Friday, September 29, 2023

Gen. O.O. Howard will be depicted on horseback in new monument at Lincoln Memorial University, which he helped found

The Howard monument (Lincoln Memorial University)
Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate, Tenn., next month will dedicate a monument honoring Civil War Maj. Gen. Oliver Otis Howard, who was instrumental in the creation of the school.

”It was a conversation with (President) Lincoln about the loyal unionists in East Tennessee that inspired Howard to help turn the Harrow School into a university,” Michael Lynch, the director of the Abraham Lincoln Library and Museum at LMU, told TV station WVLT.

Howard, known for leading the Freedmen’s Bureau after the war and co-founding Howard University in Washington, D.C, became involved after touring the mountainous Cumberland Gap area in 1896.

Construction of the monument base (Lincoln Memorial University)
“There he met with Reverend A.A. Myers who had founded the Harrow Academy for underprivileged mountain families,” Lincoln Memorial said in a news release.

Howard agreed to help raise money for the school if Myers would expand its scope to include higher education. A year later, Lincoln Memorial University was founded as a living memorial to President Abraham Lincoln. Howard remained dedicated and involved with LMU through the end of his life in 1909.”

Sculptor Omri Amrany is making the 20-foot monument of Howard, depicted on horseback. The statue is the second memorial of Howard on the campus. A bust (below) sits outside Chinnock Chapel.

(Courtesy of Lincoln Memorial University)
The new monument, which will be placed in Alumni Park, will be dedicated at 11 a.m. Oct. 13 during homecoming celebrations.

Lincoln Memorial University, a private institution, has about 5,400 students. It covers 1,000 acres near Cumberland Gap National Historical Park.

Howard, an ardent abolitionist, participated in numerous Civil War campaigns and battles, including Chancellorsville, Gettysburg and Atlanta. He lost his right arm during the battle of Seven Pines in Virginia but returned to service. He later fought in the Indian Wars and served as superintendent at West Point for two years.

The American Battlefield Trust said of Howard:

“Known as ‘the Christian General,’ Oliver Otis Howard is a unique figure in Civil War history.  Despite lackluster performances by troops under his command, Howard’s reputation as an efficient and personally courageous officer would lead to command of an army by the war’s end.

Tuesday, September 26, 2023

Rocky Face Ridge Park: Groups acquire two replica Napoleon guns to help further interpretation of clashes in northwest Georgia

These two artillery pieces are now in a park near Dalton, Ga. (Courtesy of BGES)
Two replica Napoleon cannons that for years accentuated the grounds of a hotel across from Vicksburg National Military Park have a new home at Rocky Face Ridge Park – scene of two Civil War actions -- in northwest Georgia.

The purchase and transport of the non-firing artillery pieces was a joint effort of the Blue and Gray Education Society and the nonprofit Save the Dalton Battlefields in Georgia.

“Cannons have arrived!” Bob Jenkins, head of the Dalton group, wrote in an email Thursday afternoon to supporters about the additions to the park, which formally opened in July 2022.

They will be the second and third guns on site, following the BGES donation last year of a 3-inch ordnance rifle replica.

The majority of the $30,000 purchase was covered by a donation from Bill and Linda Blackman (right), who have supported preservation efforts in Whitfield County, home to the park. Virginia-based BGES paid other costs.

“I am interested in anything that will help Whitfield County do more and draw people.” Bill Blackman told the Picket in a phone call.

The park is perhaps best known for its extensive and challenging bicycle trails. “I think (the new cannons) will bring out the Civil War aspect of it,” said Blackman, past president of the Whitfield County Historic Preservation Commission.

Model 1857 12-pounder smoothbores were the most widely used field artillery piece during the Civil War, and both sides had dozens during the 1864 Atlanta Campaign, according to the Georgia Battlefields Association, adding the price for the two pieces was a relative bargain.

Whitfield County touts its park as a wonderful history magnet -- with the remains of Federal and Confederate earthworks, trenches and 12 interpretive signs spread out over a 3-mile trail below a towering ridge.

