(Photo courtesy of the Civil War Trust) |
The Civil War
Trust two years ago pledged to restore the site of Confederate Gen. Robert E.
Lee’s headquarters at Gettysburg as much as possible to its July 1863
appearance when a maelstrom of war descended on the property.
The widow
Mary Thompson would be proud. Her love for a dog and flowers have been restored
for posterity.
This Friday,
visitors will be able to see the exacting detail rendered in an ambitious $6
million project that included the razing of a motel and restaurant, the
building of an interpretive trail and preservation of Thompson’s stone home.
Working from
Mathew Brady photographs taken shortly after the battle, crews built replicas
of an arbor and doghouse that were features of the small residence along
Chambersburg Pike, the Washington Post reported.
Doghouse above number 6 in top photo (Civil War Trust) |
The Civil War Trust, along with
other preservation groups, will have an 11:30 a.m. ribbon-cutting ceremony to
unveil all that’s been done on the 4-acre property.
Gary Adelman,
director of historian and education for the Trust, told the Gettysburg Daily
website that the transformation of the property will give Gettysburg visitors a
new appreciation of what occurred July 1, 1863, the first day of the momentous
battle.
Adelman says on a video: “Now that we can stand here
and not be standing in the bottom of a swimming pool, not with a putt-putt golf
course right over, here, not with a hotel complex literally surrounding us over
here -- we can now see what the soldier saw here on Seminary Ridge. This is the
last position to fall on July 1, 1863, in this part of the battlefield.”
The
Thompson home, built in about 1833, was co-owned by U.S. Rep. Thaddeus Stevens.
Thompson, about 70, lived across the road from one son (also part of the Trust
property); seven other children lived elsewhere.
The
Federal army used the area as a defensive position as hordes of Confederates
converged west of town. Among the units who held the ground for several vital
hours were the 143rd Pennsylvania, Battery B of the 4th U.S.
artillery and perhaps the 6th Wisconsin of the Iron Brigade.
Brig.
Gen. Alfred Scales said his North Carolinians “encountered a most terrific fire
of grape and shell on our flank, and grape and musketry on our front. Every
discharge made sad havoc in our line, but still we pressed on at a
double-quick.”
Widow Thompson may be figure at right (Library of Congress) |
There
was heavy fighting all around the house, leaving parts of the home’s wooden
fences trampled and windows shattered by gunfire. After the Yankees were pushed
back toward other positions (and a large surrender of U.S. troops in the
Railroad Cut), Lee set up his headquarters for the next two days. Tents
surrounded the Thompson home.
“This
is the site of the nerve center of the Confederate army during the battle,”
historian and Licensed Battlefield Guide Tim Smith told the Trust. There is some debate on whether Lee used the house or was in a tent nearby, Smith told Gettysburg Daily.
The
house was used to treat wounded soldiers, with the widow among those rendering
aid. Thompson died in 1873. According to the Trust, a longtime tenant was
arrested in 1907 for “keeping a bawdy house.”
Interestingly,
the property did not become part of Gettysburg National Military Park when
it was created in the 1890s. The home became a museum (1921) and was surrounded
by a motel and restaurant, virtually erasing any sense of its 1863 appearance.
Demolition of motel office (Civil War Trust) |
The
Trust in 2014 launched its fundraising effort to buy the property and museum
collection. The hotel and restaurant were demolished, parking lots were removed
and the property was regraded to more approximate its wartime appearance. The
house itself saw extensive restoration – inside and out -- and got a new roof.
New fences were built and trees planted.
Meg
Martin, communications manager for the Trust, told the Picket that the Thompson
house in the future will be open for special events. Visitors can walk the
grounds and interpretive trail.
Officials
would like for Lee’s headquarters to be managed one day by the National Park
Service.
“We
consulted with the Civil War Trust when they acquired the property and
were very pleased by their intentions to remove non-historic intrusions and
bring back missing features," said Katie Lawhon, a spokeswoman for Gettysburg National
Military Park.
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