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150th ANNIVERSARY EDITION 2014 Vol XXII V IRGINIA’S C IVIL W AR GUIDE TO B A T T L E F I E L D S & S I T E S INFO BY REGION Central Virginia 3–14 Tidewater 17–21 Valley & Mountains 26–35 Southside 36–41 Northern Virginia 42–46 CALENDAR 150th Anniversary 22–23 ~ DRIVING TOURS ~ Overland Campaign 14 Peninsula Campaign 17 Lee’s Retreat 36–37 The Battle of Spotsylvania ON THE WEB CivilWarTraveler.com/ EAST/VA ope was still alive for the Confederate cause in the spring of 1864. After three years of war, there was hope that the Northern people would tire of the endless casualty lists and the tremendous cost. Hope that a new U.S. president might sue for peace on favorable terms. Hope that the Confederate military might yet pull off some incredible victory on the battlefield. The events of 1864 ended those hopes. It began in early May as Gen. U.S. Grant unleashed Union armed forces across the country. The new overall commander of Federal forces aimed to bring the enormous power of the Northern military to bear at multiple points of the Confederacy at once. Nowhere was that plan more evident than in Virginia. Grant’s main objective there: Defeat Robert E. Lee's Army of North- ern Virginia. To accomplish that, Grant ordered simultaneous attacks across a 100-mile front from the Shenandoah Valley to Bermuda Hundred south of Richmond. Other Federal troops targeted the Virginia & Tennessee Railroad, an important supply line and link to the west. Grant himself rode along with more than 100,000 soldiers as the main Union army struck south toward Richmond. He H 1864: The Decisive Year VirginiaCivilWar.org See 150th anniversary events, pages 13, 22–23, and 34 knew that Lee would move his outnumbered but still dangerous army to protect the Confederate capital. Hoping to distract Lee and prevent his concentrating more soldiers in Central Virginia, Grant also ordered attacks south of Richmond and in the Shenandoah Valley. As the main Union army plowed into the “Wilderness” west of Fredericksburg, other Please turn to page 2 2 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War 1864: The Decisive Year, cont’d from page 1 Northern soldiers were marching south in the Valley and landing between the James and Appomattox Rivers south of Richmond. Grant and the Army of the Potomac immediately ran into trouble in the tangled growth near the old Chancellorsville battlefield. Lee attacked the Union columns on the narrow roads in the Wilderness with a vengeance. Staggered but not defeated, the Union army did what it would do for the next month, disengage and move south and east, keeping Richmond in its crosshairs. Lee caught up near Spotsylvania Court House, where the armies slugged it out for more than a week in some of the bloodiest fighting of the war. While all this was going on, the Union columns in the Valley and south of Richmond were stalled. The Federals in the Valley were defeated May 15 at New Market by a collection of Confederates that included boys from the Virginia Military Institute. And a great Union opportunity was lost south of Richmond where the Northern commander there, Gen. Benjamin Butler, frittered away a chance to drive a wedge between the capital and Petersburg and the rest of the South. So both Union sideshows came up short but the main event in Central Virginia continued to roll south. From Spotsylvania, Grant overpowered a trap set at the North Anna River and kept moving. Lee, hamstrung by the obligation to defend his capital, moved to block. After nearly a month of continuous contact, the armies ended up at Cold Harbor, a road junction a few miles northeast of Richmond. Union attacks June 1 and 3 failed to do anything but lengthen the already long Northern casualty lists. While the main Union army was licking its wounds at Cold Harbor, things heated See 150th commemorative events, pages 13, 22–23 and 34 Gen. Philip Sheridan in the Valley up again in the Shenandoah Valley. Union Gen. David Hunter brushed aside Confederates at Piedmont then advanced toward Lexington, home of the Virginia Military Institute. On June 12, Hunter sacked and burned VMI. Lee, still at Cold Harbor, watched Hunter’s Valley campaign with concern. As Hunter crossed the Blue Ridge Mountains, the Confederate commander dispatched Gen. Jubal Early west to meet the threat. Hunter’s raid wasn’t the only thing drawing Lee's attention. After nearly two weeks of sweltering trench warfare at Cold Harbor, Grant stole a march on the Confederates, crossed the James River and attacked a nearly defenseless Petersburg. Enough Confederates responded to save the important railroad city during those mid-June assaults, but just barely. At about the same time, Early provided a lonely Confederate bright spot by whipping Hunter at Lynchburg June 17–18. An Independent Newspaper © Copyright 2014 Page One history publications The Guide to Virginia’s Civil War is published annually. Free copies are available at most Virginia Civil War sites and selected local/regional visitor centers. For a free copy by mail, visit CivilWarTraveler. com, click on a “Free Info” button, and fill out the form (check Virginia). A copy of the newspaper and other related Civil War travel information will be sent to you. PO Box 4232 Richmond VA 23220-4232 www.civilwartraveler.com/EAST/VA [email protected] Editor / Publisher Don Pierce 804-399-5737 Associate Publisher Vickie Yates [email protected] Associate Publisher Norma Pierce [email protected] Less than a week later, as soldiers on both sides were digging in for a long haul at Petersburg, Grant dispatched another raid deep behind Confederate lines. Union Gens. August Kautz and James Wilson led about 5,000 cavalry west of Petersburg, tearing up railroads and sowing panic. The Federals got as far as the Staunton River in south central Virginia before a collection of “old men and young boys” turned them back June 25. Meanwhile, Confederates under Early followed up their win at Lynchburg by chasing Hunter out of the picture entirely, then heading north in the Valley unopposed. By July, Early’s advance was setting off alarms in Washington. The Confederates fought through Federals at Monocacy Junction south of Frederick MD, then headed for the U.S. capital itself where, on July 11–12, Early finally was turned back at Fort Stevens. Chased back to the Valley, Early defeated his pursuers July 24 at the second Battle of Kernstown south of Winchester. About a week later and 150 miles from the Shenandoah Valley, Union forces exploded four tons of gunpowder under part of the Confederate line at Petersburg, creating “The Crater” in the Southern defenses. The creative attempt accomplished next to nothing for the Federals. Soldiers kept digging through the summer at Petersburg as Grant extended the lines around the city, choking off supply routes. By mid-September, the opposing lines wandered for miles — from south of Petersburg to east of Richmond. Back in the Valley, a frustrated Grant ordered yet another offensive, this time under aggressive commander Philip Sheridan. Sheridan easily defeated Early in a huge battle north of Winchester Sept. 19, then moved south, pushing the Confederates from Fisher’s Hill and beyond. Sheridan then began one of the most notorious episodes in the war, initiating a campaign of destruction of the Valley’s considerable resources. “The Burning” still stirs resentment in some parts. Not to be left out, the Union army got into action on the Petersburg and Richmond front in late September, staging coordinated assaults on both sides of the James River. The attacks on the Richmond defenses were distinguished by efforts by United States Colored Troops at New Market Heights and Fort Harrison. But none of the Union attacks managed to punch through. Despite the stinging defeats in September, Early’s Confederate army was not done in the Valley. Sneaking up on Sheridan’s army north of Strasburg, Early launched an attack Oct. 19 across Cedar Creek that initially routed the Federals. But the Union army counterattacked and once again chased Early from the battlefield. The dramatic battle was the last big military engagement in the Valley and ended Confederate hopes there forever. So, as cold winds began to blow across Virginia in the late fall of 1864, the last real patch of Confederate control in Virginia had shrunk to Richmond and Petersburg. And that control was slipping by the day as Lee weakened and Grant grew stronger. In the larger picture, Lincoln was reelected and Northern victories, especially in Georgia, eased the sting of considerable losses. The hope that Confederates had clung to at the beginning of the year was almost gone. u Take Civil War guide along on your iPad The publishers of the Guide to Virginia’s Civil War have created an iPad app that travelers can use for planning and while on the road. The app, “Virginia Civil War Field Guide,” includes complete and current information about the state’s Civil War sites, from the Shenandoah Valley to Hampton. Interactive maps help visitors plot their course. Download the app to iPads from the Apple App Store. Search “Virginia Civil War Field Guide.” Cost is $3.99. 2014 3 CENTRAL VIRGINIA “O n to Richmond” was the battle cry of Northern politicians, military leaders and newspapermen as the war began. A quick, powerful thrust would cast aside Southern resistance, topple the Confederate capital and end the war. So went the promise. Maps made it look easy. Only 100 miles or so separated the two warring capitals. But maps don’t show the quality of the resistance. Maps don’t show the ineptness and genius of leaders. The most direct road to Richmond was straight south. Northern armies under Gens. McDowell, Burnside, Hooker and Meade tried that road and found it blocked, most times by determined Confederates under Robert E. Lee. Finally, in the spring of 1864, U.S. Grant took command and drove relentlessly south. His soldiers marched into Richmond nearly a year later. The countryside west of the Tidewater and east of the Blue Ridge Mountains between Washington and Petersburg is the most blood-soaked in the country. Thousands died fighting at places no one had heard of before, places like Cold Harbor, Chancellorsville, Malvern Hill, Spotsylvania, Brandy Station and the North Anna River. More fell during encounters at places that had no name. Their earthen fortifications, memorials to their deeds; and their graves, still mark the landscape. National Park Service Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park Main visitor center at 1013 Lafayette Boulevard, just west of downtown. S ignificant areas of four major battlefields plus a handful of historic buildings are maintained in this 5,500 acre park. More than 100,000 men became casualties in the fighting in and around Fredericksburg, making it perhaps the bloodiest piece of ground in the country. Start at the main visitor center for a film, maps, exhibits and ranger help. Other visitor centers are manned year-round at Chatham and Chancellorsville. Main visitor center hours are 9 am–5 pm daily with extended hours in the spring, summer and fall. $2 fee for films in visitors centers. For more information: nps.gov/frsp or 540-373-6122. Removing the wounded from a burning Wilderness battlefield Park highlights Fredericksburg battlefield – The visitor center is just steps away from the famous stone wall at Marye’s Heights that was successfully defended by Confederates Dec. 13, 1862. Short self-guided walking tours along the wall and up to Confederate positions on the heights are available. The National Cemetery is located just above the center. A driving tour with several stops takes visitors through the lesser-known but important Prospect Hill area of the battlefield on the Confederate right flank. Chancellorsville battlefield, Spotsylvania County – The visitor center here is located just off Route 3 about 10 miles west of Fredericksburg. Stop there for information about this site, scene of intense fighting in early May, 1863. Stonewall Jackson was severely wounded May 2 at a spot marked near the visitor center. The famous general died about a week later. This battle is regarded by many as Robert E. Lee’s greatest victory. A driving tour highlights significant areas. Note: A wayside and trailhead with Civil War Trails signs describing the action early on May 1 is located just off the westbound lanes of Route 3, 0.07 miles west of Route 626. This part of the battlef ield was preserved recently by the Civil War Preservation Trust. Wilderness battlefield, near intersection of Routes 3 and 20, west of Fredericksburg – An exhibit shelter (manned during the summer) helps explain the action here May 5-6, 1864, as Federal soldiers pushed forward in what would become the Overland Campaign. A short walking tour from the shelter routes visitors through Saunders Field, one of the most fought-over areas in the battle. A driving tour includes significant areas of the battlefield. Ellwood, a plantation home, became a Federal headquarters during the battle and is open daily April 25–Aug. 17, 10 am–5 pm, and weekends April 12–20 and Aug 23–Oct. 26. It’s also the burial place of Jackson’s arm. www.fowb.org. Spotsylvania battlefield – Another exhibit shelter (manned during the summer) highlights the fighting as the Army of the Potomac and the Army of Northern Virginia slugged it out in mid-May 1864. Among the short walking tours in this park unit explores the Confederate salient that became known as the “Bloody Angle.” Stonewall Jackson Shrine, Caroline County located between Fredericksburg and Richmond, watch for the signs along I-95 – Jackson died here May 10, 1863 following his wounding at Chancellorsville. Open daily 9 am–5 pm during summer season and at least Saturday–Sunday other times. Chatham, Stafford County located across the river from downtown Fredericksburg – Great views of the city from here, a Federal position during the 1862 fighting. Restored rooms in the Georgian mansion and exhibits tell the story here. Open 9 am–4:30 pm. Old Salem Church, Spotsylvania County located on busy Route 3 just west of Fredericksburg – 1844 church was site of fighting during the Chancellorsville campaign and a refuge for Fredericksburg citizens in 1862. u CENTRAL VIRGINIA: Fredericksburg and area I nformation about all Fredericksburg area sites can be found at the city visitor center downtown at 706 Caroline St. Excellent free Civil War walking tour brochures of the city also available there. Civil War Trails signs describing the action in town and the area are located just outside the building. Paid sight-seeing tours by carriage, bus and foot begin at the visitor center in season. www. VisitFred.com or 800-678-4748. More information about Spotsylvania sites including the major battles fought there is located in the county visitor center at 4704 Southpoint Parkway off U.S. Route 1, south of the city near the Massaponax exit from I-95. Trails maps and other Trails information are available at both centers. Slaughter Pen Farm, entrance to site at 11232 Tidewater Trail (Route 2) south of downtown Fredericksburg – The site of a failed Union assault during the Battle of Fredericksburg, Dec. 13, 1862, has been Continues on next page 4 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War Fredericksburg area, cont’d preserved and a 1.75-mile interpreted trail established. The attack here, south of Fredericksburg, was supposed to be the main attack that day. But Union troops had to advance over open fields to attack dug-in Confederate defenders on high ground. The site is known as “The Slaughter Pen” due to the high number of casualties taken here. For more information and a virtual tour, see www.civilwar.org. Pelham’s Corner, interpretive signs located southwest corner of Route 2 and Benchmark Road south of downtown – This is the spot where Confederate artillerist John Pelham shelled the Federal flank as it advanced toward the Southern line during the December 1862 Battle of Fredericksburg. Fredericksburg Area Museum and Cultural Center, 1001 Princess Anne St. – Downtown museum devoted to area history including the Civil War. Highlight is a Confederate flag that flew over the city during the 1862 battle. $7/adult. Call for hours. 