The Napoleons after they arrived in Georgia on Sept. 21 (Courtesy of BGES)
Rocky Face Ridge Park was the site of two Civil War clashes.

Federal Maj. Gen. George Thomas probed the Confederate defenses in February 1864, ahead of the grinding march on Atlanta. The park is near Dug Gap, Mill Creek Gap and Tunnel Hill, other Civil War sites of interest.

And in early May 1864, Union troops advanced toward Dalton, which was held by forces under Confederate Gen. Joseph E. Johnston. The Yankees “were the tip of the spear” that launched the Atlanta Campaign, said Jim Ogden, chief historian at Chickamauga & Chattanooga National Military Park. Rebel troops on top of the ridge thwarted a Union victory.

'Our work is diverse, meaningful and long lasting'

Len Riedel, executive president of the Blue and Gray Education Society, said the two Napoleons were placed in front of the Mississippi hotel about 15 years ago.

“The owners wanted to fit in and the property was within the Federal siege lines and so pointed at the Confederate lines less than 1,000 yards ahead -- they blended well. As our group frequently stayed there during study tours, we were accustomed to their presence.”

Cannons when they were along hotel driveway (Courtesy of BGES)
New owners of the hotel decided to go in a different promotional direction and decided to sell the guns, Riedel said. The Picket left messages for the hotel's general manager.

The replica gun were manufactured and installed by Steen Cannon in Kentucky.  

“While reenactment groups wanted fully fireable reproductions there was also a robust market for display units such as we have acquired. The tube is only half bored and there is no firing vent hole,” Riedel wrote in an email. “The carriages are aluminum and our belief is that they are in good condition.”

The Blue and Gray Education Society recruits historians across the country to lead tours and aids preservation efforts. It has made numerous cannon purchases and has produced interpretive signs and brochures across the region.

“Our work is diverse, meaningful and long lasting,” Riedel said. “Our Dalton work will bring more awareness and interest in this early part of the Atlanta Campaign -- it is for things like that that we are in business for and have been for nearly 30 years.

Park features mountaintop and valley views

Jenkins said one of the replica Napoleons will be placed on the north end of the field at the May 1864 Confederate line, and the other will be placed on the south side, representing the location of the February 1864 Confederate line.

The reproduction 3-inch ordnance rifle (Picket photo of Jenkins, left, above)  is placed at the location of the Federal 4th US light artillery battery during the February 1864 action.

They will likely be formally dedicated in the fall.

Rocky Face Ridge Park, in Crow Valley, was 20 years in the making, following purchases of 625 acres -- in the shape of a rectangle -- on top of the mountain, and then 301 grassy acres below.

Getting to the mountaintop is not easy. It’s accessible from a bike trail, but officials are hoping a better-marked, hiking-only trail will one day be constructed. Visitors are rewarded with a great view and stone breastworks built by Confederate defenders.\

In a statement Friday, Jenkins said:

“On behalf of Save the Dalton Battlefields, we are grateful for this gift from Blue and Gray Education Society for the new Rocky Face Ridge Park and for the generous donation from Dr. and Mrs. William Blackman to help make it happen. Blue and Gray Education Society has been, and continues to be a wonderful friend and supporter of our new park and of historic preservation, education, and interpretation across the nation. We are also grateful for Whitfield County’s continued support of historic preservation efforts within our county.”

Tuesday, September 19, 2023

Much-needed R&R: Three Fort Sumter flags are headed for a cool, dark place after years on display. Here's more about the banners

US storm flag, top, garrison flag, lower left, Palmetto Guard (NPS)
Three Fort Sumter flags – among them the U.S. flag that waved during its bombardment -- have been on display for at least 20 years, powerful symbols of a nation torn apart and brought back together.

Gunfire wasn’t their only enemy: saltwater spay, humidity and light took a toll on the flags. Now it’s time to give them some down time. Today and Wednesday, gloved curators will carefully remove the fragile banners from exhibit.

It is long overdue for them to be rested,” said Brett Spaulding, chief of interpretation for Fort Sumter and Fort Moultrie National Historical Park in Charleston, S.C. “Light is an issue for all textiles that are on display. To help preserve them, it’s common practice to rest artifacts.”

