2017

21. Adams National Historical Park, Massachusetts


               Hello!  Welcome back to our blog.  We’ll be continuing our swing through the Northeast in this post with a trip to the home of not one, but two U.S. Presidents, John Adams and his son John Quincy Adams at Adams National Historical Park.
 
Entrance Sign for the Old House at Peace field

BACKGROUND:

               Born in 1735, John Adams would go on to prominence as one of the foremost Founding Fathers of the United States.  From being the man who defended British soldiers after the Boston Massacre, to becoming the leading voice and driving force in the Continental Congress for the cause of American Independence, John Adams was intricately involved with the creation of the country.  Alongside him in these endeavors was his formidable wife, Abigail, and his son, John Quincy Adams, who followed in his father’s footsteps as a statesman.

               Following his return from abroad as an ambassador for the newly independent United States, John and Abigail purchased a large homestead in Quincy, Massachusetts, not far from their original homestead which had been the birthplace of both John and John Quincy.  Their new estate, called ‘Peace field,’ would be the home of the Adams family for over a century, as John, and then John Quincy both ascended to the nation's highest office as the second and sixth Presidents.

The "Old House" at Peace field, the Adams' family estate

THE PARK:

               Adams National Historical Park is located in the highly developed Boston suburb of Quincy, Massachusetts.  The park consists of two main sections and a visitor center.  The visitor center is located within and office complex building in the center of Quincy.  From the visitor center, guests will be transported by trolley to first the site of the birthplace homes of John and John Quincy Adams, and then finally the Peace field mansion.


One of the Adams NHP trolleys.

               The first park section consists of two 18th century homes, the birthplaces of both Presidents.  The older of the two houses was built by John Adams’s father, also named John Adams, usually called Deacon John due to his clerical position.  The second home was gifted to John Adams by his father, and it was where John and Abigail raised their children and lived during the American War of Independence.  Both homes, though they have undergone some minor restoration and preservation processes, are the original structures.
The home of Deacon John, birthplace of Founding Father John Adams

               The second section of the park is the “Old House” or “Peace field” estate.  Purchased by John and Abigail Adams in 1788, the original property once had 75 acres.  Today only a small section around the mansion, library, and carriage house remain.  The house, like the birthplace houses is completely original.  The interior has been unaltered since at least 1927 and all of the artifacts inside are original to the Adams family as the house was donated straight from family ownership to the National Park Service in 1946.  In the rear of the mansion is the Stone Library, built by John Quincy Adams son, Charles Francis Adams, to contain his father’s large collection of books and is considered by some to be the first Presidential Library.

The Stone Library and gardens behind the Old House

TRAVEL TIPS:

               Visitors should be warned that access to the Adams National Historic Park is somewhat restrictive.  In order to visit either the birthplace houses or the Peace field mansion one must go on the guided trolley tour, which usually has a duration of two and a half hours.  Getting to the visitor center can also be difficult as Quincy is a very built up area with heavy traffic and many one-way roads.  The houses are not handicapped accessible and photography is prohibited in the interiors.  The visitor center opens at 9:00am and closes at 5:00pm in the summer, with the trolley tours departing every half hour starting at 9:15am.  While the visitor center is open during the winter, both house sites are closed.  There is a parking garage attached to the rear of the office complex where the visitor center is located.  The only restrooms at the site are located within the visitor center.  Passport stamps are to be found at the front desk.

               It is recommended that after finishing your tour, to cross the street to visit the United First Parish Church, which is the burial site of both Presidents and their first ladies.  The tombs are in the basement of the church in a special vault.  There is no fee to enter the church, though a donation is recommended, and guided tours are available.
The tombs of John and Abigail Adams
ADDITIONAL PHOTOS:
The home of John and Abigail Adams and birthplace of John Quincy Adams

The carriage house at Peace field

The United First Parish Church

Tombs of John Quincy and Louisa Adams

Tuesday, November 14, 2017

20. Maggie L. Walker National Historic Site, Virginia


               Hello!  Welcome back to our blog!  In this post we return to Virginia, to visit the home of an early Civil Rights leader at Maggie L. Walker National Historic Site.
Entrance sign

BACKGROUND:
               Maggie L. Walker was born in the aftermath of the Civil War in the former Confederate capital of Richmond, Virginia, the child of former black slave and a white Confederate soldier.  Her experiences growing up in the era of segregation and Jim Crow laws would lead her to become an early Civil Rights activist.
               Her first foray into activism came as a teenager when the city of Richmond denied the city’s black high school graduates a graduation ceremony.  Although the effort to secure a ceremony for herself and her fellow classmates failed it would be the start of a long activist career.
               Throughout the late 1800s her stature within Richmond’s Black community grew as she rose through the ranks of the charitable organization known as the Independent Order of St. Luke.  Believing that economic power would eventually be the way to defeat Jim Crow laws, she championed black businesses and established the St. Luke Penny Savings Bank, becoming the first woman bank president.  Her activism would continue until her death in 1934 due to complications from diabetes.