540-371-3037, www.famcc.org. City Dock – The site of one of the Federal pontoon bridges constructed under fire in December 1862. Located at the east end of Sophia Street at the Rappahannock River. Civil War Trails interpretation. The Courthouse, series of interpretive signs at the corner of Princess Anne and Hanover streets – You are virtually surrounded by antebellum buildings here (1852 Courthouse, 1849 Episcopal Church, 1837 Presbyterian Church and the 1820 Farmer’s Bank building. Signs here describe the town during the war including the destruction during the 1862 battle and the “vast hospital” the town became. “Trail to Freedom” – Walking and driving tour commemorating the experience of more than 10,000 slaves in this area between April and September 1862. The walking tour highlights buildings and sites in downtown Fredericksburg related to slavery and the adventures of John Washington, who left an account of his life and escape to freedom. Driving tour covers sites along the Rappahannock River and in Falmouth. See maps, site descriptions and podcasts at www.trailtofreedom.com. Kenmore and Washington Street Tour, begins at Kenmore, 1201 Washington St. – A walking tour of an often overlooked area of the Frederickburg battlefield focuses on Kenmore, the 1775 home of Fielding Lewis and his wife Betty Washington Lewis (George Washington’s sister). The tour includes Kenmore’s grounds with views of a cannon ball imbedded in the Scene from the Stafford Civil War Park mansion’s walls and stories about its use as a hospital in December 1862. A short walk covers Civil War action along and below Washington Street. Stops include the Mary Washington Monument and the Confederate Cemetery. Pick up a free tour map/ brochure at Kenmore. 540-373-3381. Stafford County, north of Fredericksburg Call 540-654-1844 or see www. tourstaffordva.com for your Stafford information. White Oak Museum and White Oak Church, 985 White Oak Road, Falmouth, about 5 miles east of Fredericksburg – Unique items, most relating to life in the camps around Fredericksburg, are offered in an interesting style. Well-done reconstruction of soldier huts and an original section of a “cordoroy” road are highlights. Open Wednesday–Sunday 10 am–5 pm. $4/adult. 540-371-4234. whiteoakmuseum. com. A Civil War Trails marker outside the museum now describes White Oak Church across the road, which was the center of much activity during the Federal “occupation” in the winter of 1862. Aquia Creek Landing – Confederates began fortifying this spot soon after Virginia seceded. Shore batteries dueled with Union navy here early in war; Grant used it as supply base in 1864. Trails sign. Hartwood Church, Trails sign at 50 Hartwood Church Road, Fredericksburg 22406 – Federal troops, occupying the area early in the war, ripped out the woodwork and wrote on the walls of this historic Presbyterian Church. Confederate cavalry captured a group of inattentive Union troops here Nov. 28, 1862. Potomac Creek Bridge – Looked like “beanpoles and cornstalks” to Lincoln when he crossed in 1862. Bridge helped carry the Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Trevilian Station Battlefield ~ Driving Tour ~ W hile Gens. Robert E. Lee and U.S. Grant squared off at Cold Harbor, Northern cavalry under Union Gen. Philip Sheridan rode west to disrupt communication and supply lines into Richmond. Confederate cavalry rode to cut them off. The two large forces clashed June 11–12, 1864, near Trevilian Station on the Virginia Central Railroad near Louisa Court House. The Southern horsemen succeeded in halting the Union raid, but drew much-needed cavalry away from Lee’s army at Cold Harbor while Grant’s army slipped across the James River to Petersburg. See www.trevilianstation.org for a driving tour map. Among the stops marked by Civil War Trails signs are “Louisa Courthouse,” “Netherland Tavern” and “Custer’s First Last Stand.” The Sargeant Museum of Louisa County History, 214 Fredericksburg Ave., Louisa – Museum serves as the Trevillian Station battlefield visitor center with maps, exhibits and other orientation. Pick up information there about other county Civil War resources. Open Monday–Friday 10 am–4 pm and Saturday 10 am–1 pm (March–December). Call for hours other times. 540-967-5975 or www.louisahistoryhistoricalsociety.org. ◆ Railroad between Fredericksburg and the Potomac River. Used by both sides. Trails sign. Ferry Farm — Site just across the Rappahannock River from Fredericksburg was George Washington’s boyhood home and saw considerable Union activity during the December 1862 battle. $8. Open daily March–December. 540-370-0732. Stafford Civil War Park, 400 Mount Hope Church Road, Stafford – This 41acre county park encompasses preserved features of a fortified campsite used by the Union Army of the Potomac the winter of 1863. Five interpreted stops including hut sites and remains of battery earthworks that once guarded the camp.. Open 8 am-8 pm mid-March-October. (Closes 5:30 pm other times.) Free. Caroline County Port Royal, Civil War Trails sign located at Caroline and King streets, east of US 301 – John Wilkes Booth and a small party stopped at the Brockenbrough-Peyton House April 24. They were turned away after spending a brief time in the parlor. Booth then continued south to the Garrett Farm. Note: Nothing is left of the Garrett Farm where Booth died early on April 26. The site is now the right-of-way of U.S. 301 about 3 miles south of Port Royal. A state historical marker stands very near the site on the northbound lanes of the highway near milepost 122. Bowling Green (Star Hotel), Civil War Trails sign at the Caroline County Courthouse – One of Booth’s companions was captured by Federal patrols at the Star Hotel here (no longer standing). He led them to the Garrett Farm. See CivilWarTraveler.com for more on Caroline County's Overland Campaign sites. Spotsylvania County, south and west of Fredericksburg Three major Civil War battles were fought in this county: Chancellorsville (1863) and Wilderness and Spotsylvania (1864). For more about Spotsylvania County sites, see the Overland Campaign Driving Tour and the Fredericksburg National Park. Spotsylvania County Museum, 9019 Old Battlefield Blvd, Spotsylvania VA 22553 – The history of the county since 1722 is traced here with special focus on the Civil War. The exhibit “17 days in May” is devoted to the 1864 battles in the county with emphasis on the local experience. Open daily 9 am-5 pm. Free. 540507-7210. ◆ IN THE BATTLES TO TAKE RICHMOND HONOR CAME IN MANY COLORS. TAKE THE JOURNEY. IMAGE COURTESY LIBRARY OF CONGRESS VISIT ONTORICHMOND.COM OR CALL 1-888-RICHMOND. Christian Fleetwood received the Medal of Honor for his bravery in the Battle of New Market Heights Virginia.org 6 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War CENTRAL VIRGINIA: Richmond and area R ichmond was capital of the Confederate States of America from May 1861 to April 1865. Major battles were fought outside the city when Union armies came close in 1862 and 1864. Elements of the major battlefields are maintained by the Richmond National Battlefield Park. Although part of the city burned when it was evacuated in 1865, many sites associated with the Civil War in Richmond survive and are open to the public. Information about Richmond-area Civil War sites can be found at the visitor center located at the Richmond Convention Center downtown. Other visitor centers are located at the airport and at the BassPro shop north of town. VisitRichmondVA.com. For a series of free interactive downtown walking tours of Richmond, see CivilWarTraveler.com/RichmondTours. OnToRichmond.com outlines Civil War sites, tours, events and itineraries in the Richmond–Petersburg area. American Civil War Center at Historic Tredegar, 490 Tredegar St. – Eightacre park on the James riverfront was the site of the Tredegar Iron Works, the epicenter of Confederate industrial warmaking capacity. Buildings once part of the old ironworks now house the exhibit “In the Cause of Liberty” and the visitor center for the Richmond National Battlefield Park. ”In the Cause of Liberty,” located in the signature gun foundry building, is a comprehensive look at the entire war from causes to consequences, featuring films and other state-of-the-art visuals, artifacts, maps and interactive material. The exhibit describes the war from Confederate, Union A visitor center at the former Tredegar Iron Works at the American Civil War Center at Historic Tredegar on the James River introduces visitors to the Richmondarea battlefields and the city’s other Civil War history resources. Exhibit areas highlight military and civilian experiences during the war. The main visitor center and the Cold Harbor visitor center are open year-round 9 am–5 pm. Visitor centers at Fort Harrison and Glendale National Cemetery are open seasonally. All is free, except extended parking at the riverfront visitor center. 804-771-2145. www.nps.gov/rich. Park highlights Chimborazo Medical Museum, at the former main park visitor center, 3215 E. Broad St. — Exhibits and a film, “Under the Yellow Flag,” highlight the medical history of the site, a former Confederate hospital. The exhibit explodes some and African-American perspectives. The NPS facility focuses on Richmond and the area’s battlefields. The NPS visitor center is free. Adult admission to “In the Cause of Liberty” is $8. Both are open 9 am–5 pm daily. There is an hourly charge for on-site parking that is reimbursed with admission to “In the Cause of Liberty.” The first hour of on-site parking is free. www.tredegar.org or 804-780-1865. Museum and White House of the Confederacy, 1201 E. Clay St. – J.E.B. Stuart’s plumed hat, Armistead’s Gettysburg sword and countless other Civil War icons are exhibited here. Special sections highlight various aspects of soldier and civilian life in the Confederacy. The Confederate “White House,” home to Jefferson Davis and his family during the war, has been restored to its wartime appearance and is open for tours. Open daily 10 am–5 pm. Museum $10/adult, White Housse $10/adult, combo ticket $15. See also Museum of Monument at Yellow Tavern the Confederacy – Appomattox in Southside Virginia section. www. Confederate-manufactured weapons. The moc.org or 855-649-1861. cornerstone exhibit offers a Civil War section. Open 10 am–5 pm Monday–Saturday; Virginia Historical Society, Boulevard 1–5 pm Sunday. Free. www.vahistorical.org and Kensington Avenue – Housed in what or 804-358-4901. once was called the “Battle Abbey,” the Hollywood Cemetery, entrance at modern Virginia Historical Society features Cherry and Albemarle streets – An estiexhibits relating to all of Virginia’s hismated 18,000 Confederate soldiers, includtory. Civil War features include the murals ing Gens. George Pickett and J.E.B. Stuart, “Four Seasons of the Confederacy” and are buried here. Jefferson Davis and his items from the most extensive collection of family also are here overlooking the James River. Open 8 am–5 pm. Free. 804-648-8501. Valentine Museum / Richmond History Center, 1015 E. Clay St. – A museum dedicated to the history of the city of Richmond. Offers a Civil War section in an exhibit “Settlement to Streetcar Suburbs: Richmond and its People.” Open 10 am–5 pm Tuesday–Saturday; noon–5 pm Sunday. Admission fee. 804-649-0711. Monument Avenue – Statues in memory of Confederate leaders Stuart, Davis, Lee, Jackson and Matthew Fontaine Maury grace this grand avenue, which some call the South’s most beautiful. Confederate Memorial Chapel, 2900 Grove Ave. (behind the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts) – This tiny building was once part of the Confederate old soldiers’ home. Much Confederate memorial material inside. Free admission, video and guided tours. Open Wednesday–Sunday 11 am–3 pm. Virginia State Capitol – Main building, inspired by Thomas Jefferson, housed both the Confederate and Virginia legislatures during the war. The surrounding square is full of history with statues, the Governor’s Mansion and the old Bell Tower. Free guided tours daily. 804-698-1788 or www.virginiacapitol.gov. National Park Service at dawn June 3, 1864. A mile-long walking trail winds its way through both the Union and Confederate lines, scene of trench warfare during early June 1864. Electronic map is excellent. Fort Harrison, Henrico County — Confederate fortifications guarding Richmond were attacked with some success here in September 1864. This park unit highlights the role of the United States Colored Troops (USCT) in this and other attacks in the neighborhood. Visitor center open seasonally. Totopotomoy Creek Battlefield/Rural Plains – A walking trail takes visitors through this May 29-31, 1864, battlefield. Confederates managed to hold off Union attacks here before Grant moved on to Cold Harbor. “Rural Plains,” the 18th-century home where Patrick Henry was married, still stands on the battlefield and is undergoing restoration. ◆ Richmond National Battlefield Park myths surrounding Civil War medicine. Includes a 12-foot panorama photograph of Richmond taken shortly after the war showing the location of the city’s hospitals. Battlefield information also available. Open 9 am–5 pm. Free. Beaver Dam Creek battlefield, Hanover County — The Seven Days battles opened here just outside Mechanicsville June 26, 1862. New walking trails on both sides of the creek. Gaines’ Mill battlefield, Hanover County — Fighting here June 27, 1862 resulted in Robert E. Lee’s first victory as commander of the Army of Northern Virginia and was a turning point in the Seven Days battles. Walking trails explore the battlefield. Glendale battlefield, Henrico County — A visitor center open seasonally in the National Cemetery begins a tour of the 1862 Glendale/Malvern Hill battlefields. Malvern Hill battlefield, Henrico County — New walking trails explore the stories associated with the July 1, 1862 battle. Great walk of the Confederate attack route to the Union guns posted above them on the slight hill. Drewry’s Bluff, Chesterfield County — Great views of the James River shared by Confederates in May 1862 when they thwarted an advance by Union gunboats (including the famous Monitor). Walking tour through the fort and site of the Confederate Naval Academy. Cold Harbor battlefield, Hanover County — A visitor center is open at this site, famous for the bloody Federal attack Continues on next page 2014 Richmond and area, cont’d The following Richmond sites are marked with Civil War Trails signs unless otherwise noted. Belle Isle – Island in the James River served as prison camp for thousands of Union soldiers. Conditions here ranged from bad to horrific. Pedestrian bridge off Tredegar Street leads to the site. For info, visit the Civil War visitor center at the Tredegar Iron Works. Libby Prison, site at 20th and Cary streets – Union officers housed in famous and notorious building, no longer standing. Plaques on Richmond’s flood wall note the site. Rocketts Landing, East Main Street near Orleans – Ocean-going ships once docked here just below the James River falls, but commerce effectively was shut off by Union blockade in 1862. The Confederate Navy Yard also operated at the site, turning out ironclad warships. Hanover County (north of Richmond) One of the most fought-over counties in the country. See the Overland Campaign and the Richmond National Battlefield sections about visiting the sites at Cold Harbor, Gaines’ Mill, Beaver Dam Creek, Haw’s Shop, North Anna, Ashland and many others. Hanover Tavern, on Route 301 across the street from the old courthouse – Civil War associations vie with Patrick Henry in this historic community north of Richmond. J.E.B. Stuart led his Confederate troopers through here in 1862 during his famed ride around McClellan; the battle of Hanover Court House was fought nearby; and the tavern served as a haven for refugees from Northern Virginia. "Hanover County: Impact of War” exhibit. Selfguided and audio tours available Tuesday– Saturday 11 am-4 pm. 804-537-5050. Civil War Trails interpretation. Henrico County (borders Richmond north, east and west) See sections on Overland Campaign Peninsula Campaign Driving Tours and the Richmond National Battlefield Park about visiting battlefields at Seven Pines, Yellow Tavern, Malvern Hill, Fort Harrison and Glendale. Meadow Farm, county park off Mountain Road – Civil War civilian life often depicted at this antebellum farm house and grounds during events and programs. Orientation center open Tuesday–Sunday noon–4 pm, March–November. Weekends only mid-December–February. Grounds open dawn to dusk daily. 804-501-2130. 