The museum on the island will be closed both days; the grounds of the fort and bookstore will remain open and ranger programs will operate normally, officials said.

Storm flag flies above the fort on April 14, 1865 (Library of Congress)
The flags are among the most famous of the Civil War: The 33-star U.S. garrison flag flew over the fort until it sustained wind damage on April 11, 1861, hours before Rebel artillery effectively began the Civil War. Its smaller successor, the storm flag, flew during the 34 hours of the attack.

Both were removed from the island by Union Maj. Robert Anderson after he surrendered. The storm flag immediately became a patriotic symbol for the remainder of the conflict and raised the status of the Star-Spangled Banner to what we know today.

The Palmetto Guard flag was the first Confederate flag to fly over the fort after the departure of the US Army on April 14, 1861. 

(NPS photo)
The storm and Palmetto Guard flags have been at the Fort Sumter museum. The garrison flag is at the Fort Sumter Visitor Center (above) at Liberty Square in downtown Charleston.

All underwent conservation before they went on display. “Despite taking great care to protect the artifacts they are best preserved when stored in a clean, dark, cool, and dry environment for periods of rest,” the park said in a news release

Here is more about the three flags:

U.S. 33-star garrison flag (wool bunting, 20 feet by 36 feet)

This was the larger of two U.S. flags to fly over Sumter in April 1861. When the Civil War began, the United States flag had 33 stars: one representing each state in the Union. After Fort Sumter, President Abraham Lincoln had to decide whether to leave all 33 stars on the flag or to remove those of the seceded states. Since Lincoln's mission was to preserve the Union, no stars were removed.

The garrison flag flew as tensions rose before the bombardment. By the evening of April 11, hours from the exchange of artillery, the larger banner suffered extreme wind damage and it was taken down. It has lost the most material of the three historic flags.

McCrone Associates, which partnered with the NPS to authenticate the flags, wrote this about the project:

“A crucial finding was that the fibers were characterized by “glass rod fracture,” indicative of severe photo degradation -- findings verified through micro chemical tests, as well. Thus, museum personnel were strongly advised to keep the rolling up and unrolling of the flags to an absolute minimum. 

"The severe climatic conditions of an ocean island, together with prolonged exposure to ultraviolet radiation from the sun, were responsible for irreversible damage to the integrity of the individual fibers, so that every movement of the flags resulted in countless more broken fibers. These facts, together with the constant whipping in the wind, accounted for the missing portions of the garrison flag.”

Remarkably, the blue canton of the tattered flag is largely intact.

U.S. 33-star storm flag (20 feet by 10 feet)

(NPS photo)
While it flew only three days over the fort, this banner was the sturdier banner and was taken by Anderson to New York City a week after the surrender for a rally. He was celebrated as a hero. The storm flag later was the object of fundraising across the country for the Federal war effort.

Anderson said of the flags in 1863, according to the Post and Courier newspaper:

 “I feel that no one can love and ... keep as carefully as I do this sacred relic, and it is my earnest wish that when Fort Sumter shall be again our own, I may be permitted by the government to there once more unfurl it, or should I die before that time, that it may be wrapped around my body when it is borne to its last resting place ...”

On April 14, 1865, five years after the garrison surrender, Anderson (left) returned to Fort Sumter as the storm flag was raised. Charleston had been under Union occupation for two months and the liberated black population had put on parades.

“Lincoln had pushed for the April 14 ceremony and was invited to attend, but with the break-neck speed of events in Virginia following the fall of Richmond, the president opted to stay in Washington instead,” according to Emerging Civil War

“The flag ceremony went on without him. That evening, at Ford’s Theater, John Wilkes Booth put a bullet in Lincoln’s head. Had the president gone to Charleston, how different might things have played out.

In 1905, the garrison and storm flags were donated by Anderson’s family to the War Department.

