(National Park Service) |
After a
four-year absence, the Grand Illumination returns this weekend to Corinth, Ms.,
an event that will combine a Civil War memorial and merchants holding their
first holiday open house of the season.
Events
Saturday and Sunday include period music by Bobby Horton, living histories,
tours of Civil War-era homes and infantry firing demonstrations. See the schedule here.
(NPS photo) |
“You think
about 12,000 casualties. It is hard to comprehend,” said Ashley Berry, Shiloh
supervisory park ranger. “When you stand on the hill, looking downtown … it is
breathtaking and puts it into perspective.”
One sight
sure to turn heads will feature two camels and the 16th Alabama
Infantry re-enactor group. The 16th will be portraying the 43rd
Mississippi Infantry, which fought at Corinth and Iuka and was trapped in the Union siege of Vicksburg. A camel dubbed Old Douglas carried baggage and musical
instruments for the regiment.
Doug Baum of
the Texas Camel Corps will provide the beasts, which will have their own “hotel” and veterinarian, Berry
told the Picket. The interpretive center will "ring in" old Douglas with artifacts from the U.S. Camel Corps experiment, including the bell shown below.
(NPS photo) |
In a recent Facebook post, Shiloh Superintendent Dale Wilkerson wrote about Old Douglas' refusal to be tethered. "The loose ranging camel scared horses on several occasions, causing stampedes."
Alas, Old Douglas was killed by a Federal sharpshooter at Vicksburg, and legend has it that his famished human companions consumed his remains.
The timing of
the Grand Illumination, the last National Park Service centennial event for
Shiloh, was coordinated with the Corinth Area Convention & Visitors Bureau. (The Battle of Corinth occurred in
early October 1862).
Corinth Area Convention & Visitors Bureau) |
Christy Burns, the bureau’s executive director, has worked with Shiloh on getting about 120 volunteers needed to place and light the luminaries. The Grand Illumination, which also depends on donations, is returning largely because of an NPS grant, officials said.
“It fills all
of my tourism hats,” Burns said of the event. “All the boutique businesses are
having their first holiday open house that weekend.” She cited a list of new or
signature downtown businesses, including Blazing Noodlez and Borroum’s, the “oldest drug store in the
state (and) with great milkshakes.”
A view of Fillmore Street (CACVB) |
Besides events at the Corinth Civil War Interpretive Center, people can see Civil War-related items at the Crossroads Museum at the old depot and visit the antebellum Verandah and Duncan houses.
“Christmas decorations
are going up as we speak,” said Burns. “Our downtown is another jewel we are
trying to sell as one unit.”
The bureau
touts industry and businesses that employ many of the northeastern Mississippi
city’s 15,000 residents. “History is only half our story,” Burns said. Major
employers include the hospital, Caterpillar and Kimberly-Clark.
(NPS photo) |
The NPS
interpretive center in Corinth is 12 years old. It’s about a half hour drive from
the Shiloh battlefield in Tennessee. It’s designed to be the starting point for
those wanting to learn about the action at both Corinth and Shiloh. It also
tells the broad story of the war’s causes, impact and significance today, said
Berry.
She said a
large number of slaves flocked to Corinth after President Abraham Lincoln
issued a preliminary Emancipation Proclamation in September 1862.
A contraband camp was established in
Corinth and its hospitals, churches and schools served about 6,000 African-Americans
until January 1864, when the Union army moved its headquarters to Memphis,
Tenn.
Berry said
the Friends of the Siege and Battle of Corinth works to
preserve Civil War sites “scattered around town.” The city was a strategic
railroad hub for the Confederacy, and the Federal army meant to control the
crossroads.
The siege and
battle were two separate events. Federal troops laid siege to the town in late
April 1862 (a few weeks after the clash at Shiloh), eventually forcing the
outnumbered Confederate Gen. P.G.T. Beauregard to withdraw. Rebel units marched
on Corinth in early October, only to be defeated.
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