7 Civil War Trails interpretation. Dabbs House Museum, 3812 Nine Mile Road, 23223 – Exhibits, a short film and a tour highlight this fine museum outlining the history of this historic property. The home’s Civil War connection is highlighted. Robert E. Lee made this house his first headquarters after taking over command of the Army of Northern Virginia on June 1, 1862. Special attention is given to the meeting here June 23, 1862, when Lee, A.P. Hill, Stonewall Jackson and D.H. Hill planned the offensive that became known as the Seven Days Battles. Information about other county Civil War sites also is offered. Tours of the restored Civil War-era parts of the house are available. Museum is open Wednesday–Sunday 10 am–4 pm and by appointment. Free. 804-652-3406. Civil War Trails sign. America’s (Re) Birthplace The following Henrico County sites are marked with Civil War Trails signs unless otherwise noted. Deep Bottom, county park located off Kingsland Road south of Route 5 – James River crossing important to Federals attacking Richmond’s defenses during the late summer and fall of 1864. Savage Station, Trails sign located on Meadow Road a few miles south of Route 156 on the Richmond National Battlefield tour route – Union rearguard fight here June 29, 1862, as Gen. George McClellan withdrew his army to the James River following the battle of Gaines’ Mill. A large Union field hospital was abandoned here. White Oak Swamp, Trails sign at creek crossing on Route 156 on the Richmond National Battlefield tour route – Union troops managed to hold off a listless Confederate attack here by Stonewall Jackson June 30, 1862. Jackson receives some blame for his failure here while Confederates fought it out at Glendale the same day. Darbytown Road, Trails sign located on Darbytown Road at entrance to Dorey Park, east of Laburnum Avenue – Robert E. Lee set out Oct. 9, 1864, to recover some of the Richmond defensive line he had lost during fighting on Sept. 29. Although attacks near here began well for the Confederates, Lee was unsuccessful in his last offensive north of the James River. Meadow Bridge, Trails sign located on Meadowbridge Road near the Chicka hominy River crossing – Union cavalry had to fight it out here May 12, 1864, after finding themselves nearly trapped after the Battle of Yellow Tavern the day before. The Northern horsemen made good their escape with the help of Gen. George A. Custer. Lincoln and Lee. Burnside, Grant and Jackson. Slavery, states rights. Refugees, bombardment, battle and occupation. Flight to freedom. War. Life and death. Midway between the capitals of the Union and Confederacy, the tumultuous years of the Civil War in Fredericksburg, Spotsylvania and Stafford are vividly told at four major battlefields. More than 7,500 acres of national parkland and five museums and historic manors let us know how America challenged itself and was made new again. Fredericksburg, Spotsylvania, Stafford, Virginia. VisitFred.com 1-800-678-4748 Continues on next page VCW Re-size-cmyk 12312.indd 1 1/24/12 9:14 AM 8 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War mattox. Also see the Lee’s Retreat section in Southside Virginia. Richmond and area, cont’d Powhatan County Trent House, Trails sign located at the house on Grapevine Road on the Richmond National Battlefield Park driving tour route – Union commander Gen. George McClellan used this house as headquarters June 12–28, 1862. An observation balloon floated overhead while the Union high command tracked the beginning of the Confederate offensive ( June 26–27) that eventually dislodged them from this place. (south and west of Richmond) Route 60 is the main road through the county. • Lee’s Retreat Chesterfield County (south of Richmond) See www.chesterf ieldhistory.com for much more information about the Bermuda Hundred Campaign sites. A new driving tour guidebook also is available from the website. • Bermuda Hundred Campaign Sites This campaign was part of Union commander U.S. Grant’s grand plan for the destruction of Confederate forces in Virginia in 1864. In early May, Union Gen. Benjamin Butler landed his Army of the James below Richmond and above Petersburg while Grant was marching south from Culpeper and other Union armies were operating in the Shenandoah Valley. Butler’s orders were to drive west from landings between the James and Appomattox rivers and threaten both cities. But the Union commander’s feeble efforts were thwarted by Confederates under Gen. P.G.T. Beauregard. Within weeks of his landing, the Army of the James was “bottled up” between the James and Appomattox. Butler’s troops were to remain there until Petersburg was evacuated in April 1865. Bermuda Hundred, turn north from Route 10 on Allied Road, then to James River – Civil War Trails interpretation at the river near the place where Butler launched his Bermuda Hundred campaign in May 1864. Point of Rocks Civil War Park, 201 Enon Church Road, Chesterfield – This multi-use county park features trails exploring the southern end of the Union line on Bermuda Hundred. Remants of fortifications and the site of a large Civil War hospital (with Clara Barton connection) are highlighted. Lincoln, Grant and others visited this large Union base that continued to operate until the end of the war. Battery Dantzler, just north of Route 10 – This Confederate fort represents the northern end of the famous Howlett Line. It once overlooked a curl of the James River (now cut off by Dutch Gap). Open to the public with Civil War Trails interpretation. Half Way House Fort Wead, take Bermuda Orchard Road south from Route 10 to Greyledge Boulevard and turn right; fort is on left at end of the road – New site added to the Bermuda Hundred campaign tour. Fort was constructed in late May 1864 to reinforce the eastern section of the Federal line. Drewry’s Bluff, follow the signs from I-95 or Route 1 – The Richmond National Battlefield Park maintains a unit here, site of a May 15, 1862, battle between Union gunboats on the James River and Confederate fortifications above. The Southern fortifications were attacked from the land side nearly two years later by Butler’s Union troops. This was also the site of the Confederate Naval Academy. Fort Stevens, just east of Route 1, follow signs from Willis Road and Pams Avenue — Chesterfield County park preserves the fort and interprets the fighting here mid-May 1864. Civil War Trails interpretation. Battle of Chester Station, Trails sign located south side of Route 10 west of U.S 1 – Confederate attacks here May 5, 1864, failed to dislodge Union infantry stationed along the Southern communication and supply lines from Richmond to Petersburg. Although Union forces held the battlefield, they soon withdrew east to Bermuda Hundred and were “bottled up” there. Half Way House, on Route 1, now a restaurant – Butler used this old tavern May 14–16 while fighting raged to the north at Drewry’s Bluff and Fort Stevens. He was forced to leave by a Confederate counter attack. Civil War Trails interpretation. Battle of Swift Creek, Trails sign located at the Swift Creek Mill Playhouse, just off Route 1 between Richmond and Petersburg – Union troops advancing south toward Petersburg ran into Confederate resistance here May 9, 1864. Several Confed- erate attacks failed to dislodge the Union line, but Butler withdrew his Federal forces the next day. Parker’s Battery, off Route 10, just east of I-95 (follow signs) – Interpreted trail provides detailed look at this fort on the Confederate Howlett Line. Richmond National Battlefield Park site. 804-226-1981. Howlett Line Park, 14100 Howlett Line Drive – Impressive earthworks with some unique features are preserved in this two-acre park. This was a strong point in the Confederate line that “Bottled Up” Gen. Ben Butler’s Army of the James on Bermuda Hundred in 1864 and was involved in several military events in the area. • Also in Chesterfield County Henricus Historical Park (Dutch Gap), north of Route 10, just east of I-95 – A Chesterfield County park at the site of a 1611 English settlement also has Civil War significance. Union troops tried to build a canal here late in 1864 to cut off a curl of the James threatened by Confederate forts such as Dantzler. The effort failed during the war but the canal was later completed and is now the main James River channel. Civil War Trails interpretation. Visitor center open Tuesday–Sunday 10 am–5 pm. $8/ adult. www.henricus.org or 804-748-1613. Chesterfield County Museum and Lee’s Retreat marker, both located near the 1917 Courthouse, 6805 W. Krause Road – Museum takes in all of Chesterfield County’s history including items related to the many battles fought in the county in 1864. Small admission fee. Call 804-7961479 for hours. A Civil War Trails sign is located nearby describing the April 1865 retreat through Chesterfield from Petersburg by Robert E. Lee and his Confederate army. Three Confederate columns retreated through the county, one stopping here at the courthouse before moving on. The retreat ended less than a week later at Appo- When Robert E. Lee’s lines collapsed at Petersburg April 2–3, 1865, Confederates from that city and Richmond retreated south and west to consolidate at Amelia Court House. Many of the soldiers who defended Richmond marched through Powhatan. The following two signs describe this part of the story of “Lee’s Retreat.” More on the subject in the Southside/Lee’s Retreat section. Ewell Crosses the Appomattox, Trails sign at intersection of Routes 610 and 604 – On April 4, 1865, Confederate Gen. Richard Ewell, who commanded the Richmondarea forces, faced challenges crossing the Appomattox River near here while trying to join Lee in Amelia. Finding the Genito Bridge unfit, the Confederates crossed near here on the Richmond and Danville Railroad bridge at Mattoax Station. Powhatan Court House, Trails sign located on courthouse grounds – A large Confederate wagon supply train and some lost and straggling soldiers passed through here after Richmond’s fall. The much-needed supplies, meant to join Lee in Amelia, never made it. The wagons were captured shortly after crossing the Appomattox River near here. • Other Powhatan Trails sites Huguenot Springs, Trails sign at cemetery, follow signs from Route 711 (Robious Road) – A Confederate convalescent hospital was established here in 1862 at the site of an antebellum spa and hotel. A mass grave at the site contains the remains of more than 250 soldiers. Lee’s Last Bivouac, Trails sign located on Huguenot Trail (Route 711) and Lee’s Landing Road, about 4 miles east of Route 522 – Robert E. Lee spent the night of April 14, 1865, on the lawn of Windsor, his last camp “in the field” after his surrender at Appomattox. He rode into Richmond and his family’s home the next day. Derwent, Trails sign at the home (from U.S. 60, take Route 629 north to 646 then to house) – After his surrender at Appomattox, Robert E. Lee joined his family in Richmond. Bothered by constant visitors there and limited in funds, Lee began looking for “some small little home in the woods.” He was offered the use of Derwent, moving here late June 1865. ◆ Ten MonThs of Terror The Campaign That Ended The Civil War 150 years Civil War 2014-2015 Chesterfield County • Colonial heights • dinwiddie County hopewell • petersburg • prinCe george County Virginia www.petersburgarea.org PartAd_95x11.indd 1 1/18/14 3:10 PM 10 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War CENTRAL VIRGINIA: Petersburg and area A fter months of fighting in the late spring of 1864, Union forces backed Robert E. Lee’s Confederate army into defensive lines around Petersburg. For more than nine months the city endured a siege. The Petersburg National Battlefield maintains several park units to help tell the story (see listing later in this section.) Information about the city of Petersburg is available at the visitor center in Scene at City Point, Grant’s headquarters and supply base Old Town. 877-730-7278, www.PetersburgArea.org. 36 – Good Civil War displays here among Fort Mahone, 1964 Wakefield Ave – Pamplin Historical Park, entrance interesting assortment of historic military After a short train trip from City Point off Route 1 south of Petersburg (near the uniforms and equipment. Free. Monday– April 3, 1865, President Abraham Lincoln I-85, I-95 intersection) – This 422-acre Friday 10 am–5 pm; Saturday–Sunday toured this captured Confederate fort on park is located on the site of the April 2, 11 am–5 pm. 804-734-4203. the outskirts of Petersburg. Unburied bodies 1865, “breakthrough” by Union troops into remained from the fight the day before and Petersburg near the end of the war. Four Civil War Trails signs only at the following the president seemed deeply affected by the museums, including the National Museum locations: sight. Nothing is left of the fort. A monuof the Civil War Soldier with high-tech, ment and Civil War Trails sign on site. South Side Station, Old Town – This interactive displays, are located on the Wallace House, 204 S Market St – historic railroad station, located near the park’s “campus.” Also on site are several an- city visitor center, is the beginning of VirLincoln and Grant talked on the front tebellum buildings and a preserved section porch here for about 90 minutes during ginia Civil War Trails’ Lee’s Retreat tour of Confederate entrenchments with trails. Lincoln’s 1865 visit. It was the last time and the end of the 1864 Overland CamHours vary seasonally. $12.50/adult. www. they met. Civil War Trails sign. paign. pamplinpark.org or 877-PAMPLIN. Campbell’s Bridge, Trails sign located See www.petersburgarea.org or call 800368-3595 for hours and fees for the following sites: Siege Museum, Old Town on Bank Street – This quality museum highlights events and lifestyles during the city’s Civil War siege. Located in a beautiful antebellum public building. 804-733-2404. Centre Hill Mansion, Old Town – This 1823 mansion is said to be haunted (at least once a year) by Confederate troops. 804-733-2400. Blandford Church and Cemetery, Crater Road – Confederate sentimentality enshrined in Tiffany stained glass windows in this 1735 church. Special Confederate burial section in the cemetery. This spot was the objective of the Union attack, never reached, during the battle of “The Crater.” Civil War Trails interpretation. 804-733-2396. Quartermaster Museum, on the Fort Lee army base, east of Petersburg on Route on the Petersburg side of the Route 36 Bridge over the Appomattox – Part of Robert E. Lee’s Confederate army crossed to the north bank of the Appomattox River here the night of April 2, 1865, as he evacuated Petersburg. Fort Davis, Crater Road – One of a series of Union fortifications. This one built June 1864. Fort Hays, Trails sign at the fort on Flank Road, Petersburg National Battlefield tour road – This Union fort was built shortly after fighting to capture one of the most important Confederate lifelines to Petersburg, the Weldon Railroad. The fort was built in August-September 1864 after the eventual capture of the railroad and represented the continuing Union movement to encircle the city. June 9, 1864, Battle. Trails sign on Graham Road (rear entrance to Cameron Field) – Sign marks the point where a Union cavalry assault against Petersburg was stopped by Confederate cavalry, artillery and a collection of city residents led by James Dearing. Hopewell Information about Hopewell’s Civil War sites is available at the visitor center, near the intersection of I-295 and Route 36, 800-8638687. City Point — The national park at the confluence of the James and Appomattox rivers interprets the vast supply depot established here during the Union siege of Petersburg in 1864. A visitor center is located in Appomattox Manor. Grant’s headquarters has been rebuilt on its original site. (He directed all U.S. armies from a small cabin.) Open 9 am–5 pm daily. Free. 804-458-9504. A walking tour of the historic City Point neighborhood is described in a brochure available at the visitor center. It includes a dozen antebellum structures. The following Hopewell sites are marked with Civil War Trails signs unless otherwise noted. City Point Fortification, city park on Appomattox Street – This earthen fort protected the great depot at City Point 1864–65. Depot Field Hospital, site currently occupied by John Randolph Medical Hospital on Route 10 — Huge, efficient hospital complex served the Union armed forces during the Petersburg and Appomattox campaigns. Weston Manor – Civilian life is emphasized at 1789 home above the Appomattox River. Guided tours. Restrooms. Open April 1–Oct. 31; 10 am–4:30 pm Monday–Saturday, 1–4:30 pm Sundays. $5/adult. Prince George County See the Overland Campaign Driving Tour for Flowerdew Hundred and Prince George Courthouse. See also the WilsonKautz tour in the Southside Virginia listings. Beefsteak Cattle Raid, Civil War Trails sign at intersection of Routes 609 and 106 – Confederate cavalry successfully slid behind Union lines in September 1864 to capture 2,486 steers meant to feed Union troops engaged in the siege of Petersburg. Colonial Heights Violet Bank, Arlington and Virginia streets (a block east of Route 1, just north of the Appomattox River) – Early 19thcentury Federal style building served as Robert E. Lee’s headquarters late June– September 1864. 10 am–5 pm Tuesday– Saturday, 1–6 pm Sunday. Trails sign. Call first. Donation suggested. 