The national nonprofit
recently announced it had closed on the property that belonged to the Hensley
family of Marietta, Ga., which previously sold 34 acres to the National Park Service in
2008.
George Dusenbury,
Georgia director for the TPL, said the NPS paid the fair market value of $2.58
million using funds from the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund.The parcel is north of Burnt Hickory Road.
“TPL worked in
partnership with NPS to complete the necessary property due diligence and
secure the federal funding needed for the acquisition,” he told the Picket.
The property is largely
meadow with some woods. A stream that flows through the property was
dammed in the 1950s to form a small pond; it will remain as a fire suppression
resource. The property is surrounded on three sides by land already owned
by the NPS.
The Battle of Kennesaw Mountain occurred on June, 27, 1864.
Union troops
that moved through the parcel were part of the extreme left of Logan’s XV
Corps, said Ray Hamel, park ranger and chief of interpretation at Kennesaw
Mountain. Troops serving under brigadier generals Harrow, Williams and Fuller
and the 64th Illinois skirmish line were among those present. (See Logan's, Harrow's and others' names at left, map courtesy American Battlefield Trust)
“Troops here
did not take part in the assault on Pigeon Hill,” said Hamel. “Confederate
defenses were east of the property. Nearest was a skirmish line of the 9th Texas."
The TPL said “The newly
acquired property, now under National Park Service ownership, safeguards not
only the rural, open character of the area but also any Civil War-related
archaeological resources that may lie beneath its surface."
The park said the acquisition "furthers the preservation of historically significant sections of the original battlefield from modern development."
The Picket
reached out to the Hensley family for comment but has not yet
received answers to questions about the transaction.
TheNational Park Foundation provided funding to assist with associated costs, such as
the demolition of an old
barn, said Dusenbury.
The park --
the most-heavily visited national battlefield in
the country -- recently commemorated the 161st anniversary of the
Atlanta Campaign battle in Cobb County.
Click to enlarge to see details of newly acquired tract in orange; park boundaries in green (TPL)
Charlie
Crawford, president emeritus of the Georgia Battlefields Association, told the
Picket, “We appreciate landowners
who are committed to preservation and will wait on the slow federal government
process for acquiring additional land for the National Park Service.”
The TPL said is goal is to help create a cohesive park that “supports
public exploration and learning.”
“This
acquisition isn’t just about adding acreage -- it’s about preventing the
fragmentation of this irreplaceable landscape and keeping it from being lost to
suburban development,” Dusenbury said in the announcement.
Kennesaw
Mountain National Battlefield spans 2,923 acres, including three battlefield
areas and 11 miles of preserved Civil War earthworks.
The TPL said its
land additions to the park include:
Early 2000s: Approximately 50 acres to expand park
access and continuity.
2008: Acquisition of 34 acres from the
Hensley family, featuring forests, fields and a lake.
2013: Addition of the 42-acre Hays farm,
home to Nodine’s Hill, with remnant Union entrenchments, rifle pits and cannon
placements.
Another view of the 21 acres recently added to the NPS park (TPL)
Sam Hensley,
a former Georgia legislator, once owned the land involved in both family
transactions. The property includes trenches built by Federal Maj. Gen. William
T. Sherman’s forces in June 1864.
“Our parents never let us forget that we stand
on hallowed ground. They always told us that it was never going to be developed
and that we would never see rooftops on this property,” said Sam Hensley Jr. during a ceremony in 2008 concerning the 34 acres. (Sam's brother Shuler is a notable Tony Award-winning actor and singer.)
“That became a very difficult thing to
accomplish over the years. There was not a week that went by that my father did
not have an unsolicited call from a developer or somebody that wanted to build
a subdivision out here.”
A plaque featuring two rows of 15 names has been added to the Civil War
memorial on the square in Jacksonville, Ill. Those named were
Black soldiers who fought for the Union,
almost all members of the U.S. Colored Troops. The more than
3,000 names on the memorial before the update included a few Black service
members — but some people noticed a gap. The 30 men whose names were
added served mostly with the Third Heavy Artillery and 29th Infantry.
