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At right, Sam Huffman of the Civil War commission and planners Emily Huffer and Elizabeth Bulay (City of Franklin) |
The
announcement this week came ahead of a March 28 groundbreaking for a new
visitor center at the Carter House, which was in the center of the fierce
fighting.
The Federal trench line was crescent-shaped and anchored by the Harpeth River. The city’s
Civil War Historical Commission erected six markers this month, according to
preservation planner Emily Huffer.
The first two
markers were dedicated in November 2023 near the Carter House and Carter Hill Park, “a reclaimed Civil War
battlefield site where some of the heaviest fighting took place,” Kelly
Dannenfelser, assistant
director of long-range planning and historic preservation, told the Picket in
an email. Those markers
were funded by Save the Franklin Battlefield and the Battle of Franklin Trust.
Huffer said the markers, made of Indiana limestone and standing about 5 feet tall, are being placed on either side of 10 streets (20 markers total). They are labeled "U.S. Army Line."
“Using these markers as a reference point,
locals and visitors can visually identify where the forces were located to
better understand how the battle enveloped much of the central Franklin area
and to obtain a sense of how much the landscape has evolved since the time of
the Civil War,” Huffer wrote.
The Harpeth River served as the natural barrier for the entrenchment line. The US Army did not dig up the roads on the streets that the entrenchment line went through, only between each of the streets.
The Union soldiers were set up on the streets between the earthen mounds to protect Franklin citizens, she added.
The city is developing new software that integrates mapping,
historical documentation and brief descriptions of each site and location, planners said.
That is a project of the historic parks audio tour subcommittee of the Civil War Historical Commission.
Franklin, about 20 miles south of Nashville, has long been known for working to save or reclaim battlefield. (New marker, right)
The Civil War Trust (now known as the American
Battlefield Trust) worked with the city and nonprofit groups to do so
following decades of rampant development over battle sites.
”Today, well over a hundred acres of battlefield land have been reclaimed and preserved, often one acre at a time over a span of many years,” says the trust.
“In 2005, (a) Pizza Hut property was bought and restored
to its 1864 appearance. In 2012, the Civil War Trust and its partners secured
the strip mall, another acre and a half, and thus scored another major victory
in the historic journey to reclaim the heart of a battlefield that was once
considered lost forever. “
Franklin formed a Civil War advisory task force in the early 2000s, said Huffer. It suggested reproduction carriages for four authentic cannons on the Public Square and the establishment of U.S. trench line markers.
The
late Sam Gant was the driving force behind the latter.
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The visitor center, other buildings are behind the Carter House (Tenn. Historical Commission) |
Among the
most popular stories is of Tod Carter, a young Confederate mortally wounded 500
feet from his boyhood home. His family found the captain on the battlefield. “Dying and insensible, Tod was carried back to the Carter
House near dawn and set down in his sister Annie’s room. He died the next
day, just one of the nearly ten thousand family tragedies that the battle
wrought,” said the American Battlefield Trust.
The Tennessee Historical Commission said this week $8.5 million has been earmarked for the new Herbert Harper Visitor Center at the state site, which is managed by the Battle of Franklin Trust. The trust will sponsor interpretive exhibits.
The existing visitor center, which has been in use since the early
1980s, will be replaced by a new multiuse building designed to blend with its
surroundings.
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Map of main combat courtesy American Battlefield Trust (https://www.battlefields.org/) |
The loss at Franklin had a mighty influence on Confederate Gen. John Bell
Hood and his troops.
“The scale of the Confederate charge at Franklin rivaled that of Pickett’s Charge at Gettysburg. The action resulted in a disastrous defeat for the South and failed to prevent the Union army from advancing to Nashville,” said the American Battlefield Trust. “The fighting force of the South’s Army of Tennessee was severely diminished.”
Among the Southern generals killed were Patrick Cleburne, Hiram Granbury and States Rights Gist.
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The markers are visible along the right of way, from sidewalks (City of Franklin) |