Palmetto Guard Flag (9 feet by 6 feet)

From the National Park Service: As victorious Confederates entered Fort Sumter, John Styles Bird Jr., a private in the South Carolina militia unit known as the Palmetto Guard, placed his unit's flag on the parapet facing Charleston.

Palmetto Guard flag on display at Fort Sumter Museum (NPS)
The single star signified the independent Republic of South Carolina and the tree harkened back to the Revolutionary War. The fort remained in Confederate hands for the next four years until evacuation in February 1865.

John Styles Ashe, son of John Styles Bird Jr., donated it to the National Park Service. They were transferred to the National Park Service at Fort Sumter in 1954, according to the Post and Courier.

No timetable for them to be put back on display

Spaulding, the interpretive ranger, told the Picket in an email that there are no current plans to replace the flags. “Later this year, we will look to develop temporary displays to occupy the empty space.”

He said it is not currently known whether significant work is needed or will be done on the three flags.

“For right now they are only being stored and preservation will take place at a later undetermined time. At this time, no date has been set for the return of the flags” to exhibit.

Sunday, September 17, 2023

For nearly $1.8 million, you can own a Fredericksburg home that comes with elegant features, modern upgrades -- and a Civil War cannonball

408 Hanover Street has retained its character over the years (Jason Buttram Photograhy)
At 408 Hanover St. in Fredericksburg, Va., amid the architectural wonders – a spiral staircase, classic front porch and fluted Doric columns, among them – is an eye-grabbing piece of Civil War history. A cannonball rests among damaged red bricks on an upstairs interior wall, evidence of the December 1862 battle that defines much of the city’s identity.

The piece of ordnance is among the selling points for the 1848 Greek Revival residence that has an asking price of $1.795 million. The property has 5 bedrooms, 5.5 baths and features 5,400 square feet of space, much of it preserved and modernized by its current owners. An arbor, fire pit and rectangular pond provide for extra relaxation outside.

“This home appears to be steeped in history and seems to be very well-kept,” said Kelley Monahan, director of operations for Historic Fredericksburg Foundation Inc., in an email. “408 Hanover is a beautiful home in a historic district within a very historic town.”

The 19th century homes on Hanover Street and surrounding neighborhoods are part of the charm of which Fredericksburg boasts. They are among the survivors of the bombardment and street fighting that shattered the city during the Civil War battle and leveled many residences. Yankee troops moved through the street as they made their disastrous assaults on Marye's Heights.

Battle damage at Hanover and George streets (Library of Congress)
“Today, few visible examples of external battle damage survive in Fredericksburg,” wrote Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park then-chief historian John Hennessy in 2010. “I am aware of only a few buildings that show it, and then only subtly. It’s a different story on the interior of buildings in town. Probably dozens still bear scars, and many owners consciously preserve the evidence of battle.”

Such was the case at 408 Hanover St., which has been sold numerous times since the Civil War. The current listing by Amy Cherry Taylor and Associates says the “cannonball room” awaits those ascending the staircase. “Once a sunporch, it now includes a full bath.” (See cannonball in photo 56 of this gallery).

Confederate shells also hit homes

Hennessy, who has since retired from the National Park Service, says that as many as 100 shells a minute exploded over the town during the Dec. 11, 1862, Union bombardment. Scores of homes were destroyed or heavily damaged.

“Bear in mind that not all these buildings were destroyed by Union fire,” he wrote in the park’s Mysteries & Conundrums blog said. “The Confederates fired into town, too, over the next four days; I would estimate that about one-quarter of the town’s damage came from Confederate guns.”

Hennessy has a deep knowledge of the city’s history and operates the “Fredericksburg Remembered” website. I asked him about 408 Hanover St., which he has not visited. (Photo at left of home during 2018 candlelight tour courtesy of HFFI)

“Virtually every house on Hanover had shell damage (much of it likely caused by Confederate artillery firing at the Federal troops as they exited town into the bloody plain beyond), and in several houses it still survives,” he wrote the Picket.

HFFI said it believes the solid-shot cannonball at 408 Hanover came from a Federal gun across the Rappahannock River.