Maggie L. Walker's bedroom on the second floor of the Walker home, where she passed away in 1934.

THE SITE: 
Maggie L. Walker National Historic Site preserves the home of Maggie L. Walker, and a block of houses known as “Quality Row,” an affluent area of Richmond’s historically black Jackson Ward neighborhood.  The Walker house remained in the possession of Maggie L. Walker’s decedents until the 1970s, when it was donated to the National Park Service.  The Walker home was kept as much as possible to the way it appeared in the early 1900s and many of the items in the home are original artifacts.  The adjacent houses along “Quality Row” now house the park visitor center, exhibits, and offices, and their external facades have been restored to their 1920s appearance.

The Walker house (center left) and a preserved stretch of "Quality Row."

TRAVEL TIPS:
               Maggie L. Walker National Historical Site is located at the corner of W. Leigh and 2nd Street in the Jackson Ward neighborhood on the northern edge of downtown Richmond, Virginia.  The site is open year-round, with holiday exceptions, from 9am to 5pm except on Sunday and Monday, and closing at 4:30pm from November through February.  It is recommended to visit during the summer as parking in the area may be difficult to find during weekdays due to the proximity to downtown and some walking may be necessary.  It is also recommended to view the short film at the visitor center before proceeding with a tour.  Tours of the Walker home are given on a first-come first serve basis and run for approximately an hour.  The Walker home is only partially handicapped accessible.  Passport stamps can be found in the visitor center.

ADDITIONAL PHOTOS:
A second view of the houses along "Quality Row."

The courtyard behind the Walker home that includes a mural of Maggie L. Walker.

The interior of the Walker home.

Tuesday, October 31, 2017

19. Fort Stanwix National Monument, New York


               Welcome back to our blog on the National Park Service.  For our latest post, we will be traveling to upstate New York to visit the site of an important crossroads of early American history, Fort Stanwix National Monument.

Entrance Sign, with the fort in the background

BACKGROUND:

               Prior to European settlement, the small stretch of land between the Mohawk River and Wood Creek in upstate New York was an important link for Indian Tribes known as the Oneida Carrying Place, where tribes used the portage between rivers to transport goods from the Atlantic coast to Lake Ontario.  This highway was also the northern gap in the Appalachian Mountains, and the location’s strategic significance was not lost on European powers as they expanded their territories westward.
The Monument visitor center, with a replica American Indian canoe of the type used to transport goods to the portage known as the Oneida Carrying Place
               During the French and Indian War, several British forts at the Oneida Carrying Place were destroyed by the French.  In order to maintain a hold on the portage, British General John Stanwix ordered the construction of a new replacement fort.  The fort was named Stanwix in his honor and held the gap between the rivers until the end of the war.  Following the French and Indian War, the famed Indian Agent William Johnson, negotiated a treaty at the fort with Iroquois Confederacy which ceded land to British colonists in present day West Virginia, Kentucky, and Tennessee (something the Iroquois had no authority to do). 

               With the beginning of the American War of Independence, American forces once again saw the need to fortify the Oneida Carrying Place.  American General Phillip Schuyler seized the abandoned fort and immediately set about repairing it.  The renamed Fort Schuyler would play a vital role during the campaigns of 1777.
Exterior view of the fort, partially obscured by the earthen ramparts
               Determined to finally crush the American rebellion, the British devised a strategy to cut off New England, the hotbed of the American Independence movement, from the other States and take the new United States apart piece by piece.  A three-pronged attacked was envisioned to take control of the Hudson River.  One British army would march north from the occupied New York City, a second marching south from Lake Champlain, and a third marching east down the Mohawk Valley from Lake Ontario, all converging at Albany.