-- Article
Note and display case holding the forearm bone, field that will hold grave (Historic Blakeley State Park) and Robert Knox Sneden map showing battle zones in and around Mobile (Library of Congress)
Early this
year, employees at a shop in Gettysburg pored through relics it purchased from
the family of a collector. Normally, such merchants in the Pennsylvania town
synonymous with Civil War collectibles might receive display cases containing a
belt buckle, bullets, unit badges or something rarer that turned up on a
battlefield.
But this one
was different, very different.
Tucked inside
a box protected by bubble wrap was a handwritten scrap of paper, reading: “Found
in Extreme Northern end of Union Army lines at Spanish Fort (near Basin
Batteries). December, 1973.”
The note
refers to the Federal siege and capture of Spanish Fort in April 1865. Back-to-back victories at Spanish Fort and Fort Blakeley led to the surrender of Mobile, Ala., a
vital Confederate port.
With the note
and in the box was a human bone -- part of a forearm.
The
Gettysburg shop, of course, had no intension of putting the relic up for sale.
What to do?
In this case, you contact a
subject matter expert for advice. If you live in southern Pennsylvania, that expert is Greg
Goodell, longtime museum curator at Gettysburg National Military Park.
After being contacted, Goodell acted as a middle man to ensure the bone would find a home and
be laid to rest in a respectful way.
The curator
contacted sites in the Mobile area, eventually reaching Mike Bunn, director of
Historic Blakely State Park, home to the Fort Blakeley battlefield. Bunn
stepped forward and said he would bury the bone in a field and place a granite
marker that reads “Unknown Soldier, Civil War.” (design at left)
Next to the
headstone will be an engraved interpretive plaque.
The
Gettysburg business sent the item to Alabama a couple months ago.
Bunn wants to
place the grave near a main park road and impressive remnants of Confederate defenses.
He anticipates a Veterans Day ceremony to dedicate the memorial.
“We know not
every person in the (Mobile) campaign has been found and marked,” Bunn told the Picket
of his aim to honor them.
There’s
plenty of mystery about the bone remaining, despite a story that appears to have a good ending.
The arm bone is believed to belong to a soldier, mostly likely Federal. What happened to the rest of him? No one knows. Officials see no need for DNA
testing of the remain at this point.
I asked
Gettysburg communications specialist Jason Martz how often such a thing has
happened at the federal park.
“In plus-20
years, it has happened fewer than five times,” Martz replied.
Federal siege paid off in two Alabama battles
Although Union Adm. David
Farragut had bottled up Mobile in summer 1864, the city remained in Confederate
hands.
Union troops, a third of which were U.S. Colored Troops
regiments, laid siege of Blakeley for about a week. A similar operation against
outnumbered Confederates took place at Spanish Fort, just to the south.
The forces under Federal Maj. Gen. Edward Canby (right) first surrounded
Spanish Fort on March 27, 1865. Most of the Confederate troops escaped to
Mobile or Blakeley and the fort fell on April 8.
Two Union commands
combined to storm Fort Blakeley the following day, unaware of Gen. Robert E.
Lee’s surrender in Virginia. They carried the field.
Confederates evacuated Mobile and the mayor surrendered the city on
April 12.
The Union lines at Spanish Fort were mostly to the east and
north of the Rebel defenses.
Most of the battlefield lies within Spanish Fort Estates, a
large residential community dating to the late 1950s and early 1960s. While
most of the fortifications are gone, there are several discernible lines of
breastworks running through front yards.
Bunn said he believes the forearm bone was found by a relic
hunter in or near a Federal trench at Spanish Fort with other artifacts. The
park director (below) said he does not know the finder’s name but believes he died
several years ago. “He had a pretty big collection.”
A water artillery battery near the end of the Yankee line was
in swampy ground at a body of water called Bay Minette. “All of that stuff is gone,” Bunn said
of this part of the siege line.
Relic hunters frequently pored over the area, which is on
private land, as the subdivision was built in stages.
The paper indicates the bone discovery in December 1973. “I can’t confirm all the details, but I don’t believe the
section this came from was developed at the time. Probably dug as they were
clearing land for it, though,” Bunn added.
It’s possible the bone was part of a mass
grave. Bunn doesn’t know whether the rest of the skeleton was left intact,
scattered by animals or taken by other collectors.
Relic hunters today are more likely to report
human remains or leave them in place, officials said. “At least they did not chuck it. I am
sure others have,” Bunn told the Picket of this bone.
Bunn said the
exact circumstances regarding the bone and its precise location are impossible
at this point to pin down.