804-520-9395. Fort Clifton, follow signs to Berberich Park from Temple Avenue – City park now encompasses the site of a Confederate fort on the Appomattox River. Forces there fended off various land and river attacks during May 1864. Nice place. Trails sign. Dunlop Station, Trails sign located at St. Michael’s Church, 501 Old Town Drive – This was the site of an important station on the Richmond and Petersburg Railroad. The station became even more important during the siege of Petersburg as a spoke line ran west from here to Ettrick to avoid Federal shelling. ◆ 2014 11 National Park Service Petersburg National Battlefield Park highlights Eastern Front Unit – Fort Stedman, site of Lee’s last great offensive to break the siege. His attacks there March 25, 1865, were unsuccessful. Remains of “The Crater,” famed site of a Union attempt to break the lines here with the use of four tons of gunpowder at the end of a mine, are still visible. The explosion July 30, 1864 tore a gap but failed to lead to Northern success. Five Forks – This strategic crossroads was the anchor of the Confederate line until April 1, 1865, when it was attacked successfully by Union forces under Gen. Philip Sheridan and others. The Confederate loss here opened the door to the last supply line leading into the city, the South Side Railroad. A visitor contact station is open daily 9 am–5 pm. 804-469-4093. Grant’s Headquarters at City Point (in Hopewell) – Exhibits in the Appomattox Manor visitor center help tell the story of the vast Union supply depot and hospital at the confluence of the James and Appomattox rivers. Walking tour of the area is available. 804-458-9504. Western Front – Siege Line Tour covers a series of battlefields and fortifications constructed during the siege. The tour traces the evolution of events and covers several battlefields as the Union and Confederate lines lengthened. Poplar Grove Cemetery is located on the tour route. It’s open year-round. Ranger on duty during the summer. Tour includes Fort Gregg, which fell during the last Federal push April 2, 1865. ◆ MORE CENTRAL VIRGINIA INFORMATION Culpeper Fredericksburg Hopewell Richmond Metro Orange County Petersburg Spotsylvania County 888-CULPEPERwww.VisitCulpeperva.com 800-678-4748www.VisitFred.com 800-863-8687www.hopewellva.gov 888-RICHMOND www.VisitRichmondVA.com 877-222-8072 www.visitorangevirginia.com 800-368-3595www.petersburg-va.org 800-972-2526 www.spotsylvania.org/tourism NEWS Manassas Civil War weekend Aug. 22–24 Dozens of programs including living history camps and demonstrations, tours and more is on tap during the city’s Civil War Weekend Aug. 22-24. See www.manassasmuseum.org for details. ‘Muster on the Maury’ living history event set Living history camps and demonstrations are set May 10–11 at the Paxton House in Glen Maury Park in Buena Vista. Details: www.mustermaury.vpweb.com. DVD covers Jackson Valley Campaign A new DVD produced by the Shenandoah Valley Battlefields Foundation focuses on Stonewall Jackson’s famous 1862 Valley campaign. The $14.95 disk contains modern and historic images plus maps. Order a copy: www.shopshenandoahatwar.org/Valley-Campaign-DVD-p/valley-campaigndvd.htm. the campaign before richmond september 26-28, 2014 henrico county, virginia www.civilwarhenrico.com a henrico county, chris anders, mike lavis & rear rank productions event From 1864–65, City Point was the hub of Union war activity and one of the world’s busiest seaports. Follow history to Appomattox Plantation where General Grant directed the Siege of Petersburg. FOLLOW HISTORY. •Grant’sHeadquartersatCityPoint PetersburgNationalBattlefield June15,1864–March29,1865 •Lincolnspenttwoofthelastthree weeksofhislifeatCityPoint • CityPointSelf-GuidedTour •WestonPlantationNearby HOPEWELL •VA HOPEWELL OFFICE OF TOURISM & VISITOR CENTER 4100 Oaklawn Boulevard Hopewell, Virginia 23860 Hopewell Ad — Page One_ Jan 2014.indd 1 www.hopewellva.gov [email protected] 804-541-2461 1-800-863-8687 © 2014 Hopewell Office of Tourism Eastern Front (Main) visitor center located east of the city off Route 36 This 2,659-acre park encompasses landmarks associated with 9.5 months of fighting for this strategic railroad town. Initial Union attacks against the city’s defenses were turned back in June 1864 and the armies settled into siege warfare, punctuated by intense fighting. Supplied from nearby City Point (now in Hopewell), the Union army finally flanked Lee’s Confederates at Five Forks on April 1, 1865, forcing the Southern army to leave the city the next day. The surrender at Appomattox was a week away. The park visitor center at the Eastern Front unit features an electronic map, museum exhibits, ranger help and a bookstore. Daily programs during the summer. Open daily 9 am–5 pm. $5 per vehicle (seven days). 804-732-3531 or www.nps.gov/pete. 1/9/14 10:59 AM 12 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War CENTRAL VIRGINIA: Piedmont R olling hills leading west to the Blue Ridge Mountains are the prime landscape feature of Virginia’s Piedmont area. During the Civil War residents of this countryside experienced a share of heavy fighting, but more often the area was the site of camps, cavalry action, hospitals and Confederate supply. Most of the sites listed below are readily accessible from Routes 29 and 15. Culpeper County Pick up a detailed map of all the county’s Civil War resources at the visitor center in the train staion downtown. Request a free copy from www.visitculpeperva.com or 888-CULPEPER. Museum of Culpeper History, reopens in April in the train depot/visitor center downtown – This fine community museum covers the full scope of the county’s history. An electronic Civil War map highlights the dramatic Civil War battles nearby including Brandy Station and Cedar Mountain. Open Monday–Saturday 10 am–5 pm, Sunday 1–5 pm. www.culpepermuseum.com or 540-829-1749. $3. Ask about walking tours. Brandy Station Battlefield, visitor center in the town of Brandy Station. Take Brandy Station exit from US 29, then left – A driving/walking tour of the site of the largest cavalry battle in North American ( June 9, 1863) is now open. JEB Stuart got quite a scare here. Stop at the “Graffiti House” visitor center for orientation. The house got its name for the well-preserved graffiti left by Civil War soldiers while hospitalized there. Tours available. Open Friday–Sunday 11 am–4 pm. Tours begin at the Graffiti House. Check website for lectures and tours. www.brandystationfoundation.com. 540-727-7718. Cedar Mountain – Stonewall Jackson confronted elements of Union Gen. John Pope’s Army of Virginia here Aug. 9, 1862, and got quite a scare. The Confederates gained a narrow victory and continued north toward Manassas. An interpreted walking trail now leads into the battlefield from a cluster of historical markers, including a Civil War Trails marker. Look for the signs on Route 15 south of Culpeper, then west onto Route 657. Kelly’s Ford, Civil War Trails sign at the Rappahannock River near the bridge from Remington – Big cavalry fight along the Rappahannock March 17, 1863, resulted in a technical Confederate victory but cost the South one of its best and most charismatic soldiers, Maj. John Pelham, who was killed in the battle. To get there from Remington, take Business US 29 to Route 651, then Route 620 to the river and across to the sign. From Culpeper, take Route 29 to Route 674 then east to Route 620, then to the river. Town of Culpeper, Civil War Trails signs at the restored railroad station/ visitor center downtown – Information here describes the Union encampment in Culpeper and surrounding areas during the winter of 1863–64 and a Sept. 13, 1863, Union cavalry raid on Confederate supplies loaded in rail cars at the station. “Pelham’s Last Days,” Trails sign two blocks north of the intersection of Main and Davis streets in Culpeper – Confederate Maj. John Pelham, commander of JEB Stuart’s horse artillery, left from near here to fight Culpeper National Cemetery Union horsemen who crossed the flank. Bad weather and quick action by the Rappahannock River at Lee ruined his plans. The heaviest action of Kelly’s Ford March 16, 1863. Wounded in the the campaign was at Payne’s Farm, where battle, he was returned to Culpeper, dying that the two forces clashed Nov. 27. A 1.5-mile night at the Shackelford House. interpreted trail established by the Civil Orange County War Trust begins at the church and winds Stop at the visitor center in the old train its way through the most intense part of the station in downtown Orange for Virginia battlefield. Civil War Trails information and merchanTown of Orange, Civil War Trails indise. www.visitorangevirginia.com or 877terpretation at the visitor center at the old 222-8072. See the Overland Campaign train station downtown – Robert E. Lee’s Driving Tour for Orange County sites at Army of Northern Virginia was camped the Wilderness battlefield and Germanna in the area during the winter of 1863–64. Ford. He moved out to meet the Union threat in Civil War Museum at the Exchange May 1864 as U.S. Grant began his camHotel, Gordonsville – Evocative of its past paign, crossing the Rapidan River into the as a railroad hotel turned Civil War hospiWilderness. tal. Excellent exhibits and artifacts (espeSt. Thomas Church, in Orange – Bigcially medical) on display. Special medical name Confederates, including Lee, Jefferreenactments in the spring and fall. Call for son Davis and A.P. Hill worshipped here. details. Open mid-March to mid-NovemCall 540-672-3761 for information about ber Monday–Thursday and Sunday 1–4 pm visiting. and Saturday 10 am–4 pm. Last tour begins Montpelier (Confederate camp trail), at 3 pm. $5/adult. www.hgiexchange.org or James Madison’s home located four miles 540-832-2944. south of Orange – Walking tour covers the Mine Run /Paynes Farm, Trailhead site of an 1863–1864 Confederate camp on with signs at the Zoar Baptist Church, the property and the cabin of a slave fam31334 Zoar Road, Locust Grove – Union ily, freed after the war. Four interpretive Gen. George Meade hoped to cross the waysides are located along the ¾-mile trail. Rapidan River in late November 1863, then Free (fee for tours). www.montpelier.org or hit Confederates under Robert E. Lee in 540-672-2728. Charlottesville and area The following Charlottesville and area sites are marked with Civil War Trails signs. Downtown Charlottesville – Signs near statues of Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson in the city’s public squares. Charlottesville’s role as manufacturing and hospital center is examined. Rio Hill Skirmish, now the Rio Hill Shopping Center north of Charlottesville on Route 29 – The famed Gen. George Armstrong Custer, leading a cavalry detachment to burn mills and destroy bridges in Charlottesville, was stopped here by Confederates. A good display describing the battle is located on the wall of Subway Sandwiches. Scottsville, south of Char lottesville on Route 20 – Union soldiers swept through this small James River town March 6, 1865, on their way to join U.S. Grant around Petersburg. Canal locks were destroyed and buildings burned. Buildings in the town served as Confederate hospitals. A cemetery in town honors the dead. Impressive riverfront display includes Civil War history. Madison County The visitor center in Madison will get you started. They say you will travel back in time in Madison County, and you do. The following Madison County sites are marked with Trails signs unless otherwise noted. Battle of James City, Route 29 near Route 631 – Only remnants of this town remain after day-long fighting between cavalry under Confederate Gen. J.E.B. Stuart and Union Gen. Judson Kilpatrick on Oct. 10, 1863. Roadside historical marker just south of the intersection. Battle of Jack’s Shop, modern-day Rochelle on Route 231 – J.E.B. Stuart got a bad scare here and was almost captured by Union cavalry under Kilpatrick and John Buford Sept. 22, 1863. This countryside is little changed since the Civil War and is still dotted with antebellum homes along the old Blue Ridge Turnpike (Route 231). It’s well worth the short trip from Route 29. Roadside marker in Rochelle. ◆ 2014 13 1864–2014 Bus tour covers USCT sites Museum of the Confederacy schedules 150th talks A June 14 bus tour leaving from the Manassas area is set to visit sites associated with attacks made by United States Colored Troops at Petersburg and Richmond in 1864. The black troops were among the first to attack the Petersburg defenses in mid-June. The tour also includes a stop at the New Market Heights Battlefield, distinguished by 14 Medals of Honor awarded to black troops after the September 1864 battle. Tour cost is $80 and includes lunch. Call 703-367-7872 for reservations. Both branches of the Museum of the Confederacy, in Richmond and Appomattox, offer timely and frequent talks and lectures related to various 150th anniversaries across Virginia and the country. Topics include the “Battle of the Wilderness” May 14, “Hunter’s Raid” June 11, “Battle of the Crater” July 18 and “New Market Heights” Sept. 19. See www.moc.org for the times and location of these and many other anniversary talks. Appomattox sets homefront program The big anniversary at Appomattox Court House National Historical Park is next year, but rangers at the park have scheduled programs Oct. 11–12 focused on the 1864 homefront. See www.nps. gov/apco for details. Annual Farmville conference features 1864 events Anniversary events are featured during the annual Civil War Seminar at Longwood University in Farmville March 15. The seminar, co-sponsored by the Appomattox Court House NHP, includes talks on the 1864 Overland, New Market and Nashville campaigns. More info on the free event: www.nps.gov/apco. THE 150TH ANNIVERSARY BERMUDA HUNDRED CAMPAIGN April 26-27 IMMERSE YOURSELF. This unique event will demonstrate what siege warfare was like in Chesterfield County, Virginia, in May 1864. Two lines of earthworks, one for Gen. Butler’s forces, and the other for Gen. Beauregard’s, will wind their way through the woods. Visitors will be able to follow alongside the battle as it commences, following the forces as they struggle for control of Richmond. A visitors’ area will show how civilians, slaves and medical personnel lived during the war, as well as tell stories from the U.S. Navy. Learn about infantry life, artillery, clothing and equipment and what camp was like for the soldiers. This isn’t a polite re-enactment on a manicured field. This is war. VisitChesterfieldVA.com 14 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War CENTRAL VIRGINIA Grant vs. Lee: The Overland Campaign ~ Driving Tour ~ T his is the 150th anniversary of the Overland Campaign, launched from just west of Fredericksburg toward the Confederate capital at Richmond. The Civil War Trails program has created a driving tour following the soldiers on their bloody route south through the Wilderness, Spotsylvania, the North Anna River, Cold Harbor and to the gates of Petersburg. Pick up a copy of the Trails map, ”Lee vs. Grant,” at area visitor centers or download a copy from CivilWarTraveler.com/maps. Many events are planned to commemorate the Overland Campaign this year. See that section of this newspaper or, for the latest information, see the events section of CivilWarTravler.com. Here are some of the tour highlights. Germanna Crossing – Union forces crossed here and at other Rapidan River sites, beginning the offensive May 4, 1864. Civil War Trails tour stop is located just east of the river, south of Route 3 at the Germanna Community College. The Wilderness Battlefield – Significant areas of the May 5–6, 1864, battlefield, including Saunders Field and the Widow Tapp Farm, are maintained in the national park. Driving and walking tours available. Plenty of good information on site. Todd’s Tavern – Trails wayside at the intersection of Brock Road and Catharpin Road. Union and Confederate cavalry clashed near here May 6–7 as the armies disengaged and raced to Spotsylvania. Spotsylvania Court House battlefield – The national park preserves and interprets the important parts of this bloody ground fought over May 8–21, including the famous “Bloody Angle.” Driving and walking tours throughout the park. Massaponax Church – Church still stands near where the Union high command met after moving through Spotsylvania Court House. Famous photos by See our red, white and blue history in Orange. ‘On to Richmond’ was the battle cry during much of the war. Timothy O’Sullivan of Union generals in action were made here. North Anna River Battlefield (Ox Ford) – A Hanover County park offers an interpreted walking trail among some nicely preserved Confederate earthworks on the south side of the river. Good stop midway through the campaign (May 24–25). Located on Route 684 west of US Route 1. Totopotomoy Creek – Lee’s army defended positions south of the creek May 28–June 1, 1864. Wayside at the creek on Route 606 helps tell the story. Rural Plains, a private home, stands nearby. Trails sign at Rural Point Elementary School. Cold Harbor – The Richmond National Battlefield Park operates a small visitor center on the battlefield. A short driving loop offers views of both Confederate and Union lines used during the May 31–June 12 stalemate. An interesting mile-long walking trail takes visitors through the maze of trenches and explains details of the fighting in the area. Another walking trail through the Union lines is located in a Hanover County Park nearby. A national cemetery, established in 1866, is nearby, as is the Garthright House, a landmark on the battlefield. Petersburg battlefield – The Petersburg National Battlefield encompasses sites associated with the mid-June 1864 Union attacks. Cautious Northern attackers, seeing the impressive Confederate fortifications, missed their chance against the thinly held Southern line. Lee’s arrival with the main army ensured a lengthy siege. South Side Station – Old Town Petersburg historic site is pivot for the Overland Campaign and Lee’s Retreat tours. The South Side Railroad was the last supply line left to Lee in April 1865. When that was cut, Lee was forced to evacuate the city. His surrender came at Appomattox Court House April 9, 1865. ◆ NEWS Winchester-area Civil War tours set • Old Town Winchester: 6 pm on the first and second Friday each month June–October. Meets at 2 N. Cameron St. $5. Reservations: 540-542-1326. Montpelier. Civil War sites. Historic inns, homes and trails. • Stephens City: 10:30 am on fourth Saturdays June–October. Meet at Newtown History Center, 5408 Main St, Stephens City. $5. Reservations: 540-869-1700. • Middletown: 5 pm on second Saturdays, June–October. Meets at Main and First streets, Middletown. Free. Reservations: 540-869-3051. • Kernstown Battlefield: 11 am and 1 pm on third Saturdays, May 10–October. Meets at 610 Battle Park Drive, Kernstown. More info: 540-869-2896. For more information about Winchester-area activities, see www.visitwinchesterva.com. Fairfax Civil War Day April 26 Living history, period music and special tours are features of this year’s Civil War Day in Fairfax. This year’s event is set for 10 am–5 pm April 26 at Historic Blenheim, 3610 Old Lee Highway. For more info, call 703-591-0560. 