All better now: A new parking area at the Wisler House outside Gettysburg (NPS) |
Fortunately,
improvements are sometimes made. Gettysburg National Military Park this week
announced it has made visiting “The First Shot House” a whole lot safer with
the recent addition of a gravel driveway and five parking spots.
The addition
is part of the extensive rehabilitation of the Ephraim Wisler house at 1495
Chambersburg Road (U.S. 30) three miles west of town. A monument outside the
two-story 1857 residence marks what’s believed to be the location where a Union
soldier first fired upon advancing Confederate troops on July 1, 1863.
The home before additions in the back were removed, as the front looks now (NPS) |
Park
spokesman Jason Martz told the Picket in an email that the new parking lot
provides a safer and more convenient environment for visitors to the 4-acre
site, which is northwest of the sprawling park.
The National
Park Service has spent a few years doing a major overhaul of the Wisler
(pronounced Whistler) House. Crews removed modern additions and features and strengthened
the embankment in front of the brick house. A porch was built in the front and
the roof received new cedar shingles and two chimneys jut out.
A modern addition is removed from the back of the Wisler home (NPS) |
Work is
nearing the final stages. There are historic features inside the house, largely
architectural, but there are no plans to furnish it. There are no current plans to open the house to the public.
When asked why, Martz cited no available staff
to run the site and that even with five parking spaces, “there still aren't enough to
accommodate an open house type of event. Similar events of the past have
attracted dozens of visitors and their vehicles all at once.”
Licensed Battlefield Guides (LBGs) have used the site to discuss the opening shots of the battle and park staff has conducted virtual tours. (Click NPS map at left to enlarge; the Wisler property is on the extreme top left)
On July 1,
1863, war came to the doorstep of blacksmith Ephraim Wisler and his family.
Confederate Maj. Gen. Henry Heth’s
division was advancing on Gettysburg, and Federal Maj. Gen. John Buford
deployed cavalry troopers to buy time before a larger Army infantry corps could
go into action.
Among the Union regiments posted west of Gettysburg was the 8th
Illinois Cavalry. The Wisler House, perched on a ridge, made an excellent
observation point for pickets.
“At 7:30 am, Union cavalrymen detected the advance of Henry Heth's Confederate division, which had departed their Cashtown bivouac to conduct a reconnaissance in force toward Gettysburg,” the NPS says.
“Lt. Marcellus E.
Jones, who commanded the picket line of the 8th Illinois, borrowed the carbine
of Sgt. Levi Shafer, rested the weapon on one of Wisler's fence posts, and from
the western yard of the home fired the first shot of the Battle of Gettysburg.
The Ephraim Wisler home would become enshrined in Gettysburg lore as ‘The First
Shot House’... the location from which the great Battle of Gettysburg was
inaugurated.”
Rear of the residence after removal of additions, rehabilitation (NPS) |
J. David
Petruzzi, in a 2006 article in America’s Civil War magazine, wrote:
“Regardless of which regiment could claim that first shot, whether it
was fired at a Confederate line of battle, detached Southern cavalrymen or a
noise in the dark by a jittery young trooper, the shot carried no tactical
significance whatsoever. But such a claim was evidently important to a small
group of rapidly aging and often stubborn old cavalrymen who could argue over
the most minute details as if the fate of the world depended on it. We can
surely understand if, to them, it indeed did.”
First shot monument right next to the residence (NPS) |
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