Siege operations at Spanish Fort, note map is not displayed north-south (Library of Congress)
“If it was a
burial, it probably would have been a shallow grave.” Circumstantial evidence
points to a Federal soldier, though the U.S. military after the war worked
diligently to relocate such remains to new national cemeteries.
“There could
be a chance he was a Confederate,” said Bunn.
Shop knew the park service would have an answer
Martz, with
Gettysburg National Military Park, said the local business – which he and Bunn
did not identify -- had a conversation with Goodell (below) after the discovery.
“The shop was
basically in a position to be a good Samaritan and didn’t know what to do with”
the bone, Martz told the Picket.
“When someone
in the position of the local shop doesn’t know where to start, they start with
an organization like the National Park Service. It is easily one of the most
recognizable and trusted organizations in the country come to,” he said.
In this case,
there was no need to go to law enforcement.
Martz
described the man who had the bone as an avid Civil War artifacts/relics
collector. “When he passes, the family doesn’t know what to do with a
collection. They find a reputable shop.”
Then the
shop’s inventory process begins.
“They start
to go through it piece by piece. ‘Oh wait a minute.’ There is one extra thing
they are not comfortable with.”
Nothing in
this case has any connection with NAGPRA “as far as we know,” said Martz.
The takeaway
is the Gettysburg shop did the best thing by reaching out to Goodell so the
bone could be sent to the best place – Alabama, said the park spokesman.
Remains not eligible for state veterans cemetery
Bunn turned
to the Historic Blakely Foundation and a GoFund me campaign to raise money for
the headstone and plaque. So far, $350 of the estimated $600 expense has been
raised.
The new grave
will be in a field that holds a cemetery that dates to 1819. It will be in a
separate area and will be viewable from the road. Bunn expects a ceremony in
November, with a gun salute and presence of a U.S. flag. “It is a long overdue,
proper respect,” he added.
The state cemetery contains about 5,000 graves (Alabama Dept. of Veterans Affairs)
The park
director consulted with Joseph Buschell, director at the nearby Alabama State Veterans Memorial Cemetery in Spanish Fort. Alabama operates the location because the U.S. cemetery in Mobile is closed to new interments
and the closest national cemeteries are in Biloxi, Ms., and at Barrancas near Pensacola,
Fla., each more than 70 miles away.
The Spanish Fort cemetery would not have been able to accept the
remains without a name and proof of military service, including an honorable
discharge, Buschell said.
On behalf of
Historic Blakeley, Buschell contacted a company in Pensacola to make a
government-grade marker. “It is assumed to be a soldier.”
Regarding
Bunn, Buschell told the Picket: “I think what he is going to do with this is
pretty noble.”
Cunningham Farm wall remnants (Chuck Laudner/ABT), Gens. John Buford and WHF "Rooney" Lee; 8th Illinois Cavalry attack along Beverly's Ford Road at Brandy Station (Keith Rocco/ABT)
A low stone wall that separated two 19th-century farms in Brandy Station, Va., is
remarkably intact today, despite being worn by time and a mammoth cavalry clash
that signaled the beginning of the Gettysburg campaign.
It was here
on June 9, 1863, where Union Brig. Gen. John Buford tried to turn the Confederate left flank. Brig. Gen. William Henry
Fitzhugh "Rooney" Lee, son of Gen. Robert E. Lee, had no intention of
allowing Buford's maneuver to succeed. Lee’s horsemen stubbornly fought off
repeated assaults for five hours, stalling the Federal advance.
The site of their pitched fighting is on preserved ground that the
American Battlefield Trust (ABT) will donate to the state for its burgeoning
Culpeper Battlefields State Park, which will be made up of several parcels in
Northern Virginia.
The trust, Friends of Culpeper Battlefields, the Brandy Station Foundation, Friends of Cedar Mountain Battlefield and other groups have worked
for decades to save and interpret imperiled Civil War battlefields in Culpeper
County. They are Brandy Station, Cedar Mountain, Kelly’s Ford, Rappahannock
Station and Hansbrough's
Ridge.
About
263 acres centered at the crest of Fleetwood Hill at Brandy Station were the
first donated to the state.
While the
state park opened a year ago, development is still in its embryonic stage.