Damage from cannonballs could be extensive and many walls were rebuilt, with the shell placed at the location of impact. Histories of 408 Hanover St. don’t indicate whether that was the case.

Hennessy told the Picket the house was almost certainly used as a hospital by the Union army. “Hanover Street was the main passageway for wounded being carried back into Fredericksburg. I have several accounts of the use of those houses as hospitals.”

The bombardment caused trauma for luckless residents who could not get out.

Fanny White, then 10, later wrote: I ran out into the yard, and as I turned toward the cellar steps I beheld what seemed to me the most brilliant light that I had ever seen….A shell had exploded at the back of the garden….As I looked, my aunt reached out her arms and pulled me, quivering with terror, into the cellar….For long hours the only sounds that greeted our ears were the whizzing and moaning of the shells and the crash of falling bricks and timber.”

The NPS diorama of Hanover Street (Courtesy of John Hennessy)
Interestingly, the oldest exhibit at Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park -- in the visitor center basement -- is a detailed diorama depicting Hanover Street during the chaos of battle. The Union army briefly held the town before they were thrown back in a decisive Confederate victory.

The diorama is derived from the famous photograph showing some of Peter Goolrick’s ruined rental properties at the junction of Hanover and George Streets. The detail is amazing, down to addresses being written on the envelopes strewn in the street,” Hennessy wrote in 2010 on Fredericksburg Remembered.

Home was part of an early subdivision in town

The residence was built 15 years before the war came to Fredericksburg.

Realtor Amy Cherry Taylor, who represents the couple selling the home, referred me to the HFFI for further questions on the history of the property. The foundation provided two reports on 408 Hanover Street, adding rich details of its story.

Marker on 408 Hanover (Courtesy of Historic Fredericksburg Foundation)
When it researches a home, HFFI delves into ownership over the years and what changes and renovations have been made.

Anne Catherine Henry purchased lots in that part of Fredericksburg in the 1850s, one of them developed into the property now on sale. It shares a wall with an adjoining home, known as the Hurkamp House, at 406 Hanover Street.

Little is known about Henry’s time in the city; her sons fought for the Confederacy.

A local man acquired the property shortly before the Civil War, according to one report. He left the house and a few enslaved persons to his daughter.

“Prompted by ill health (or premonition), Robert W. Carter made a will in October 1861 that undoubtedly raised eyebrows when it was proved two months later. He left the two lots and house at 408 Hanover to his daughter Anne Catherine Carter for her lifetime, and he made it plain that he hoped she would die a spinster.”

Alfred Waud illustration in Harper's Weekly shows street fighting (Library of Congress)
(HFFI said in a candlelight tour script for the home that  Anne fled to the countryside during the December 1862 battle.)

The homes on Hanover Street were part of a posh subdivision called Allan Town, dating to the early 19th century, according to Hennessy. “It included the lots along the 400 block of Hanover Street. But Allentown never had the identity of, say, Liberty Town -- so few people then or now view the upper end of Hanover Street as part of a larger subdivision,” he said.

408 Hanover originally had 12 fireplaces (later trimmed to eight feeding four chimneys).

The house was rented in the years after the Civil War. In 1876, it was rented to two men named Green. In 1892, the house was sold to the Green family, according to a 2010 article in the Fredericksburg Free Lance Star. 

The Green family lived there for many years, including for a time by Duff Green Jr. and his wife Martha, who were described as gracious hosts.

'Continual restoration and renovation'

The HFFI reports provide extensive detail on major repairs and renovations to the house made beginning in the 1980s. Two second-floor bathrooms were added and the basement was renovated, among many other updates.

The patio behind the home today (Courtesy Jason Buttram Photography)
The home was auctioned in 2014, with the following description:

“An exceptional example of Greek Revival architecture and fine Flemish brick work, the entirety of the 4,800 square foot home has been completely restored to include many modern amenities, but still retains all of its period character. Civil War history literally resides in these walls.”

The cannonball rested at a spot then used as a laundry room.

HFFI reports cite the cannonball, the original spiral staircase and a photograph that the current owners found that was likely of an enslaved person. The chandeliers “somehow survived the Civil War.”

