A new retaining wall is built at the 91st Pennsylvania monument (GNMP) |
The popular
site closed on July 26, 2022, to the disappointment of visitors who planned
trips but welcomed by others who lauded the project.
The hill is
where Union forces fought off a furious Confederate assault on July 2, 1863,
during the three-day battle in Pennsylvania.
Park officials have said they are addressing ongoing problems at the overcrowded site. They
cited erosion, overwhelmed parking areas, poor accessibility and related safety
hazards, and degraded vegetation.
“This project will also enhance the visitor experience with improved interpretive signage, new accessible trail alignments, and gathering areas. These improvements will allow visitors to better immerse themselves into the historic landscape that is essential to understanding the three-day Battle of Gettysburg,” a 2022 news release said.
A park page on the project says the aim is to “reestablish, preserve, and protect the features that make up this segment of the battlefield landscape.”
Some 164 feet above the Plum Run Valley to the west, the hill became the
anchor of the Union’s left flank and a focal point of Confederate attacks on
the afternoon of July 2. The 4th,15th and 47th Alabama regiments made a series of legendary assaults
against the 20th Maine.
“The (Maine) regiment’s sudden, desperate bayonet charge blunted the Confederate assault on Little Round Top and has been credited with saving Major General George Gordon Meade’s Army of the Potomac, winning the Battle of Gettysburg and setting the South on a long, irreversible path to defeat,” according to the American Battlefield Trust.
Wednesday’s update on social media indicated Little Round Top may be open in time for 161st anniversary programs and events in early July. The Picket reached out to park spokesman Jason Martz..
"Maybe. That is our hope, but it's too soon to speculate," Martz said in an email.
Little Round Top seen from Plum Run Valley (Library of Congress) |
When asked
about archaeological investigations during the work, Martz said a lot of battle
material was found, including “a few unique items, but nothing that would move
the needle too much one way or the other. The archaeological process is long and
drawn out and final details won't be available for quite some time.”
A Dyer artillery round was found in February 2022, with park officials saying then they
believe a Confederate cannon fired at Federal position and
mistakenly dropped them on friendly Texas regiments trying to navigate the
difficult terrain.
Martz said officials have enough details to largely close the loop on that story and will provide an update in the future.
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