2014 15 “My God, has the army dissolved?” — GEN. ROBERT E. LEE Walk the ground where Lee’s men faced their final major battle. Tour the house turned makeshift hospital. Follow in the footsteps of soldiers who fought to possess the majestic High Bridge, rising 125 feet above the Appomattox River. Pristine state parks now preserve this priceless land, purchased with the lives of those who fought and died here. SAILOR’S CREEK BATTLEFIELD STATE PARK 6541 Saylers Creek Road, Rice, Virginia 23966 HIGH BRIDGE TRAIL STATE PARK Access points at Pamplin City, Elam, Prospect, Tuggle, Farmville, Osborne Road, River Road, and Rice. Virginia State Parks SP_ZR_GuidetoCivilWar_ad.indd 1 1/28/2014 12:21:42 PM In 2014, commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Battle of Monocacy, “the battle that saved Washington.” Lee’s final invasion of Maryland led to the Confederates’ largest victory on northern soil, but it cost him critical time. While you’re here, don’t miss the National Museum of Civil War Medicine in hip and historic Downtown Frederick, South Mountain State Battlefield, and dozens of other Civil War Trails sites. VISITFREDERICK.ORG | 800-999-3613 2014 17 TIDEWATER T he Tidewater area of Virginia is defined by the tidal rivers, primarily the James, York and Potomac, flowing from the interior of the state into the Chesapeake Bay. These rivers made the Confeder- ate heartland, including Richmond, vulnerable to attack by water or watersupported land assault. Most of the Civil War sites in this area are related to an attempt by a Union army under Gen. George McClellan, to march to Richmond using the “Peninsula” created by the York and James Rivers. A visitor center at Lee Hall Mansion in Newport News helps The Peninsula Campaign ~ Driving Tour ~ I n the early spring of 1862, the Union Army of the Potomac landed at Fort Monroe at the tip of the Virginia “Peninsula” formed by the James and York Rivers. The battle of the ironclads March 9 had cleared Hampton Roads, enabling the Federal water transports to land unmolested. Union Gen. George McClellan hoped to march west on the Peninsula and capture Richmond, less than 100 miles away. Confederates, led by Gen. John Magruder, manned strong fortifications behind the Warwick River, holding off the Federal juggernaut for a month before making a fighting withdrawal through Williamsburg in early May. The Confederate armies fell back to the Richmond defenses and were pinned down by mid-May. Taking command of the Southern army in June, Gen. Robert E. Lee broke the tightening Federal noose fighting what became known as the Seven Days battles. Lee’s attacks succeeded in driving McClellan from the immediate Richmond area. Less than two months later the theater of war had shifted to Northern Virginia. A Virginia Civil War Trails driving tour connects some of the most significant sites of the campaign from Fort Monroe to Richmond. Pick up a free map of the Peninsula Campaign driving tour at local visitor centers or download a copy from www. CivilWarTraveler.com/maps. Here are the highlights. For a complete list of Trail stops and their exact locations see www. civilwartraveler.com/EAST/VA. Fort Monroe – Built 1819–23, it is the largest moat-encircled masonry fortification in America and an important Union base for campaigns throughout the Civil War. Robert E. Lee served here 1831–34. Trails signs at Casemate Museum. Hampton – Multiple Trails signs here describe the Aug. 7, 1861, burning of the city by Confederates to prevent its fall into Union hands. Other Trails stops address The sinking of the USS Cumberland by the CSS Virginia efforts to assist former slaves in the area. More information about all the Trails stops at the Hampton Museum. For more, see the “Museums and Visitor Centers” section. Monitor-Merrimack and Congress and Cumberland Overlooks – Trails signs located at points near the dramatic events of March 8–9, 1862, during the Battle of the Ironclads. Find much more on the battle (and the remains of the USS Monitor) at the Mariners’ Museum in Newport News. See the “Museums and Visitor Centers” section for details. Forts Boykin and Huger – Confederate forts on the south side of the James River near Smithfield were built to hinder Union attempts to approach Richmond. Both sites are public parks with good interpretation, including Trails signs. Lee’s Mill Battlefield Park – Interpreted trail winds through this well preserved Confederate fortification that withstood a Union attack April 5, 1862. Lee Hall – Restored 1850s home was headquarters for Confederate commanders Magruder and Johnston. Open to the public as a house museum, the basement serves as a Peninsula Campaign visitor center. For more, see the “Museums and Visitor Centers” section. Battle of Dam No. 1 – Heavily entrenched Confederates turned back a major Union assault here along the Warwick River April 16. An interpreted trail through surviving Confederate earthworks features the story of the battle. The site is in Newport News Park. More information at the city’s visitor center at the entrance to the park. Endview – Built circa 1760, this small home was used by both forces as a hospital during the campaign. Site hosts frequent living history programs and is open to the public as a house museum. See the “Museums and Visitor Centers” section for details. MORE TIDEWATER INFORMATION Gloucester Hampton Newport News Norfolk Portsmouth Suffolk Williamsburg area 866-847-4887www.gloucesterva.info 800-800-2202www.visithampton.com 888-493-7386 www.newport-news.org www.visitnorfolktoday.com 757-393-5111www.visitportsva.com 866-SEE-SUFFOLKwww.suffolk-Fun.com 757-229-6511 www.williamsburgcc.com explain the 1862 Peninsula Campaign. A Virginia Civil War Trails map/brochure is available there and at most visitor centers in Tidewater. Yorktown – This Colonial port was the subject of a siege during the Peninsula Campaign as it was during the Revolutionary War. McClellan’s decision to stage a siege here is much criticized. It delayed his campaign for a month. Trails signs and other interpretation along the York Riverfront tell tell the Civil War story. More Civil War information at the NPS visitor center, which is mostly devoted to the important Revolutionary War story here. Tyndall’s Point Park and Gloucester Riverfront – Confederate batteries here helped deprive McClellan the use of the York River. Park with interpreted trail contains remains of the earthworks. Other Civil War-related signs on the York Riverfront, site of the “First Shot” in Virginia. Williamsburg – Multiple Civil War Trails signs are located in several areas of this Colonial capital, which became a battlefield May 5 as Union troops, pursuing a retreating Confederate army, attacked its defenses. Williamsburg’s sites include preserved fortifications at Fort Magruder and a nice Redoubt Park on Quarterpath Road. Seven Days Battles – McClellan’s Union army settled around Richmond by mid-May. Rain and flooded rivers hindered his attempts to get at the Confederate capital. Following the Battle of Seven Pines (May 31), Robert E. Lee took command of the Confederate forces in the city. In a series of battles beginning June 26, Lee defeated the Union army, forcing it away from Richmond and into a James River enclave. Seven Days battle sites at Beaver Dam Creek, Gaines’ Mill and Malvern Hill are preserved in the Richmond National Battlefield Park. Berkeley Plantation – This James River plantation was the final stop of McClellan’s Peninsula Campaign. It was here at Harrison’s Landing that the Union army licked its wounds under the cover of gunboats. The plantation’s history, dating to the 1600s, is highlighted. Open to the public. Nearby Westover, where only the grounds are open to visitors, was Union Fifth Corps headquarters. Trails sign near the parking lot. ◆ 18 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War TIDEWATER VIRGINIA: Museums & Visitor Centers Tidewater Museums The Casemate Museum, on the grounds of the Fort Monroe National Monument – Fort Monroe has guarded the approaches to the vital Hampton Roads since 1823. It is the jumping off place for the Peninsula Campaign. The museum offers good interpretation of the fort and preserves the area where Confederate exPresident Jefferson Davis was imprisoned after the war. Open Tuesday–Sunday 10:30 am–4:30 pm. Free. 757-788-3391. USS Monitor Center/Mariners’ Museum, 100 Museum Drive, Newport News – The Monitor Center is now a major part of the well-established Mariners’ Museum, offering a comprehensive look at the famous ironclad USS Monitor and its famous battle with the CSS Virginia (formerly USS Merrimack) at Hampton Roads March 9, 1862. The Center, using both traditional and state-of-the-art audio-visual experiences, takes visitors through the process of creating the Monitor, through the dramatic “Battle of the Ironclads” and finally the recovery of the Monitor wreck off Cape Hatteras, NC. Highlights include the “Battle Theater” that puts visitors in the Former Confederate President Jefferson Davis in prison at Fort Monroe middle of the ironclad battle. Admission price for the Center includes the rest of the fine museum, which covers 3,000 years of maritime history. Open Monday, and Wednesday–Saturday 10 am–5 pm and Sunday 11 am–5 pm. $12/adult. 757-5962222 or www.monitorcenter.org. Virginia War Museum, 9285 Warwick Blvd., Newport News – More than 50,000 displayed artifacts document America’s wars from 1775 to the present. Features Civil War weapons, flags and accouterments. Inquire here about living history programs and tours of the Newport News Civil War sites. Open Monday–Saturday 9 am–5 pm; Sunday noon–5 pm. $6/adult. 757-247-8523. Lee Hall, 163 Yorktown Road (take Lee Hall exit from I-64) – Restored antebellum mansion that served as Confederate headquarters during part of the 1862 Peninsula Campaign now serves as a visitor center for that phase of the war. Restored rooms reflect both military and civilian life. The English basement offers exhibits and other material related to the commanders and the fighting on the Peninsula. Civil War Trails interpretation near a fortification on the property. Guided tours. January–March hours: Thursday–Saturday 10 am–4 pm; Sunday 1–5 pm. April–December hours: Monday, Thursday, Friday 10 am–4 pm; Saturday 10 am–5 pm; Sunday noon–5 pm. $6/adult. 757-888-3371 or www.leehall.org. Endview Plantation, located on Yorktown Road just off the I-64 Lee Hall exit – The grounds around Endview were occupied by Confederates until Union troops took over during the May 1862 advance toward Richmond. The Federals stayed in the area the rest of the war. Tours of the buildContinues on next page BLACK HISTORY SITES T he experience of African-Americans during the Civil War is extraordinarily rich and often contradictory. Nowhere are those stories, in their variety, better told than in Virginia. In Virginia, blacks were slaves and they were soldiers. Free blacks and bondsmen manned the iron works and helped build the fortifications around Richmond. Other blacks, wearing Union blue, attacked those same fortifications in September 1864, winning 14 Medals of Honor on the way. Nearly every museum dedicated to the study of the Civil War in Virginia includes some black history. The national parks, especially the Richmond National Battlefield Park and the Petersburg National Battlefield, highlight the role of United States Colored Troops (USCT). The Museum of the Confederacy in Richmond acknowledges the role of African-Americans in the southern states. Civil War Trails interpretation throughout Virginia tells stories such as Union Gen. Benjamin Butler’s action in 1861, while at Hampton’s Fort Monroe, to accept and employ runaway slaves as “contraband of war.” Many blacks who eventually served with the Union army are buried in A United States Colored Troops member Norfolk’s Elmwood Cemetery under a monument to their service. Another trail site, Freedman’s Village in Arlington, explains what happened to some of those who escaped slavery. Many village residents, along with members of the USCT, are buried in a special section at nearby Arlington Cemetery. Other stops on the trail are Baylor’s Farm in Hopewell, where black soldiers took a leading role on the road to Petersburg in June 1864, and Deep Bottom in Henrico County, where USCT crossed the James River to assault Richmond defenses at New Market Heights and Fort Gilmer (part of the Richmond park’s Fort Harrison unit) a few months later. Outnumbered black troops successfully defended a James River outpost located on the property of Sherwood Forest Plantation in May 1864. USCT troops played a significant role in the Battle of Saltville in October 1864. There, as in other Virginia battles, evidence exists that Confederate troops killed black prisoners. Thousands of blacks certainly traveled with the Confederate armies as well — as cooks, teamsters and personal servants. For most of the war, it was the official policy of the Confederate government not to enlist blacks as combat soldiers, although a handful may have served in that role. However, blacks were preparing for entry into the Confederate army in March 1865. Witnesses saw black Confederate recruits drilling on Richmond’s Capitol Square. Those black Confederates may have been the ones captured during Lee’s Retreat to Appomattox. A total of 36 blacks were surrendered with the Confederate army at Appomattox. All were listed as cooks, teamsters, musicians and other nonsoldier roles. More about African-American involvement during Lee’s Retreat is covered in a brochure of the Virginia’s Retreat group, which is available free at National Park sites in Petersburg, Appomattox and Richmond and at the Sailor’s Creek State Park. Civil War Trails signs now mark the location of homes and burial places of USCT in Chesapeake. Black Union troops took the lead in the occupation of Petersburg and were among the first to enter the city of Richmond in 1865. u 2014 19 Museums, cont’d ing and grounds and frequent living history programs are highlighted at this site. January–March hours: Thursday–Saturday 10 am–4 pm; Sunday 1–5 pm. April–December hours: Monday, Thursday, Friday 10 am–4 pm; Saturday 10 am–5 pm; Sunday noon–5 pm. $6/adult. 757-887-1862 or www.endview.org. James A. Fields House, 617 27th St., Newport News – Trails sign located in front of the house owned by Fields, who was born a slave and escaped to Union lines in 1862 as a “contraband of war.” He later became a lawyer and served as justice of the peace and as local representative to the Virginia House of Delegates. Home open by appointment. $3/adult. 757-2451991. Hampton History Museum, 120 Old Hampton Lane, downtown – Museum covers 400 years of Hampton history and includes inventive galleries on the Antebellum, Civil War and Reconstruction periods. Topics in the Civil War gallery include the Battle of Big Bethel, the Burning of Hampton and the effort of Union Gen. Ben Butler to declare escaped slaves “contraband.” Open Monday-Saturday 10 am–5 pm; Sunday 1–5 pm. $5 adult admission. 