Staff is being hired to develop a master plan. Drew Gruber (left), former executive
director of Civil War Trails, was recently hired as the park's first manager.
The ABT –
which will be chief steward of the properties until 2027 -- plans to make several additional donations to the Commonwealth over the next couple years, said Jim
Campi, chief policy and communications officer.
“I think it is one of our biggest accomplishments by far,”
Campi said of the land
preservation organization’s efforts in Culpeper County.
Ultimately,
he said, visitors will be able to enjoy Brandy Station through a wide array of
transportation – on foot, horseback, bicycle and canoe or kayak.
The ABT and
the state hope the new park units and ensuing visitation will provide a boost
to the local economy. Culpeper is nestled between Cedar Mountain and Brandy
Station. “Downtown Culpeper is part of the Civil War story, anyway,” said
Campi.
Click map to get a closer view of planned state park properties (American Battlefield Trust)
“Where else can you stand in the footsteps of soldiers,
follow cavalry charges on horseback or paddle the battle?” Gruber said in a news release about his hiring. “This park already offers a unique set of
experiences for visitors of all ages and interests, and I am excited to share
these gifts with our guests.”
43rd state park in Virginia a rare foray into history
Greg Mertz,
vice president of the Brandy Station Foundation, said local groups are
committed to supporting the state park in the long haul, whether through
volunteering, fundraising or participating in special events.
That
commitment was a big draw for Gov. Glenn Youngkin and the Virginia General
Assembly when they first appropriated funds in 2022.
A pair of cannons at Cedar Mountain (Matthew Hartwig/American Battlefield Trust)
“We have been
told that one of the reasons why the Culpeper Battlefields State Park
has come into being before some other equally deserving new state park
proposals is because of the number of friends groups and partners willing to
both advocate for the park and help out with volunteers,” Mertz told the Picket
in an email.
Campi said Virginia's park system "is mostly about managing natural parks and wildernesses,” so
this Civil War site will indicate a new effort to convey the Commonwealth’s
rich history. Culpeper will be the state's 43rd park and encompass about 2,200 acres.
While many
portions of the Cedar Mountain and Brandy Station battlefields have been open
to the public for years, including trails, the Fleetwood Hill unit of the
Brandy Station battlefield is the only portion of
the Culpeper Battlefields State Park that is currently open to the
public, said Mertz.
Interpretation at Brandy Station's Fleetwood Hill sector (American Battlefield Trust)
Public hearing will spotlight cool features
The ABT,
working with the Brandy Station Foundation and other partners, is engaged in a
yearlong cultural landscape study that will help inform the state’s master plan.
Campi said
this study focused on a portion of the Brandy Station battlefield, including St. James Church and Elkwood. “We have identified some pretty interesting
archaeological resources we are going to identify publicly,” he said.
Those
features include an old road and cemeteries. The stone wall that separated the Cunningham
and Green farms will be among discussion points at a June 24 evening program in
Culpeper about the study.
An ABT marker
about fighting at the Cunningham farm details the action. (Above, American Battlefield Trust map of Brandy Station. See top to see where Buford and Lee clashed)
“Rooney Lee was a skilled fighter and used the terrain well. First, he
blocked Buford's progress by the stone
wall 500 yards in front of you.
“From his command post on the knoll behind you, Buford saw that a
portion of Lee's dismounted regiments were placed between Ruffans Run and the
Hazel River (to your left and right respectively). Two unlimbered cannon were
located on the other side of the hill behind the stone wall. Since the
disposition of the enemy and the channels of the two water courses left him no
alternative, Buford launched several mounted and dismounted charges against the
wall. Blistering fire from Lee's brigade held the Federals back for several
hours.”
Rooney Lee’s cavaliers eventually left the field as an additional Federal
cavalry force entered the fray. Casualties at and near the stone wall were
significant.
U.S. cavalry earned their stripes at Brandy Station
The Friends of Culpeper Battlefields provides details on Brandy
Station, Cedar Mountain, Rappahannock Station and Kelly’s Ford at this page. Cedar Mountain is famous
for Confederate Maj. Gen. Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson’s August
1862 victory over Federal forces led by Maj. Gen. Nathaniel Banks. This battle shifted fighting in Virginia from the Peninsula
to Northern Virginia, giving Lee the initiative, according to the National Park
Service.