               The British plan fell apart before it started.  The southern force, rather than marching north, sailed from New York to capture the American capital of Philadelphia.  While the British succeeded in capturing the city, the detour would instead lead to an inevitable American victory.  The force from Lake Ontario would be the next to fail.  Upon reaching Fort Schuyler, the British commander, Barry St. Leger, decided to besiege the fort rather than bypass it and leave the sizable garrison in his rear.  As the Americans hunkered down, a militia force was dispatched to lift the siege.  The American militia was ambushed near the fort by a mixed force of British Loyalists and Indian allies.  The following Battle of Oriskany was devastating as hundreds of militiamen fell fighting their Loyalist families and neighbors, while the Iroquois Confederacy was torn apart as British and American allied tribes fought each other.  Though St. Leger’s force beat off the force sent to relieve the fort, the siege was making no progress, and with more American reinforcements approaching, he lifted the siege and retreated.  This left only one British force marching to take Albany.  The northern force would be stopped north of Albany and destroyed at the pivotal battle of Saratoga, giving the Americans the upper hand in the War of Independence.

 
Gallery in the visitor center displaying artifacts from participants in the siege of Fort Schuyler and Battle of Oriskany

THE MONUMENT:

               Fort Stanwix National Monument as is as seen today, was constructed by the city of Rome, New York and the National Park Service.  The fort is accurate to its appearance during the American War of Independence when it was known as Fort Schuyler.  The modern fort lies on a large plot of land at the center of Rome, New York, and is in the shape of a square with four diamond shaped bastions at each corner.  The fort is constructed entirely of earthen ramparts and wood, with its interior buildings furnished with reproduction items.  The visitor center is a short distance from the fort and contains exhibits with items from people associated with events at Fort Stanwix and Oriskany, as well as several short films.

 
Interior of the fort as seen from the southeast bastion

TRAVEL TIPS:

               Fort Stanwix National Monument is easily accessible, located at the center of the town of Rome, New York.  There are no parking lots at the visitor center, though street parking is ample.  The fort is open from 9am to 5pm from April through October, closing at 4pm in November, and closed from December through March, though the visitor center is open in the winter months.  Tours of the fort are self-guided, though Ranger led tours are available twice daily.  It is recommended to view all the exhibits in the visitor center before going on a Ranger led tour.  Reenactors are a common sight and visitors are advised to check the fort’s schedule for upcoming reenactor events.  For those interested in the Battle of Oriskany, the battlefield is a short drive away and is now a New York State Park.

ADDITIONAL PHOTOS:
A replica of an encampment in the fort's ditch

Interior of the fort

A group of reenactors practice artillery drills

The storeroom under the southwest bastion that served as a hospital during the siege

Interior of one of the fort's barracks

The interior of the Suttler's store
A view looking along the line of barracks from the Suttler's Store to the north wall.

Monday, October 16, 2017

18. Antietam National Battlefield, Maryland


               Hello and welcome back to our blog.  In this installment, we will be visiting the location of the single bloodiest day in U.S. history, Antietam National Battlefield.
 
Entrance Sign


BACKGROUND:
               In the late summer of 1862, the Confederacy seemed to have the upper hand in the Civil War following a string of Union defeats in Virginia.  Confederate General Robert E. Lee decided to press his advantage and stage an incursion into the North.  Meanwhile in Washington D.C., President Lincoln was desperate for a win.  A decree, the Emancipation Proclamation which would free the slaves of all States in rebellion and whose announcement would clearly define the goals of the war, lay languishing on his desk.  The Proclamation would be useless unless the Union could prove it could defeat the Confederates.
               In September, Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia crossed the Potomac river into Maryland.  The Union Army, under the command of George B. McClellan, who had been humiliated in combat by Lee around Richmond fired from command of the army by Lincoln once before already, raced to meet them.  The two armies engaged just outside the small town of Sharpsburg along the banks of the Antietam Creek.
               With the Confederates deployed on the western side of the creek, it was up to the Union to attack and drive the Confederates back into southern territory.  On the morning of September 17th, Union forces assaulted the Confederate line north of Sharpsburg.  The first attack struck the left of the Confederate line.  Fighting raged across several wooded areas and a cornfield.  For hours both sides attacked and counterattacked, and by the end of the day, the cornfield, like so many of the men who charged across it, had been completely cut down.
The cornfield today, with a monument to the Vermont contingent of the 2nd U.S. Sharpshooter Regiment in the foreground.

               McClellan then shifted his attack against the center of the Confederate line.  Here however, the Confederates lay in wait along a sunken road which formed a makeshift trench where they could take cover from enemy fire.  Wave after wave of Union troops attacked the road, including the new “Irish Brigade,” but all were repulsed with mounting casualties until at last the road was flanked by a Union unit and suddenly it became a deathtrap for the Confederates.  The road was taken at great cost, and was known thereafter as “Bloody Lane.”
"Bloody Lane" as seen from a 1920s Army observation tower.  The sunken lane lies between the two fences, and Union forces attacked from the right of the photo.