408 is on far right next to Hurkamp House (Courtesy of Jason Buttram Photography)
The property requires “continual restoration and renovation,” the foundation said.

Its current owners, a retired Marine Corps colonel and his wife, “are always mindful that their stewardship of a historical property requires that -- above all -- they maintain 408 Hanover’s authenticity and preserve its distinctive character.”

Friday, September 8, 2023

Officials: Reenactment cannonball found at North Carolina school

A crew clearing vegetation around a school in coastal North Carolina came across what is believed to be a Civil War reenactment cannonball, prompting evacuation of the school and response from a Camp Lejeune explosive ordnance disposal team.

The cannonball had been “in place long enough that woody vegetation had grown around it, to the point that it had to be cut away so the object could be removed,” Onslow County Schools said about the Thursday incident at the Onslow County Learning Center.

The EOD team from the Marine Corps base determined the object, which had been unseen for a significant amount of time, was found to be inert with no explosives, and it was removed, officials said.

“Safety is Onslow County Schools’ top priority, and we appreciate the support and collaboration of our local emergency responders, as well as our families, as we work to keep our schools safe and secure,” the district said.

The Picket asked the district how the shell may have come to be there and what happened to it after removal. Public information assistant Jessica Wells said Onslow County Schools had no other information it could share.

A hurricane unearthed cannonballs on Florida Panhandle beach. It looks like Confederates had stacked them, on what was then dry land

Shells were neatly stacked and have D-shaped tong holes (Gulf Islands National Seashore)
Federal archaeologists have found more evidence that scores of eroding cannonballs found in 2021 along a beach in the Florida Panhandle were Confederate, officials said.

The Picket recently asked Gulf Islands National Seashore for an update on the shells, which were in vicinity of the Civil War’s Fort McRee. The fort had 12 casemates and an associated water battery, which may be underwater today.

“The (mortar) rounds appeared to have been stacked and had corroded into a single mass at the time of their discovery,” said Mike Lockman, cultural resource program manager and archaeologist at the park, in an email. “The shells exhibited D-shaped tong holes on either side of the fuse plug, indicating that they were likely Confederate rounds (as Union mortar shells usually lacked this feature, per Bartleson 1972).”

The fuse specimens were wooden plugs with timed paper fuses. Also present were wood fragments with curved indentions that were most likely sabots, Lockman said.

When news of the August 2021 find came out, the park said 194 rounds were located. The more recent details list 53 8-inch mortars -- which were destroyed on
site by experts from the Air Force’s Hurlburt Field -- because they were intact and observed to have fuses, Lockman said. (At right, shells lined up for demolition)

The Picket could not determine whether the 53 are a subset of the larger number.

Two months after the discovery, archaeologists from the National Park Service’s Southeast Archeological Service returned to Perdido Key to learn more about the artillery rounds, Lockman said. The Picket reached out to that Tallahassee-based office for comment, but has received no reply.

The exposed ordnance was discovered by Gulf Islands National Seashore staff after Category 4 Hurricane Ida pushed through in late August 2021. The artifacts were found in clusters and the area was closed for a time as a precaution.

Soldiers at Fort McRee, year unknown (Gulf Islands National Seashore)
It’s likely the cannonballs are associated with Fort McRee, which was built on a narrow barrier island separating Pensacola Bay and the Gulf of Mexico.

In November 1861, the garrison engaged in gunfire with nearby Union-held Fort Pickens and a couple warships -- and came up on the losing end. The heavily damaged brick fort, built on sand, was abandoned by May 1862, only to fall into further ruin over the years. (Fort Pickens was one of only four Southern forts to remain in Union control throughout the war.)

In 2022, the park said some of the cannonballs utilized Hotchkiss timed fuses. “Due to the threat to life and health associated with live munitions, the cannonballs had to be destroyed before much specific information could be recorded,” said public information officer Susan Teel.

(Gulf Islands National Seashore)
Asked whether the cannonballs were discarded by the garrison or had been stored there for possible future use, Teel said last year: “Without the ability to safely complete excavations, the purpose behind the location is not known at this time. The density and location within the vicinity of the fort is a factor which was considered during our analysis.”