757-727-1610. Hampton Roads Naval Museum, in Nauticus on the downtown Norfolk waterfront – Well-done naval history museum shares building with Nauticus. Much good material on the battle of the ironclads and other Civil War action. Free to visit this museum. (There is a charge for Nauticus but you do not have to pay if you only want the Naval Museum.) Open Monday–Saturday 10 am–5 pm and Sunday noon–5 pm. Shortened hours and closed Mondays during the winter. Call 757-322-2987 or www. hrnm.navy.mil. Portsmouth Naval Shipyard Museum, 2 High St. on the waterfront – Excellent Civil War exhibit is a highlight of this museum dedicated to the history of the Portsmouth area. This was the place where the former USS Merrimack was recast as the ironclad CSS Virginia. Open 10 am-5 pm Tuesday-Saturday and 1–5 pm Sunday. $4. www.portsnavalmuseums.com or 757393-8591. Riddick’s Folly, 510 N. Main St., Suffolk – This historic house, built in 1837, served as Union headquarters. The top floor interprets its Civil War use. Soldier graffiti. Call for hours. $4. Civil War Trails sign. 757-934-0822 or www.riddicksfolly.org. Tidewater Visitor Centers Portsmouth Visitor Center, 6 Crawford Parkway, offers Civil War information NEWS Isle of Wight tours scheduled • Fort Huger, 15080 Talcott Trail: 10 am, first Saturday of each month through November. • Battle of Smithfield, Isle of Wight Museum in Smithfield: 2 pm, first Saturday of each month through November. • Fort Boykin, 7410 Fort Boykin Trail, Dec. 20 at 3 pm. All tours are free and reservations are not required. More info: www.historicisleofwight.com or 757-357-0115. Lee Hall van tours cover anniversary sites Van tours sponsored by Lee Hall Plantation in Newport News cover sites with 150th anniversary commemorations this year. Here’s the lineup: “Wilderness and Spotsylvania,” March 15; “North Anna and Cold Harbor,” April 26; “Bermuda Hundred,” May 17; “Petersburg’s Eastern Front,” June 21 and “Dahlgren’s Raid,” July 19. For more info about the tours see www.leehall. org or call 757-888-3371. and walking tours of the historic areas. Water and trolley tours are available in season. For more info: www.portsva.com or 800-portsva. Norfolk Visitor Centers are located at 9401 View St. and 232 E. Main St. For more: 800-368-3097 or visitnorfolktoday.com. Gloucester Visitor Center, 6509 Main St., 866-847-4887, gloucesterva.info. Hampton Visitor Center, in Hampton History Museum, 120 Old Hampton Lane. www.visitHampton.com, 800-800-2202. Newport News Visitor Center, 13560 Jefferson Ave (I-64 exit 250B) is very near site of some of the Peninsula’s most important Civil War sites. Get maps to area Civil War sites and more here. 888-493-7386. Williamsburg Visitor Center, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. www.history. org. Suffolk Visitor Center, 510 N. Main St. 757-934-1390 or suffolk-Fun.com. Yorktown National Park visitor center. Although emphasis is on the Revolutionary War, plenty of Civil War information also is available here — be sure to ask for it at the visitor center. Open daily 9 am–5 pm daily. Expanded hours during the summer. Park fee charged. www.nps. gov/colo or 757-898-3400. ◆ Fort Wool Miss Hampton II Harbor Tours PEOPLE HAVE Explored HERE FOR OVER 400 YEARS. COME HAVE AN ADVENTURE. 800.800.2202 VisitHampton.com 20 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War TIDEWATER VIRGINIA: More to See Hampton Courtland See also the museum/visitor center listings for the Hampton Museum and the Casemate Museum. Fort Monroe National Monument, 41 Bernard Road, Hampton VA 23651. 757-788-3391 -- Strategically located at the entrance to Hampton Roads, Fort Monroe’s history spans centuries. The Union maintained control of the fort throughout the Civil War and was never seriously threatened. In 1861, Union Gen. Benjamin Butler announced his policy of harboring escaped slaves here, calling them “contraband of war.” The next year, Gen. George McClellan launched the Peninsula Campaign from the fort. Confederate President Jefferson Davis was imprisoned here after the war. The NPS took over the fort in 2011 and it’s a work in progress. Watch www.nps.gov/fomr for ranger tours of the site. Also see Casemate Museum in “Museums and Visitor Centers.” Mahone’s Tavern, Trails sign across from the courthouse downtown – This tavern was once the home of Confederate Gen. William Mahone, hero of the Battle of the Crater and able railroad executive. Confederate troops camped here during the war and the building was used as a hospital. The following sites all feature Trails signs. Ask at the Hampton visitor center for locations. Emancipation Oak, Trails sign on the Hampton University campus – AfricanAmerican students, many freed by Union Gen. Benjamin Butler’s “contraband” declaration early in the war, listened here as the Emancipation Proclamation was read in 1863. Camp Hamilton, Trails sign in Phoebus, Route 143 just before the bridge to Fort Monroe – The first U.S. Army camp on post-secession Virginia soil was established here in May 1861, under the protection of the Fort Monroe guns. St. John’s Church, Trails sign on Queen’s Way at the Hampton History Center and Museum – Built in 1728, St. John’s was burned during the Confederate evacuation Aug. 7, 1861. Much of the city burned that day on orders of Confederate Gen. John B. Magruder. The church walls remained, however, and services were held in the rebuilt church in 1869. Villa Margaret – The summer home of President John Tyler stood across the river from here. When Union troops occupied the area in 1861, they seized the home for barracks and the place was thoroughly vandalized. Hampton Military Academy – This is the site of an antebellum military school, one of many educational facilities operated at Pee Dee Point. It graduated many for service in the Confederate army. The school burned during the war. Mary Peake – Mary Peake was born free in Norfolk and later settled in Old Point Comfort (Fort Monroe) teaching both slaves James River Plantations Captured Confederate battery at Yorktown and free black children. Early in the war she established a school with Federal backing. Fox Hill in the Civil War – This hamlet was used by watermen and farmers prior to the Civil War. It became a no-man’s land in 1861, subject to Federal raids against Confederate supply vessels. Hampton is Burned – This is the site of a house burned during the Confederate evacuation of Hampton, Aug. 7, 1861. The site, probably used as a junk pile after the burning, proved a treasure trove for archaeologists, who found buttons from both sides, an inkwell and other Civil War soldier items. Hampton Courthouse – This was one of more than 500 buildings burned as Confederates evacuated Hampton in August 1861. The site was soon used as a Union headquarters for the Peninsula Campaign. Later, the American Missionary Association built a school for freedmen on the site. Williamsburg Best known for the internationally famous attraction, Colonial Williamsburg, the town also was the site of dramatic Civil War events, including the May 5, 1862, battle during the Peninsula Campaign. Confederate fortifications, many of which are now open to the public, dot the outskirts of town. Redoubt Park, 425 Quarterpath Road, Williamsburg 23185 – Nice interpreted walking trail through this city park preserving a couple of redoubts on the Williamsburg line, attacked by Union forces May 5, 1862. 757-259-3764. Franklin and area Battle of Franklin and Franklin During the War, a series of Trails signs located at the Blackwater River, downtown Frank- lin; follow the Trails wayfinding signs in town – This regional transportation hub and commercial center became a central Confederate supply center early in the war. In 1862, Confederates constructed a series of earthworks that ran 50 miles north. Union gunboats came up the Blackwater several times in 1862 including a serious combined army-navy attempt to capture the town on Oct. 3. Confederates were able to repel that adventure. Thomaston, located west of Franklin, take Route 671 (Gen. Thomas Boulevard) from Route 58, turn onto Cypress Bridge Road then 0.5 miles to left turn onto Thomaston Road, then 1 mile to house – This is the birthplace and boyhood home of prominent Union Gen. George Thomas who would earn the nickname “Rock of Chickamauga.” His choice to remain with the Union army caused family discord and he never returned home. Norfolk Norfolk Civil War Tour – Driving tour covers sites around the city including Fort Norfolk, historic districts, the site of Abraham Lincoln’s 1862 “landing” and others. Brochures available at the city visitor center. Fort Norfolk, on the waterfront at 810 Front St. – Originally built in 1794, this interesting fort was occupied by both Confederate and Union forces. Entry to the grounds during business hours Monday–Friday. Black Soldiers Monument in Elmwood Cemetery, Princess Anne Road – Rare monument to African-American soldiers who fought in the Civil War memorializes soldiers buried in the West Point section of the Elmwood Cemetery. Trails sign. 757441-2576. Located along and near the James River and State Route 5 between Williamsburg and Richmond, each of these plantations, large and small, figured in Civil War history. Shirley and Berkeley are open daily for public tours. Berkeley and nearby Westover (see Peninsula Campaign) were the final stop in Union Gen. George McClellan’s campaign to take Richmond in 1862. Thousands of soldiers camped on the banks of the river after the battle of Malvern Hill. Shots were fired at them from Evelynton’s “backyard.” Shirley Plantation hosted a hospital for a time. Sherwood Forest, home of President John Tyler, was damaged by occupying troops. A restored riverside fort at Wilson’s Wharf (Fort Pocahontas) on the Sherwood Forest grounds hosts an annual reenactment and is open for special events and preplanned tours. Smaller plantations, North Bend and Piney Grove, both feature Civil War-oriented stories, enhanced by Trails signs. The story of Union Gen. U.S. Grant’s remarkable James River crossing in 1864 is told at North Bend and at a county park at Wilcox’s Landing. Suffolk Siege of Suffolk – Confederates under Gen. James Longstreet threatened Union forces here in April 1863 but were unable to dislodge the Federals. Trails interpretation in Cedar Hill Cemetery. Portsmouth Stop at the Portsmouth Visitor Center, 6 Crawford Parkway, for more information. 757-393-5111, www.visitportsva.com. Portsmouth Naval Hospital – Used by Confederate and Union armies during the war. More than 300 Union sailors killed during the sinking of the USS Cumberland and USS Congress are buried on the grounds. Trails sign on the waterfront. Olde Towne Historic District – A square mile of Revolutionary and Civil War-era structures. Includes the Peters House, headquarters for Union Gen. Benjamin “Beast” Butler; the Pass House Continues on next page. 2014 21 More Tidewater, cont’d (Crawford and London) where citizens had to obtain passes and swear allegiance to the United States; and the Confederate War Memorial (Court and High streets). Civil War Trails sign. Chesapeake The following Chesapeake sites are marked with Trails signs unless otherwise noted: “Cuffeytown 13,” Civil War Trails sign at the Gabriel Chapel, 2216 Long Ridge Road (off Business Route 168) – A concentration of men who fought with the United States Colored Troops are buried with honor in this small cemetery. Village of Great Bridge, off route 168 north of Route 165 – Located at the strategic crossing of the Albemarle and Chesapeake canals. During the war’s early stages the Confederacy benefited from the link. Following the fall of Norfolk, Great Bridge fell into Federal hands. Glencoe, on the Dismal Swamp Canal Trail (Old U.S. 17) – Home of William Wallace, first lieutenant of the “Jackson Grays.” Within view of this homesite is the large antebellum house “Beechwood,” home of the Stewart family. Village of Deep Creek, just south of I-64 west of Route 17 on Luray Road – A 50-building village, important link on the Great Dismal Swamp Canal. Dismal Swamp Canal, south of I-64 on the Dismal Swamp Canal Trail (Old U.S. 17) – This, the oldest operating artificial waterway in America, provided the Confed eracy with an important link between the Chesapeake Bay and the North Carolina Sounds until May 1862, when it was captured by Union troops. “Seven Patriot Heroes,” from I-64, take Route 168 south, then right at Old Battlefield Boulevard, then right on Ballahack Road, then 3 miles to site – The homes and final resting places of veterans of the United States Colored Troops are located nearby. Pleasant Grove Baptist Cemetery, just off Route 165 – A monument to the “Jackson Grays” honors the regiment formed in the churchyard. Colonial National Historical Park Although the main mission here is to interpret the Colonial history of Jamestown and Yorktown, there is much to interest Civil War visitors. Information about the 1862 siege of Yorktown is available at the visitor center and a Civil War fort, partially built on the archeological remains of the original John Smith 1607 fort, is a prominent feature at Jamestown. Admission fee. www.nps.gov/ colo or 757-898-0838. Gloucester Two county parks located on the York Riverfront at the foot of the U.S. 17 bridge tell the early-war history of this strategic area. Tyndall’s Point Park, 1376 Vernon St. – See listing in Peninsula Campaign Driving Tour. The Gloucester Point Beach Park, 1255 Greate Road, features expansive river views and an interpretive sign describing the first shots of the war in Virginia (May 3, 1861). See www.gloucesterva.info/pr/parks.htm or call 804-642-9474 for directions and more information. Gloucester in the Civil War, Trails sign at the courthouse in Gloucester – Union raiders, looking to destroy Confederate supplies, raided, looted and damaged buildings here April 7, 1863. Smithfield / Isle of Wight County See historicisleofwight.com for information about free tours. Fort Boykin Historic Park, 7410 Fort Boykin Trail, Smithfield – Originally built in 1623 and used during the American Revolution and the War of 1812, this fort was captured May 17, 1862, by Union naval forces. A nice park includes interpretation outlining the fort’s history. Civil War Trails and other interpretation on site. Open 8 am-dusk. Free. Fort Huger, 15080 Talcott Terrace, Smithfield – Restored Confederate James River fort with interpreted walking trails about 8 miles from Smithfield. This was one of the forts on the south side of the James intended to block the approaches to Richmond. It was captured (along with its sister Fort Boykin) in May 1862 by a Union flotilla about a week before Union warships were turned back near Richmond at Drewy’s Bluff. Open 8 am–dusk. Free. Battle of Smithfield — Engagements Jan. 31 and Feb. 1, 1864, resulted in the destruction of the Union gunboat USS SmithBriggs. Trails sign. Northern Neck The area between the Rappahannock and Potomac Rivers is referred to as the Northern Neck. Route 3 is the major road. Stratford Hall, north of Route 3 on Route 214 – This is the birthplace of Robert E. Lee. His cradle remains in place in one of the rooms. $10/adult. Call or see website for hours: www.stratfordhall.org or 804-4938038. ◆ Ships, History Great Historic Homes & Earthworks and the Outdoors USS Monitor Center at The Mariners’ Museum Battle of the Ironclads 888.493.7386 newport-news.org Virginia Minutes from Williamsburg, A short drive from Virginia Beach. 