               The battle now entered its third phase with the Union attack now shifting once again to the right of the Confederate line.  Here Union troops had not crossed Antietam Creek yet, and found their way across a single narrow bridge blocked by Confederates on the bluff above it.  The Union commander of the troops attacking in this sector, Ambrose Burnside (namesake of term “sideburns”) stubbornly kept sending his men across the narrow bridge despite the creek only being knee deep.  Union troops were needlessly slaughtered, though they eventually took the bridge.  Burnside then attacked up the bluff and threw the Confederates back.  It looked as though Lee and his army might be on the verge of destruction when suddenly, fresh Confederate reinforcements who had marched twenty miles from Harpers Ferry crashed into the Union advance.
Burnside Bridge as seen from the Confederate position atop the bluff.

               The day ended in a tactical stalemate, but Lee withdrew into Virginia ending his invasion of the North.  Lincoln used his withdrawal as enough of a victory to justify issuing the Emancipation Proclamation.  Antietam had however become the bloodiest day in American history, with more Americans killed than either Pearl Harbor, D-Day, or 9/11, and more casualties than the entirety of the country’s previous conflict, the Mexican War, alone.  The high casualty total was a mitigating factor in Lincoln firing McClellan (again), and replacing him with Ambrose Burnside, who would lead the Army of the Potomac to disaster in December at the Battle of Fredericksburg.


Map of Antietam National Battlefield.  The areas shaded in green are the lands preserved by the National Park Service.  The colored arrows represent the different attacks staged during the fighting.  The red highlights stand for important battlefield locations (Dunker Church, Bloody Lane, and Burnside Bridge).


THE BATTLEFIELD:
               Antietam National Battlefield preserves tracts of land over which the battle of Antietam was fought in 1862.  The area around Antietam is still very rural, despite being relatively close to the District of Columbia metro area.  The town of Sharpsburg is still small and few houses encroach on the battlefield.  The land is virtually in the same condition as it was in 1862.  Many memorials to both sides dot the park, but the battlefield is not saturated with them, unlike Gettysburg.
               The visitor center is located near the center of the battlefield, across the road from the Dunker Church, a chapel made famous from a photo of Confederate artillerymen lying dead in front of it.  The visitor center includes a gallery with artifacts from the battle, a short film, a gift shop, and an observation deck.
Cannon placed in the positions they would have occupied during the battle at the center of the Confederate line with the famous Dunker Church in the background.

               To the North is the famous cornfield, now fully regrown and managed every year as part of the battlefield.  Toward the center of the battlefield, past the Dunker Church and the visitor center is “Bloody Lane,” now no longer an actual road.  At the end of the lane is a stone observation tower built by the army in the 1920s when they were performing training exercises in the area, which provides a superb view of the surrounding terrain.  Farther to the south is Burnside Bridge, closed to road traffic but still intact after over one hundred and fifty years, and Antietam National Cemetery, where many of the dead from the battle are interred.  Separated from the main portion of the battlefield is the Pry House, which served as Union headquarters during the battle.  The house is on a hill above Antietam Creek, two miles distant from the visitor center, and the northern and center sections of the battlefield can be seen from it.  The house now contains a museum on Civil War medical practices.
 
The Pry House, which served as Union Headquarters
TRAVEL TIPS:
               Antietam National Battlefield is located roughly twenty to twenty-five minutes south of Hagerstown, Maryland, and about an hour and a half drive from Washington D.C.  It is recommended to come in warmer months in order to view the battlefield as closely as it would have appeared in 1862.  The brochure map includes a driving tour around the battlefield that includes the landscape’s most famous landmarks.  Most park facilities are handicapped accessible, with the notable exception of the observation tower.  The battlefield and visitor center are open year-round with major holiday exceptions from 9am to 5pm, and a small fee is required for entry to the park.  Ranger programs are scheduled regularly and reenactor groups are a common sight.

ADDITIONAL PHOTOS:
The bell of the Aircraft Carrier U.S.S. Antietam on display outside the visitor center.

The Maryland Monument near the Dunker Church and visitor center.  Maryland, a slave state that remained loyal to Union, tragically had native sons fighting for both sides.

The distant view of the battlefield from the Pry House.  The white speck at the center of the photo is the visitor center two miles away.

Artifacts from both Union and Confederate participants on display in the visitor center.