It's possible that Federal occupiers of the abandoned fort stacked the Rebel shells and left them at some point. The ordnance each weighed between 25 and 35 pounds and are believed to be of the same type, officials have said.

Erosion regularly occurs on these barrier islands and park officials say the ordnance was likely placed in a spot that was inland at the time.

1928 view of battery on island. Fort McRee was built close by. (National Archives)
Park Superintendent Darrell Echols told WEAR-TV that the artifacts appeared to have been stockpiled and did not appear to have been fired upon the island. After the Picket posted its first article about the find on social media, readers commented they believe the ordnance was made for a 32-pounder cannon.

Inaccessible by road, McRee’s main visitors are sea birds, boaters and beachgoers who come to Gulf Islands National Seashore. The park is home to McRee, Pickens and Fort Barrancas, another Civil War outpost.

Lockman said it’s possible the artillery shells will be further investigated.

Sunday, September 3, 2023

Town outside Cleveland is moving forward with plans to replace Civil War monument smashed last year by tractor trailer

Shattered Sherman statue, including severed head, in storage (LaGrange Township)
Bright yellow poles – known as bollards – warn motorists in LaGrange, Ohio, to pay close attention as they approach the busy intersection of routes 301 and 303 (Main Street). They were put up after a series of crashes, including one that took out the downtown square’s Civil War monument in June 2022.

Residents are determined to replace the granite monument that was left in pieces, including the Union soldier’s severed head, when a truck barreled into it. Township officials want to use the same quarry that supplied the granite in the early 1900s.

“They want it restored to the original way,” says township administrator Vince Sigmund. “Everything was destroyed.”

Restoration won’t literally happen, because officials in this metro Cleveland and farm community determined that the damage to what locals call the Sherman monument was too severe for a repair.

Before and after the truck crash that took out monument, flagpole and more
“We have received three qualified bids to carve a new monument. Since the first monument was over 120 years old we cannot have the same company carve a new one,” LaGrange Township trustee Rita Canfield told the Picket in an email.

“We are not even certain who carved the original statue. … The cost of carving anew statue is simply shocking and we are insisting that the granite come from the same quarry that the first granite came from.”

Sigmund said the cost for a new monument and repairs for extensive damage to other parts of the square, including restoring lights that were taken out, could total $1.5 million.

Township officials are in active discussions with the insurance company for the trucking company involved in the accident and they expect a settlement.

Officials in LaGrange told the Picket that a big rig cruised through a stop sign at the circular intersection in the middle of the rural village on June 28, 2022. The stone memorial with a soldier on top was shattered and a flagpole was crushed.

An incident report from the Ohio State Highway Patrol said the driver told a responding officer that he fell asleep and ran a stop sign. The driver was not found to be impaired.

Canfield and fellow trustee Gary Burnett say the bollards at four spots on the traffic circle are meant to prevent accidents and protect the square.

As you might imagine, this has been a major challenge for our community and we hope to have started the monument and settled with the insurance company by September of this year,” says Canfield.

Officials said it could take up two years to have the statue carved and installed, along with other repairs. For now, the shattered pieces, which weigh hundreds of pounds each, are stored in a township building.

The Sherman statue was erected in 1903 (some sources say 1904) for about $3,000. The project was a joint project of LaGrange Village and LaGrange Township, a separate political entity.

The monument is owned by the township and literally is the focal point of the village -- where the two main roads meet

The monument base carried the names of LaGrange area residents who served during the war, the names of a few battles and of Union generals Ulysses S. Grant, William T. Sherman, Philip Sheridan and George Thomas.

“I personally would like to put it back up. It is part of our identity in LaGrange,” Burnett said last summer. “Everyone feels a little connection to it.” (Photo above, sent by Burnett, last summer, shows crews removing monument pieces.)

The Sherman statue suffered indignity 65 years ago, according to a Lorain County nostalgia blog. A newspaper article in November 1957 said pranksters tarred and feathered the base.