The Wallis House about 13 years ago (Georgia Battlefields Association) |
Federal lawmakers
from Georgia are trying again to get Congress to add eight acres containing one
of the oldest remaining buildings on the Kennesaw Mountain battlefield to the Civil
War park.
U.S. Sen.
Johnny Isakson and others announced Thursday they have launched the fourth legislative
effort to enlarge Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park near Atlanta.
“Expanding the
Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park to include the Wallis House and
Harriston Hill will add to the historical significance of the park by giving
visitors an opportunity to experience key strategies and positions of troops
during the Civil War,” Isakson said in a statement. “I hope both the House and Senate will act
quickly to allow this expansion.”
(Courtesy of Georgia Battlefields Association) |
Park and
local officials are hoping the Wallis home, a dilapidated 1853 farmhouse that at
one point was in imminent danger of being demolished, will eventually be used
to more fully tell the story of Union strategy in the battle and perhaps the
role of African-Americans in the war. The clash was a costly, but brief setback during the Federal advance on Atlanta.
The
two-bedroom home, built by Josiah Wallis, had several uses during the Kennesaw
campaign in June 1864. It was first used as a Confederate hospital, then was
the headquarters for Union Maj. Gen. O.O. Howard. His boss, Maj. Gen. William
T. Sherman, was at the house during the Battle of Kolb’s Farm to the south.
“Adjacent to the Wallis house is Harriston Hill, which offers a
sweeping vista of the valley leading to the Confederate line atop Kennesaw
Mountain,” a National Park Service official said in 2010. “From this position,
it is clear why General Howard picked this site for his headquarters and
signaling position.”
Amanda Maddox, communications
director for Isakson, told the Marietta Daily Journal this week that the National Park
Service would need to spend about $1 million to restore the house and $1
million over the next five years for upkeep. Maddox
said lawmakers hope that $2 million will be raised by the community. She told the newspaper that the spending bill has come close to passing in previous congressional sessions.
The campaign
to save the house, give it permanent protection and have it help tell the story
of the battle during the Atlanta Campaign is a long one.
O.O. Howard |
Cobb County,
just northwest of Atlanta, for years saw an incredible housing boom and
development. While that was a boon for newcomers, preservationists and
historians decried the loss of Civil War sites or land to development.
The county,
working with the Georgia Civil War Commission and the Cobb Land Trust, spent $320,000
to buy the property in early 2004 so that 43 homes could not be built on it and
adjoining parcels, park Superintendent Nancy Walther told the Picket in 2016.
The park
needs congressional approval in order to expand its boundaries and accept the donation
of the house and hill from the county.
Several years
ago, then-Superintendent Stanley Bond helped lead a community effort to
recommend ways to increase African-American visitation to the park – and tell
the story of slaves, freed individuals, U.S. Colored Troops and more.
Bond told the Picket in February 2011 that he hoped the Wallis House could house an expanded exhibit on African-American soldiers and civilians. There’s a direct connection, because of the home’s association with Gen. Howard.
Howard University, a historically black
school in Washington, D.C., was named for the white officer, founder of the
university and commissioner of the Freedman’s Bureau.
In 2016, Walther said while there were no formal plans for interpretation of the Wallis House, the park wanted to widen interpretation of what happened on and near the battlefield.
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