22 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War 2014 ANNIVERSARY EVENTS force the issue here, Grant moved to Cold Harbor. Living history, special tours and programs in and near the Shelton House on the battlefield are planned at the Richmond National Battlefield Park property May 29-31. A bus tour of the Union movement toward Cold Harbor is planned May 30. Web for all: www.nps.gov/rich Here’s a summary of 1864 historic events and their commemoration. Things change. Be sure to check the websites of the host sites for the latest information before attending. Winter camps Both the Confederate and Union winter 1863–1864 camps are getting special attention this year. A Union Winter Camp Symposium is set March 22 in Culpeper. Web: friendsofcedarmountain.org. A bus tour of the camps of both sides is planned April 11-12. Web: fowb.org. Battle of Cold Harbor May 31–June 12, 1864 Battles of Wilderness/Spotsylvania May 5–6, May 8–21, 1864 Union Gen. U.S. Grant opened what would be known as the Overland Campaign as he plunged his army into “The Wilderness” west of Fredericksburg. The Fredericksburg and Spotyslvania National Military Park plans a variety of programs for the anniversaries of these battles. Special ranger programs and tours are planned on the Wilderness battlefield May 3-4 and real-time tours for the anniversary dates, May 5-6. More programs are planned May 8–12 at Spotsylvania, with a special evening program May 10. A commemoration of the last major attack at Spotsylvania is set May 18. Web: nps.gov/frsp/sesquicentennial.htm A reenactment is scheduled for May 1–4 at Spotsylvania. Web: 150spotsylvania.com. A bus tour with Gordon Rhea is set for May 2-3. Web: fowb.org More programs are planned at Elwood, a Union headquarters on the Wilderness battlefield. Web: fowb.org. Bermuda Hundred May 1864 On May 4, Union troops under Gen. Benjamin Butler landed at Bermuda Hundred, the strip of land between the Appomattox and James River south of Richmond. Grant hoped Butler would put pressure on the Richmond defenses and cut the communication and supply lines between the capital and Petersburg. It didn’t work. After a series of fights in May, Butler was “Bottled Up” at Bermuda Hundred. A reenactment is planned April 25–27 in Chesterfield County south of Richmond. Web: visitchesterfieldva.com/bh150 Van and walking tours related to the campaign also are planned. Web: chesterfieldhistory.com. Attack at Petersburg Cloyd’s Mountain May 9, 1864 Battle of North Anna May 23–26, 1864 Confederates confronted Union forces heading for the important Virginia & Tennessee Railroad. Savage hand-to-hand combat and high casualty rates distinguished this battle in Southwest Virginia. A reenactment is set for April 5–6. Web: battleofcloydsmtn.org. Lee set a trap for Grant on the south bank of the North Anna River, but Confederates failed to fully take advantage. The Union army forced a crossing then continued toward Richmond. A bus tour, led by a National Park Service ranger is set for May 23. Web: nps.gov/rich Activities including living history and special tours are planned May 24 at the county battlefield park north of Ashland. Call 804-365-7150 for details. Battle of Yellow Tavern May 11, 1864 Confederate cavalry commander J.E.B. Stuart was mortally wounded during this cavalry battle a few miles north of Richmond. A living history “Dinner with J.E.B. Stuart” is planned for May 9; special tours of nearby Meadow Farm are scheduled May 10; and a Yellow Tavern bus tour is planned May 11. Web: henricohsitoricalsociety.org Call 804-501-2130 for Meadow Farm. Battle of Fort Pocahontas May 24, 1864 United States Colored Troops played a key role turning back a Confederate cavalry attack against this Union fort on the James River east of Richmond. The annual anniversary reenactment is set May 17-18. Web: fortpocahontas.com Battle of New Market May 15, 1864 Battle of Haw’s Shop May 28, 1864 The cadets from the Virginia Military Institute in Lexington helped turn back this first (in 1864) Union thrust deep into the Shenandoah Valley. Free car-caravan tour of the entire battlefield planned on the anniversary date. The annual anniversary reenactment May 16–18 on the historic battlefield is special this year. Web: vmi.edu/newmarket Opposing cavalry clashed near Enon Church as the Union army crossed the Pamunkey River moving toward Richmond. A real-time bus tour covering the river crossing to the battlefield is planned on the anniversary date. Web: nps.gov/rich. Battle of Totopotomoy Creek May 28-30, 1864 Fighting erupted along Totopotomoy Creek northeast of Richmond as Grant kept pushing south toward Richmond. Unwilling to Grant almost broke through a thin Confederate defense here June 1, then staged an ill-advised and very costly attack against a built-up Southern line June 3. The armies settled into what amounted to trench warfare until Grant pulled out and headed for Petersburg. The Richmond National Battlefield Park plans weekend living history and ranger tours May 31–June 1 plus special tours of the June 3 attack on that date. A “Misery in the Trenches” program is set for June 7. Web: nps.gov/rich Hunter’s Raid: Piedmont June 5, 1864 Union Gen. David Hunter renewed the offensive in the Shenandoah Valley, attacking and defeating Confederates in the shadow of the Blue Ridge Mountains at Piedmont. Several programs are planned to commemorate the battle including a June 7 tour. Web: ShenandoahatWar.org Hunter’s Raid: Lexington June 11–14, 1864 Hunter entered Lexington after a brief fight and proceeded to burn and sack the Virginia Military Institute. Reenactment, living history, lectures and music commemorate the event in Lexington Sept 10–14: “Thunder in the Valley.” Web: lexingtonvirginia.com (click events). Trevillian Station June 11–12, 1864 While the armies were enduring a stalemate at Cold Harbor northeast of Richmond, Union cavalry ranged west, seeking to destroy Confederate supply lines. Confederate cavalry confronted them near Louisa. A reenactment of the event is scheduled for June 21–22. Web: trevbattleva.com Complete and up-to-date calendar through December 2014: www.CivilWarTraveler.com/events 2014 23 2014 ANNIVERSARY EVENTS, cont'd Hunter’s Raid: Buchanan June 13, 1864 Park commemorate the event. Web: mosbyheritagearea.org Berryville Wagon Raid Aug 13, 1864 Hunter’s advance continued his move east from Lexington through Buchanan after driving Confederate cavalry from the town. Annual reenactment of the event during Buchanan’s Civil War weekend April 25-27 includes street fighting. Web: townofbuchanan.com (click events). Battle of Fort Stevens July 11–12, 1864 John S. Mosby’s Confederate rangers did considerable damage to Union Gen. Philip Sheridan’ supply wagon train. An Aug. 16 living history walking tour and first-person sketches in Berryville recall the event. Web: mosbyheritagearea.org Initial attacks at Petersburg Mid-June 1864 After crossing the James River, U.S. forces began attacking the thin defenses at Petersburg. The Confederates managed to hold and the Siege of Petersburg began. The Petersburg National Battlefield plans a special “Opening Assaults Weekend” June 14-15 with guided walks, a bus tour and living history. See the park website for other anniversay events planned in 2014. Web: nps.gov/pete Hunter’s Raid: Battle of Lynchburg June 17–18, 1864 Marching from the Shenandoah Valley across the mountains, Hunter approached the critical Confederate railroad, supply and hospital center at Lynchburg. He was met and defeated there by Confederate Gen. Jubal Early. The Confederates chased Hunter out of the picture, then headed north toward Washington DC. Living history, tours and more are planned June 13–15 at Sandusky, Hunter’s headquarters during the battle. Web: historicsandusky.org. Related events set June 20-22. Web: discoverlynchburg.org. Staunton River Bridge (Wilson/Kautz Raid) June 25, 1864 Union cavalry raiders, ranging almost unopposed through South-central Virginia, were finally stopped by a handful of regulars and a collection of “old men and young boys” at the bridge over the Staunton River near present-day Randolph. A reenactment is set for the Staunton River Battlefield State Park June 21–22. Web: stauntonriverbattlefield.org/150th. html Mosby action in Loudoun County July 6, 1864 Confederate partisan John S. Mosby soundly defeated Union pursuers at Mount Zion Church near Aldie. A lecture July 5 and a living history program July 6 at Mt. Zion Church Historic After Confederate Gen. Jubal Early defeated David Hunter’s men at Lynchburg, he headed north to threaten Washington DC. Confederates made it to the outer fortifications of the capital where they were turned back at Fort Stevens. A reenactment of the event is set for Fort Ward in Alexandria, another of the Washington forts, July 12–13. Web: fortward.org Battle of Cool Spring July 18, 1864 JEarly’s Confederates held off Union pursuers here near the Shenandoah River after his expedition threatened the Federal capital. “On This Day” tour on the anniversary date: nps.gov/cebe or www.ShenandoahatWar.org Battle of Rutherford’s Farm July 20, 1864 Decisive Union victory north of Winchester on the Valley Pike did little to disrupt Confederate plans to move their operations south. “On This Day” tour on the anniversary date: nps.gov/cebe or www.ShenandoahatWar.org Second Battle of Kernstown July 24, 1864 Confederate Gen. Jubal Early’s army, returning to the Shenandoah Valley after its visit to the Washington D.C. doorstep, turned and defeated Union pursuers here south of Winchester. A bus tour, living history programs and guided walking tours are planned on and around the battlefield July 19–20. Web: kernstownbattle.org “On This Day” tour on the anniversary date: nps.gov/cebe or www.ShenandoahatWar.org Battle of the Crater July 30, 1864 Union soldiers tunneled under the Confederate lines in Petersburg, then exploded four tons of gunpowder, creating the famous “Crater” in the Southern defenses. The Petersburg National Battlefield offers several anniversary-date programs and an evening event at Blandford Church. Related programs set Aug 1–2. Web: nps.gov/pete Battle of Guard Hill Aug. 16, 1864 Union cavalry ambushed Confederate horsemen en route to the Valley near Front Royal, capturing about 300 before withdrawing. “On This Day” tour on the anniversary date: nps.gov/cebe or www.ShenandoahatWar.org Battle of Berryville Sept. 3, 1864 Union Gen. Philip Sheridan began moving his army south from the Harpers Ferry area to Berryville. Confederate Gen. Jubal, near Winchester, attacked but withdrew after reinforcements arrived. “On This Day” tour on the anniversary date: nps.gov/cebe or www.ShenandoahatWar.org Third Battle of Winchester Sept. 19, 1864 of the James River, limiting Robert E. Lee’s ability to reinforce either point. Although stressed, the Confederate lines held. A reenactment commemorating the attacks south of the river at New Market Heights/Chaffin’s Farm is set Sept. 26-28 at a site in Henrico County, southeast of Richmond. Web: civilwarhenrico.com The Richmond National Battlefield Park has scheduled living history programs with anniversary ranger programs at its unit at the Fort Harrison and New Market Heights battlefields Sept. 26–30. Web: nps.gov/rich The Petersburg National Battlefield commemorates the Battle of Peebles Farm with living history and ranger programs at the park’s Western Front unit Sept. 27-28. Web: nps.gov/pete Battles of Saltville Oct 1–3 and Dec 20–21, 1864 The salt works here and other natural resources in southwest Virginia became major targets in 1864. Two battles were fought here, the first won by Confederates, the second the Federals. A 150th anniversary reenactment is planned Aug. 16-17. Web: battlesofsaltville.com Union troops under Gen. Philip Sheridan opened his version of the Shenandoah Valley campaign by soundly defeating Gen. Jubal Early, posted north of Winchester. Lots of events are planned on the newly preserved sections of the Third Winchester battlefield north of Winchester, including an anniversary date tour and a major event Sept 20 with living history, talks, music, a dance and much more. Web: ShenandoahatWar.org Battle of Tom’s Brook Oct. 9, 1864 Battle of Fisher’s Hill Sept 22, 1864 A surprise attack initially routed Union troops camped at Cedar Creek, but a dramatic counterattack saved the day for the Federals. Activities connected with battle are set Oct. 17–19 with the annual reenactment on the historic battlefield scheduled Oct. 18–19. Web: cedarcreekbattlefield.org A ranger tour to the overlook at Signal Knob is set for Oct. 17. Other anniversary ranger tours and programs are scheduled through the Cedar Creek and Belle Grove National Historical Park. Web: nps.gov/cebe ◆ Sheridan followed up his win at Winchester with another victory over Early in the hills south of Strasburg. “On This Day” tour on the anniversary date: nps.gov/cebe or www.ShenandoahatWar.org In addition, a seminar/tour is planned Sept. 27. Web: ShenadoahatWar.org New Market Heights / Fort Harrison / Peebles Farm Sept 29–30, 1864 The Union army staged late September attacks on Confederate lines on both sides Big Union victory (sometimes called the “Woodstock Races”) as Sheridam’s cavalry scattered Confederate opponents in the Shenandoah Valley. “On This Day” tour on the anniversary date: nps.gov/cebe or www.ShenandoahatWar.org Battle of Cedar Creek Oct. 19, 1864 Civil War events throughout America through December 2014: www.CivilWarTraveler.com/events 24 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War INFO BY REGION Central Virginia 3–14 New M WEST VIRGINIA Tidewater 17–21 Valley & Mountains 26–35 Southside 36–41 Northern Virginia 42–46 CALENDAR 150th Anniversary Events 22–23 Le DRIVING TOURS Overland Campaign 14 WEST VIRGINIA Buchanan Peninsula Campaign 17 Lync Bedford 460 Roanoke Lee’s Retreat 36–37 KENTUCKY Saltville Wytheville 29 Ararat Danville WHERE TO GO BEFORE YOU GO: Your 150th HQ CivilWarTraveler .com E-News P 27 ODCAST & MORE S THE MOST COMPLETE inform 6,100+ self- Events subscribed readers. CALENDAR Monthly reports All the Civil War sites that are interpreted and open to the public in 30 STATES plus Washington DC IT’S WHAT YOU NEED TO PLAN YOUR TRIPS. 2014 25 M 81 A R 11 Y LA N D 15 Winchester Leesburg Strasburg 50 Woodstock New Market A Manassas Alexandria 29 15 Lee’s Retreat 32 17 Culpeper Elkton Peninsula Campaign www.civilwartrails.org Remington 340 Harrisonburg Arlington Warrenton Luray Overland Campaign 12–13 Middleburg Manassas NBP 66 Front Royal Market Battlefield SP ~ Driving Tours ~ Ball’s Bluff RP Cedar Creek and Belle Grove NHP 3 15 Fredericksburg Fredericksburg & Spotsylvania NMP Orange Staunton Guinea Gordonsville Charlottesville Waynesboro 81 MARYL 95 AND 11 64 exington chburg 29 Richmond NBP 15 60 Appomattox CH nhp Sailor’s Creek sp Appomattox 295 360 60 64 Amelia Court House Hopewell Farmville 460 Petersburg Petersburg 95 Staunton River Bridge SP N Richmond National Battlefield 360 85 Williamsburg Yorktown Hampton Newport News Portsmouth Emporia Norfolk Virginia Beach Chesapeake Suffolk NOW YOU CAN TAKE VIRGINIA ALONG NEW FIELD GUIDE for iPad™ for VIRGINIA • Civil War Trails driving tours • Interactive maps locate sites • Listings for top sites • Free updates Requires IOS 6.0 or higher. $3.99 26 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War Mountains & Valley B ordered on the west by the Allegheny range and the east by the Blue Ridge Mountains, the Shenandoah Valley dramatically combines beautiful landscapes with extraordinary Civil War history. The Valley is described often as an avenue of invasion directed to the head of the Federal government at Washington D.C. More importantly, it was a vital (and vulnerable) granary for the Confederacy and a worrisome flank for both sides during operations around Richmond. In 1862, Stonewall Jackson played the Valley’s terrain like a fine-tuned instrument when his “foot cavalry” embarrassed three Federal armies sent against him. Jackson’s efforts pinned down troops that might have joined Gen. George McClellan’s drive against Richmond. Confederate control over the Valley eroded in the spring, then evaporated in the fall of 1864. After deep Federal forays at New Market and Lynchburg were repulsed, Union Gen. Philip Sheridan took over and, after hard fighting at Cedar Creek, pushed Gen. Jubal Early’s Confederates out of effective contention. It’s possible to follow day-by-day the various Valley campaigns, but a chronological trip plan would look like a corkscrew and plow the same ground several times. A more logical plan is to start at one end of the Valley and work your way to the other. Key to that idea is U.S. Route 11, which generally follows the path of the old Valley Pike. Most of the following sites are either on the Pike or close to it. The suggested tour follows Route 11 taking visitors “up” the Valley — north to south. Route 11 – ‘Up’ the Valley North to South Winchester/Frederick County Civil War Orientation Center, in the Winchester-Frederick County Visitor Center, 1400 Pleasant Valley Road – Exhibits orient visitors to the wealth of Civil War sites in the Winchester area and the Shenandoah Valley. Pick up a free guide to the Shenandoah Valley Battlefields National Historic District here. Visitor center open daily 9 am–5 pm. 877-871-1326 or www.visitwinchesterva.com. Old Court House Civil War Museum, on the Loudoun Street pedestrian mall, downtown – Emphasis is on the common soldier. An excellent collection of artifacts from every theater of the war is displayed. The building, formerly the Frederick County Courthouse, dates from 1840. Graffiti scrawled by wounded soldiers and prisoners from the war is visible. Trails sign on site. Open Monday–Saturday 10 am–5 pm, Sunday 1–5 pm (May–October). Closed Monday–Tuesday other times. $5. 540-542-1145 or www.civilwarmuseum. org. Stonewall Jackson Headquarters, 415 N. Braddock St. – Jackson used this small house as his headquarters the winter of 1861–1862 after he took command of the Valley Army. Artifacts related to Jackson and his cavalry commander, Turner Ashby, are on exhibit. House tours. Open April–October, Monday–Saturday 10 am–4 pm, Sunday noon–4 pm. $5/adult. 