The NPS says this about Brandy Station:
“Enduring a narrow defeat and forced to
withdraw, the Union force did not succeed in their mission to stop the
Confederate advance. However, for the Union cavalry, the confidence and
experience they gained at Brandy Station would prove invaluable four weeks
later at a battlefield in southern Pennsylvania called Gettysburg.”
“It is just
picturesque. It is beautiful,” Campi said of Brandy Station. Fleetwood Hill is
just stunning.” He mentions the role of Beverly’s Ford Road, which is still
unpaved in the battlefield. He also touts the important of archaeology work at
Hansbrough’s Ridge.
Rappahannock
Station witnessed fighting in 1862 and 1863. Some battleground has been lost to
residential development.
These walls do talk. Will state take over Graffiti House?
Mertz, with the Brandy Station Foundation and a retired supervisory
historian at the National Park Service, said besides owning parcels of land at
Brandy Station and Kelly’s Ford, the nonprofit owns the Graffiti House (left), which is open Saturdays from 12 p.m.-4
p.m. from mid-March to early December.
“Walls in the
1858 building-- which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places -- contain
Civil War graffiti,” he said.
“The charcoal graffiti includes signatures, unit
designations, dates, drawings and messages written by both Federal and
Confederate soldiers.”
Mertz believes
future master planning by the state could look at whether the house should be
part of the park. “We envision that the options for ownership and operation of
the Graffiti House vary from the BSF retaining both, the state taking over
both, the state taking ownership but the BSF continues to run the operations.”
Hansbrough's
Ridge -- scene of a small engagement during the battle of Brandy Station as
well as a site from the Federal winter encampment of 1863-64 – will require extensive
planning to provide visitor access and still preserve the resources on the site,
Mertz added.
View from Hansbrough's Ridge captures beauty, development (Peter Giraudeau/American Battlefield Trust)
Coming up with the right master plan is key
The ABT said
it and other groups worked together to stave off much of the development that
would take in battlefield land.
“At various
times, pieces of land that we are now gifting to the Commonwealth of Virginia
were slated to become housing tracts, industrial parks, water retention and
management areas — even a Formula One racetrack,” it says. (Below, American Battlefield Trust map of parcels at Brandy station; click to enlarge)
State and
private money are crucial to protecting more land as the development wave
continues, said Campi, adding it’s important for the public to have access to
history.
“We think
this is going to add so much tourism potential,” said of the state moving in
with a deeper budget and staffing than the advocacy groups. “We expect to see
that explode in the next decade.”
Coming up
with the master plan will take a few years as the state determines what it can
open and what is vulnerable and needs extra protection.
Wood from high school bleachers adorn lobby area; banners will be featured in exhibits (Sultana Disaster Museum)
John Fogleman
grew up in Marion, Ark., three blocks from the high school gymnasium-auditorium
his grandfather helped dedicate in 1939 near the end of the Great Depression.
Fogleman -- president
of the Sultana Historical Preservation Society, which is building a new museum
about a Civil War maritime disaster that occurred near the town -- routinely walked
to the gym to watch basketball games and attend plays and pep rallies. He
played guard for the junior high and high school hoops teams.
“My memory is
that the gym was always packed with people (probably not in reality),” he said.
“It was much like a scene from ‘Hoosiers.’”
Fogleman’s
and other alumni’s memories will live on as the Sultana Disaster Museum
continues to take shape in the old multiuse building. Recent construction has used part
of the 500-seat bleachers to decorate walls in the lobby area outside what will be the main exhibit area. (Below, Fogleman during a 1969 game at Marion High School)
“Generations
of high school students … were in that gym. (Some) of our board members played
on the basketball team,” museum director executive director Jeff Kollath told
the Daily Memphian podcast last month.
The relocated museum, which spotlights the burning and sinking of the side-wheel steamboat Sultana, will feature a space dedicated to the story of the gym and the old high
school. Visitors will see photos of basketball teams, letter jackets and
cheerleader uniforms, Kollath told the Picket in an email.
The current Marion high school is in another part of the
bedroom community, which is across the Mississippi River from Memphis, Tenn. The gym is
the only part of the old high school to survive.
Crews are
building a more dynamic Sultana
Disaster Museum than the current small location a few blocks away. Marion, close to where the Sultana caught fire in the Mississippi,
will honor soldiers who died in the disaster and residents who helped save
others who were plunged into the river in late April 1865.