A group of Confederate reenactors conducts an artillery demonstration near the Maryland Monument.

Thursday, October 5, 2017

17. John Fitzgerald Kennedy National Historic Site, Massachusetts


               Welcome back to our blog!  In this post, we will be visiting another location associated with a President, John F. Kennedy National Historic Site.

 
Entrance sign

BACKGROUND:

               In 1914, newlyweds Joseph and Rose Kennedy purchased a house in the Boston suburb of Brookline.  The two were members of prominent local political families, Joseph’s father a member of the Massachusetts Legislature, Rose’s father the mayor of Boston.  The two would found a political dynasty, with Joseph determined that one of his sons become the first Catholic President of the United States.  The son that would fulfill his ambitions, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, was born in 1917 at their house in Brookline.
Exterior of the Kennedy house


               Many years later, after having risen to wealth and political success, Rose Kennedy would return to their first home in Brookline with a mission.  After the assassination of President Kennedy in 1963, his mother set about purchasing the home he was born in and restoring it to its original appearance at the time of his birth.  After completing the project, she donated the house to the National Park Service.

 
The second floor bedroom where President Kennedy was born

THE SITE:

               John Fitzgerald Kennedy National Historic Site is located at 83 Beals Street in Brookline, Massachusetts.  The site consists solely of the house where the Kennedys lived from 1914 to 1920, and is the third smallest NPS unit in the country.  The interior of the house was restored by Mrs. Rose Kennedy at her personal expense and from her own memories in the 1960s.  The ground floor and second floor are the restored sections of the house while there is a small visitor center in the basement.

 
The dining room of the Kennedy house.  Many of them items in this room were still in possession of the family and donated by the President's mother.

TRAVEL TIPS:

               John Fitzgerald Kennedy National Historic Site is located within a residential area of Brookline, Massachusetts.  As such, there is no parking lot and visitors will need to park on the street.  The house is open from 9:30am-5:00pm in the summer, by appointment only in the winter.  Guided tours of the house run every half hour.  There is also a cell phone tour.  The site is not handicapped accessible.  Passport stamps and a short film are located in the basement visitor center.  The park brochure also includes a walking tour of sites related to the Kennedy family in the neighborhood.
ADDITIONAL PHOTOS:
A memorial on the front lawn marking the house as the birthplace of President Kennedy

The house's parlor, restored by Mrs. Rose Kennedy, the President's mother

Mrs. Rose Kennedy's office on the second floor

Monday, September 18, 2017

16. Appomattox Court House National Historical Park, Virginia

             Hello, and welcome back to our blog on the National Park Service.  In this post, we visit the place where the Civil War effectively came to an end, and the difficult process of reuniting the country began, at Appomattox Court House National Historical Park.



Entrance Sign


BACKGROUND:


               At the beginning of April, 1865, the Confederate States of America, which had been fighting for the previous four years to break off from the United States, teetered on the brink of destruction.  Locked in mortal combat with the Army of the Potomac lead by Ulysses S. Grant, Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia could no longer hold the vital railroad hub of Petersburg, Virginia, which kept the Confederate capital of Richmond supplied.  With his troops starving and demoralized, Lee led his men on a desperate retreat to the west along the Appomattox River, the Union army right behind them. 


For six days, the Confederates kept one step ahead of their pursuers until reaching the small village of Appomattox Courthouse.  On the morning of April 9th, the Confederates found their path to the nearby rail stop of Appomattox Station, where a supply train waited for them, blocked by Union forces that had managed to outpace them.  A small engagement ensued, the Confederates hoping to beat off the Union forces, but additional Unions troops arrived from two different directions.  Pressed on three sides by overwhelming Union forces, Lee called together his commanders to discuss their options.  It was agreed that further resistance was pointless and result in needless bloodshed.  Lee sent out a rider to Union lines under a flag of truce to ask General Grant to a meeting.  Grant and many of his staff headed into Appomattox for the fateful parley.



The village of Appomattox Court House


The two met at the home of Wilmer McLean, who in 1861 had moved his family away from the area of Manassas, Virginia after the first major battle of the Civil War, Bull Run, raged over his property.  The war would end in his parlor.  Grant and Lee met, engaging in a long discussion of times before the war, before finally agreeing on the terms of surrender.  Lee, who went into the meeting fearing he and many of his men would be arrested and eventually executed for treason, was shocked at Grant’s generous terms.  Rather than seeking vengeance, Grant agreed with President Lincoln’s wishes for reconciliation, and allowed the defeated Confederates to retain their horses, some officers even their weapons, only for the promise to simply go home.


