Sunday, October 20, 2019
Cornfield relics can help in battlefield mapping at Maryland site
By using metal detectors and
ground-penetrating radar to locate artifacts, archaeologists in Maryland hope
to create a more comprehensive map of how each skirmish during the Battle of
South Mountain played out. As a result of their findings, a historic military
geographer will then be able to map out which roads and
areas the troops traveled through still exist and document them more fully. • Article
Sunday, October 6, 2019
Civil War-era bell passed down by family is back home in Appomattox
After almost
50 years spent in the basement of Ora McCoy’s Appomattox, Va., home, a family
bell passed down through five generations has found a new life ringing in
history along the East Coast. Originally unearthed for the commemoration of the
150th anniversary of General Robert E. Lee’s surrender at Appomattox Court
House in 2015, the bell found its way to other park ceremonies. McCoy’s
great-grandparents, Daniel and Phoebe Scruggs, once lived as slaves on the
Scruggs family farm in Appomattox. They have owned the bell since the Civil
War, passing it from hand to hand until it found its way to McCoy. In September, after a stint at the Fort Monroe
National Monument, the bell came home. • Article