About 1,200 passengers and crew perished. Hundreds of Federal
soldiers, many recently freed from Confederate prisons, including Andersonville
and Cahaba, were on their way home. Museum officials say the exhibits
will build off the full story of the Sultana, with information about the
importance of the river, Confederate POW camps, the bribery and corruption that
led to the overcrowding of the boat, the explosion and fire, and the creation
of the Sultana Survivors Association. The vessel’s boilers are considered
to be the main cause of the catastrophe.
Recalling the smell of popcorn and sweat
Harper's Weekly illustration of the conflagration (Library of Congress)
The state of Arkansas and the federal Public Works Administration built
the gymnasium-auditorium in 1938-1939. School board President J.F. Fogleman
presided over its dedication.
“Musical
selections were performed by the Marion and Earle Glee Clubs. Following the
program, three intrasquad games were played,” according to a brief history of
the venue.
“The structure is a handsome example of brick Moderne
architecture, with two faux stone entrances. It is single-story with large
window and minimal decoration, except for the bas-relief columns and arch
around the entrances and two sculptural scrolls along the central roof line. The interior of the gymnasium appears largely unchanged from its original
form.”
The gym got off to a notable start after it opened, hosting a February 1940
game between the Southwestern College Lynx of Memphis and the Louisiana State University Tigers.
The
University of Arkansas Razorbacks, on their way to what is now called the Final
Four, beat Southwestern at the Marion gym in December 1940. (At left, a May 1939 article on the dedication of the gym, click to enlarge)
This, of course, was before segregation, which came to
Crittenden County in 1970-1971. Until then, Black athletes played at Phelix School in nearby Sunset.
I asked Fogleman what happened to that gym. “It was
sold and it is more or less tearing itself down -- nature. It’s sad to see,” he
said.
Fogleman, 69 and a retired circuit court judge, said he gave his first
speech in the auditorium when he was in sixth grade.
“I remember
basketball practice as exhausting (line drills, and bleachers). When I go into
the main part of the gym, I am reminded of the smell of popcorn,” the 6-footer
wrote in an email.
“Prior to (demolition) work, when I entered the area that
will now house the administrative offices and the classroom I could still smell
a combination of sweat and liniment (Atomic Balm).”
Gym before 2022 construction began and a concert in the 1960s-70s (Sultana Disaster Museum)
The last high
school game in the building was 1974-75. A youth sports league played games in
the building until 2020.
The elementary school across the street also used the
building until 2020.
Fewer artifacts, more storytelling
While the
bleachers have been repurposed for a decorative element, the wooden floor
remains in the gym. Most of it will be covered by a large-scale version of the Sultana
and other exhibits, says Fogleman (right, below).
Kollath, who formerly led the Stax Museum of American Soul
Museum in Memphis, told the Daily Memphian the remains of the Sultana lie about
20 feet below a soybean field east of Marion, which has about 13,000 residents.
The permanent gallery about the Sultana disaster will open in
April 2026. The society and museum are still raising money to finish the
project. Unlike Stax, the Sultana Disaster Museum has few original items to display.
“It is not
going to be as artifact heavy as a lot of museums would be. But we have great
storytelling,” said Kollath.
Gene
Salecker, Sultana author, collector and museum supporter, has amassed a
large cache of items, many associated with disaster survivor associations and
their reunions.
The museum
will use modern technology and a scale replica of the 270-foot boat to tell the
story under the 35-foot ceiling of the old gym on Old Military Road.
The Sultana
had left Memphis and caught fire in the middle of the night, with its flaming
wreckage drifting to the Arkansas side.
The story of the Sultanaruns
deep in the blood of Judge Fogleman and his cousin Frank, who was Marion's mayor
for many years.
Their great-great-grandfather, John Fogleman -- after lashing
two or three logs together -- poled his way through the current of the
Mississippi River and toward survivors.
The Fogleman and Barton families, descendants of local men who were part of
that rescue effort, donated $100,000 for the project.
The new museum met another milestone recently, with its name
added to the gym’s exterior. (Photo Sultana Disaster Museum)
“We are the only museum in the world that will
have the word disaster in it,” quipped Kollath.
May 2025 photo of the gym interior, future site of permanent gallery (Sultana Disaster Museum)