The parlor of Wilmer McLean, where the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia was signed.



Three days later a formal surrender was held.  As Confederates marched past the victorious Union soldiers, one of the Union commanders, Joshua Chamberlain, suddenly ordered his men to salute.  In response, a stunned Confederate General, John B. Gordon ordered his men to return it, a small gesture of respect on the road to reconciliation.  The Confederates then stacked their muskets, rolled up their flags, and went home.

While other Confederate forces remained in the field, total capitulation was now only a matter of time.  The last battle of the Civil War was fought in May, ironically a Confederate victory, with the last foot soldiers surrendering in June (a rogue Confederate ship not surrendering until November), the Civil War was effectively over.




THE PARK:

Located a little over ninety miles west of Richmond, the village of Appomattox Court House would undergo few changes over the years, remaining almost a time capsule of 1865.  The McLean house where the surrender was signed suffered several indignities, the first of which was the theft of the furniture in the McLean parlor by Union officers as souvenirs.  Fortunately, the furniture made its way into the safekeeping of the Smithsonian, but the McLean house was not as lucky, being dismantled in the 1890s as part of a plan to move it Washington D.C., but it instead lay in a jumbled pile until being reassembled in the 1930s after the remains of the village were given over to the National Park Service.


The exterior of the McLean house.

The current established park covers a large area surrounding the small village around the historical Appomattox Court House that preserves the village and the final battlefields.  The village is today completely uninhabited and all buildings are preserved by the National Park Service in order to keep the village as close as possible to its 1865 appearance.  The village lies along the remnants of the Richmond-Lynchburg Stage Road, which was converted to Route 24 and whose modern course now curves around the village.  It was along this stage Road that the Confederates marched during the surrender ceremony on April 12th.  The epicenter of the park is the village itself, centered on the historic court house, which is now the visitor center and houses a short film and several exhibits.  Directly across from the court house is the McLean house, where the surrender was signed.  The house has been restored to its 1865 appearance and is fully open to the public.  Several other buildings in the historic village house exhibits on daily life in the village and the legacy of the Civil War.  The kitchen to the town tavern is now the park bookstore and gift shop.  There are only a handful of monuments on the grounds, unlike most Civil War battlefields, and just west of town is a small cemetery holding the remains of eighteen Confederate and one Union soldiers who fell in the final engagement.

The small cemetery at Appomattox.

TRAVEL TIPS:

               Appomattox Court House National Historical Park is open year-round from 9am to 5pm, with certain holiday exceptions.  While open in the winter, it is generally recommended to visit the park in Spring or Summer to witness conditions similar to those at the time of the surrender, and also to easily walk the grounds.  The McLean house is open at all times for self-guided tours, although a Ranger or Volunteer will be present in the house.  The rest of the village is also open to self-guided tours, with Ranger programs available at scheduled times.  Reenactors and living history interpreters are also a common sight.  Handicapped accessibility at the park, particularly in the historic structures, is limited.  Passport stamps can be found at the bookstore.

The titular Appomattox Court House, which now serves as the visitor center.

               We hope you enjoyed this brief summary of Appomattox Court House National Historical Park.  For our next post, we will be visiting the birthplace of a President, John F. Kennedy National Historic Site.

PERSONAL NOTE:
               Visiting Appomattox National Historical Park was of special significance for us.  A relation of one of the authors served as a Private in the Union Army, Co. K 158th New York Infantry, XXIV Corps, Army of the James, one of the units deployed during the final skirmish at Appomattox Court House, and was likely a witness to the momentous events of April 9th, 1865.

ADDITIONAL PHOTOS:
The original furniture from the McLean parlor, which was stolen by Union officers following the surrender, now on display at the Smithsonian Institution.

The dining room of the restored McLean house

The former Richmond-Lynchburg Stage Road, along which the Confederate army marched during the formal surrender.

The spot along the Richmond-Lynchburg Stage Road purported to be the location of the salute between Chamberlain and Gordon during the formal surrender.

A location nearby the above photo marking the spot of a second meeting between Lee and Grant the day after the surrender to discuss additional terms

A second view of a portion of the village.

Taken from a spot near the small cemetery, the treeline is  approximate location of where Union reinforcements arrived during the Battle of Appomattox Court House.  The appearance of these fresh Union troops  essentially ended the battle.  The regiment of which the author's relative belonged to would have deployed toward the right side of the photo along the treeline.