540-6673242 or www.winchesterhistory.org. Civil War Trails sign on site. Museum of the Shenandoah Valley, 901 Amherst St. – Impressive new museum highlights the life and history of the Valley using audio visual displays, artifacts and much more. Civil War displays focus on the civilian side of the conflict. A Civil War Trails sign in the parking lot explains the site’s role in all the battles for Winchester. Museum open Tuesday–Sunday The Battle of Cedar Creek 10 am–4 pm. $10. shenandoahmuseum.org or 888-556-5799. Confederate and National cemeteries, across the street from one another, near downtown – Federal troops buried in one, Confederates in the other, these two sites reflect Winchester’s history during the war. National Cemetery, 401 National Ave. Stonewall Cemetery is in Mt. Hebron Cemetery Complex, entrance end of Boscawen Street. Third Winchester Battlefield – On Sept. 19, 1864, Union Gen. Philip Sheridan slammed into Winchester’s Confederate defenders under Gen. Jubal Early northeast of the city. Heavy fighting on the outskirts of the city eventually pushed Early’s army back through Winchester in disarray. An interpreted trail covers of some of the heaviest fighting. For information about visiting, stop at the Winchester/ Frederick County visitor center). Star Fort, located near the intersection of US 522 and Fortress Drive, Winchester – One in a series of forts guarding the northern approaches to Winchester, this site figured in both the Second and Third Battles of Winchester. An interpreted trail describes the fort and its Civil War history. Open daylight hours. Free. The following Winchester sites are marked with Civil War Trails signs. The Kurtz Building, 2 N. Cameron St. – Trails sign located on the side of the building gives an overview of the action in and around Winchester during the war. Stephenson’s Depot, Trails sign near Route 11 north of Winchester at Old Charles Town and Milburn Roads – Robert E. Lee, marching north toward Pennsylvania, sent 17,000 troops ahead to clear the way. After heavy fighting June 15, 1863, the Southerners did just that, routing the Union force and capturing thousands of prisoners and much-needed cannon. Shawnee Springs Hospital,Trails sign located just off Pleasant Valley Road at the site – This temporary hospital was established following the Third Battle of Winchester in September 1864. It treated and evacuated thousands of Union sick and wounded from the Winchester battlefield as well as from the battle of Cedar Creek a month later. The site was finally closed Jan. 4, 1865. Abram’s Delight, Trails sign located in front of the house near the Winchester/ Frederick County Visitor Center – The oldest house in Winchester (built 1754) survived the Civil War despite being in the path of the First Battle of Winchester in 1862. Now a museum/house, it interprets civilian life, which may have included a spy or two. Union Gen. Franz Sigel and staff occupied the house in 1864, paying the family $5 for the privilege. Rutherford’s Farm, three Trails signs on US 11, 0.3 miles north of the intersection with I-81 (exit 317), entrance to signs off southbound lane – A cluster of signs tells the story of the battles here at this strategic location along the main road north of Winchester. Fighting erupted here on John Rutherford’s Farm June 14-15, 1863, during the Gettysburg Campaign as Union Gen. Robert Milroy evacuated the city. On July 20, 1864, a Union force in pursuit of Gen. Jubal Early’s army (recently turned away from Washington DC) caught up with Confederate defenders here, pushing them aside. The area saw its last action during the Battle of Third Winchester Sept. 19, 1864. Kernstown Battlefield Thanks to the efforts of the Kernstown Battlefield Foundation and the Museum of the Shenandoah Valley, large portions of the Kernstown battlefields have been preserved. The first battle, March 23, 1862, was considered a defeat for Confederate Gen. Stonewall Jackson, who impetuously attacked a strong Union force gathered Continues on next page 2014 27 The Shenandoah Battlefields National Historic District encompasses eight counties and four cities in the heart of the Shenandoah Valley. The foundation administering the district is charged with preserving and interpreting Civil War battlefields in the area. The ongoing effort has resulted, most Route 11, cont’d in the area. Jackson’s aggressive behavior, however, scared official Washington enough to hold up thousands of troops destined for the major offensive against Richmond. The tables were turned July 24, 1864, when Confederate Gen. Jubal Early defeated an inferior Union force on nearly the same ground. Kernstown Battlefield, 610 Battle Park Drive, off Route 11 south of Winchester – More than 300 acres of the Kernstown battlefields have been preserved here, including Prichard’s Hill, which figured prominently in both the First and Second Battles of Kernstown. A visitor orientation center is open weekends mid-May through October, Saturday 10 am–4 pm and Sunday noon–4 pm. Free, donations welcome. www.kernstownbattle.org. Rose Hill, 1850 Jones Road, south of Winchester – A Civil War Trails marker describes the action that swirled around this home March 23, 1862. Confederate infantry defended a stone wall on the property until they ran out of ammunition and were forced to retreat in some confusion. Civil War Trails sign. www.shenandoahmuseum.org. Opequon Church, watch for “Civil War Marker” sign on west side of Route 11 south of Winchester – Good battle maps and views highlight the action of both battles of Kernstown from this historic churchyard. Stephens City Newtown History Center, 5408 Main St., Stephens City – Exhibits here trace the history of the town (the “New Town” on the wagon road) from its founding in 1758. Civil War exhibit includes items, letters and stories from local citizens. Open June–mid-November. Call for hours. 540869-1700. notably, in the preservation of parts of the Third Winchester and Cross Keys (near Harrisonburg) battlefields. Cooperating with Virginia Civil War Trails, the district has helped install interpretive signs in dozens of places, including a battle tour in Front Royal. Driving tours also have been developed, with more to come. Pick up a copy of the visitor guide and other Civil War information at the SVBF orientation centers in Winchester, Harrisonburg and McDowell. The guides also are available at Civil War sites and visitor centers throughout the Valley. For more: www.ShenandoahAtWar.org. Three Civil War Battles in 2014 with Exciting Programs & Events A Civil War Trails sign along Route 11 just south of town describes the action here between the battles of Front Royal and Winchester in May 1862. Second Battle of Kernstown Third Battle of Winchester Battle of Cedar Creek Cedar Creek Battlefield Union troops under Gen. Philip Sheridan, fresh from a string of victories over Jubal Early’s Confederates, were camped in the vicinity of Cedar Creek and Belle Grove about 15 miles south of Winchester on Oct. 19, 1864. A furious Confederate attack early that morning forced a precipitous withdrawal by Northern soldiers that did not stop until they reached Middletown. Near there, Sheridan, after a breakneck ride from Winchester, rallied his troops and led a counterattack that regained the field. The battle of Cedar Creek ended Early’s opportunities and resulted in a Confederate withdrawal back up the Valley. If you are on Route 11 heading south, you reach the battlefield beginning in Middletown and remain on the field until Strasburg. Cedar Creek and Belle Grove National Historical Park, contact station at 7712 Main St, Middletown – Visitor contact station in Middletown features exhibits, a fiber optic map program and ranger help. Frequent free ranger programs describe the 1864 battle and the history and settlement of the Shenandoah Valley. An overview program, “Cedar Creek and Belle Grove in a Box,” is offered at 11:30 am daily at Belle Grove during the summer ( June 14–Aug 17) and weekends in the spring and fall. Other programs including a car-caravan tour of the battlefield are offered frequently. Check the park website for dates and times for all the park activities. Contact station is open daily 9 am–4:30 pm April-October and Wednesday–Sunday 10 am–4 pm other times. 540-869-3051 or www.nps.gov/cebe. Continues on next page July 19-20 September 19-20 October 18-19 MUSEUMS - BATTLEFIELDS - TOURS • • • • • • Guided Civil War Tours every weekend, June - October Stonewall Jackson’s Headquarters Museum Four preserved Civil War Battlefields Old Court House Civil War Museum Union and Confederate Cemeteries Newtown History Center 28 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War Route 11, cont’d Cedar Creek Battlefield Foundation visitor center, 8437 Valley Pike (across from Belle Grove) – Interpretive signs outside the building, and information, exhibits, book store and more inside. Call for hours: 540-869-2064. Belle Grove – 18th-century home was a centerpiece of attack and counterattack on Oct 19, 1864. Call 540-869-2028 for hours. Admission fee. www.bellegrove.org. Hupp’s Hill Civil War Park – The Cedar Creek Battlefield Foundation has opened a visitor center with 1864 Valley Campaign exhibits at Hupp’s Hill on Route 11 just north of Strasburg. The site includes self-guided tours to the Civil War trenches on the property. It’s open Thursday–Tuesday 9 am–5 pm. $5. Trails sign outlining Oct. 13, 1864, battle here is on site. 540-465-5884. Strasburg to New Market Tour continues on Route 11 south from Hupp’s Hill into Strasburg and south. Strasburg Train Station / Museum, King Street – Civil War items and information here in the Strasburg Museum. This is the place where T.J. Jackson re-employed locomotives in the service of the Confederacy after hijacking them in Harpers Ferry in April 1861. Open daily 10 am–4 pm May–October. 540-465-3175. Walking Tour – Historic walking tour of Strasburg beginning at the Strasburg Museum includes Civil War topics such as the town’s role as a strategic intersection, Jackson’s raid on the B&O Railroad that brought rolling stock and locomotives overland to Strasburg and Signal Knob, the 2,110-foot mountain overlooking the town that was used as an observation and signal station during the war. Fisher’s Hill Battlefield, a mile south of Strasburg, west of Route 11. Follow signs to the park – Jubal Early’s position here was shattered by Union attacks Sept. 22, 1864. You are on the battlefield as you wind your way to the park. You will pass one of the few remaining antebellum mills in the area. Civil War Trails signs on Route 11 and Battlefield Road leading into the park. The following sites are marked with Civil War Trails signs unless otherwise noted. Tom’s Brook – Union cavalry under Gens. George A. Custer and Wesley Merritt routed their Confederate counterparts under Gen. Thomas Rosser after hard fighting here Oct. 9, 1864. The Southerners retreated in haste more than 25 miles to infantry lines at Rude’s Hill. Battle also Monument on the New Market battlefield known as the “Woodstock Races.” Trails sign in a county park just south of Tom’s Brook. Woodstock, Trails sign located a block west of the courthouse – The citizens of the seat of Shenandoah County experienced the horrors of war in the late summer and fall of 1864 witnessing the smoke and flames of the infamous “Burning,” ranger, guerrilla and bushwacker activities. Trails sign details some of the worst. Narrow Passage, east of Route 11, south of Woodstock – Stonewall Jackson ordered Jedediah Hotchkiss to make a map of the Shenandoah Valley near here on March 26, 1862. The house on Narrow Passage Creek still stands. Jackson’s spring campaign that followed became famous. So did Hotchkiss’s maps. Edinburg Mill, 214 Main St, Edinburg – The mill dates from 1848 and survived the burnings ordered by Union Gen. Philip Sheridan in 1864. Stony Creek, which provided the mill’s power, was used by Confederates two years earlier as they delayed a Federal advance up the Valley Pike. A museum now occupies most of the interior. A highlight is the Civil War film “The Burning” made especially for the site. Museum is open Monday–Saturday 10 am–5 pm and Sunday noon–5 pm. $2 admission includes film. 540-984-8400 or www.edinburgmill.com. Two Civil War Trails signs in the parking lot. Mount Jackson – This small town hosted a Confederate hospital complex established early in the war. A Confederate cemetery and monument honors those who died here. Just south on Route 11 is Union Church, a hospital site. Open some weekends. (No Trails sign.) Rude’s Hill, turnoff with interpretive signs located just south of Mount Jackson on Route 11 – This high ground on the Valley Pike was a critical point of control throughout the war. Stonewall Jackson’s troops camped here during his 1862 campaign. Union troops covered the retreat from New Market in May 1864 and later that year Confederate Gen. Jubal Early halted the “Woodstock Races” here. New Market Battlefield Confederates here blunted a Federal foray “up” the Valley, part of U.S. Grant’s multi-pronged Virginia offensive in the spring of 1864. Cadets from the Virginia Military Institute in Lexington played a role in the Southern victory on May 15, 1864. Virginia Museum of the Civil War and the New Market Battlefield State Park, 8895 George Collins Pkwy, New Market VA 22844 – This site on top of the hill combines a comprehensive museum with a special focus on Virginia’s Civil War experience with the most critical areas of the May, 15, 1864, New Market battlefield. Emphasis is on the role of the Virginia Military Institute cadets in the battle, a Confederate victory. Walking tours of the battlefield include the historic Bushong House and “The Field of Lost Shoes.” Open daily 9 am-5 pm. $10/adult. 866-515-1864. Lacey Springs, Trails sign located in elementary school parking lot off Route 11 in Lacey Springs – Union cavalry under Gen. George A. Custer was attacked here Dec. 21, 1864, by Confederates commanded by Custer’s West Point classmate and friend Gen. Thomas Rosser. This was one of the last actions of the war in the Valley. Harrisonburg, Port Republic and Cross Keys Civil War Orientation Center, in the Hardesty-Higgins House, 212 S. Main St, Harrisonburg – This antebellum home now serves as the area’s visitor center and is the site of a Valley battlefields orientation center. The Valley Turnpike Museum also is located here featuring a model portraying Jackson’s troops hauling a captured locomotive through Harrisonburg on its way to the railhead in Staunton. Union Gen. Nathaniel Banks briefly used this building as headquarters in 1862. Open daily 9 am–5 pm. Free. 540-432-8935. Harrisonburg Trails sites – Explore Harrisonburg’s Civil War history with a walking tour beginning at the Hardesty–Higgins House visitor center. Find Civil War Trails sites at the Warren-Sipe House, home of a local soldier killed in the Battle of the Wilderness; Court Square, used as a prison pen in 1862; and Woodbine Cemetery, final resting place of 250 Confederate soldiers. Interpretive signs are located at the sites of the Harrisonburg Female Academy, a Civil War hospital, and Hill’s Hotel, which was used as a temporary prison by Confederate partisan Capt. John McNeill. Turner Ashby Monument, 1 mile east of the I-81 intersection, take a left off Port Republic Road at small sign – Ashby, in command of Jackson’s cavalry, was mortally wounded at this site now marked with a monument and a small park. His death, June 6, 1862, immediately preceded the battles fought the next days. Harrisonburg battle map here. Civil War Trails interpretation. Cross Keys/Port Republic Battlefields – Trails sign and battle map at the Ruritan Club, 5094 Battlefield Road, just off Cross Keys Road southeast of Harrisonburg, anchor a driving tour of the Cross Keys battlefield. On June 8, 1862, Confederates posted in the area turned back one wing of a Union assault aimed at defeating the forces of Stonewall Jackson, who had caused considerable trouble for the Federals elsewhere in the Valley. The action moved the next day to Port Republic where Jackson defeated the other Federal wing. A small museum in Port Republic is open Sunday afternoons April–October and by appointment. Call 540-249-0040. There also is a set of streetside interpretive signs in Port Republic, some of which describe the activity in town during the battles. A walking tour on part of the battlefield is offered at the site of “The Coaling” located just off Route 340 northeast of town. See ShenandoahAtWar. org for maps and other information Mill Creek Church, Trails sign on Route 253, three miles east of Route 276 – The current church stands on the site of the wartime Mill Creek Church, used as a hospital during the battle of Cross Keys, June 8, 1862. More than two years later, Continues on next page 2014 29 farther on, just across the railroad tracks – Lt. John Meigs, eldest son of Montgomery Meigs, the US Army quartermaster general, was shot and killed here Oct. 3, 1864. Gen. Philip Sheridan, told mistakenly that civilian bushwackers had done the shooting, ordered the burning of buildings in a large area. Town of Dayton, Trails sign in town (south of Harrisonburg) just off Route 42, 100 yards south of the Route 257 W intersection – This small town was the site of many examples of the nasty style of warfare descending on the Valley in the fall of 1864. Daniel Bowman Mill at Silver Lake, Trails sign one mile west of Dayton on Route 290 – This was the site of one of the mills that dotted the landscape in the Valley, the “breadbasket of the Confederacy.” This mill and 35 others in the area were destroyed (along with barns and crops in the field) by Union soldiers in the fall of 1864. Route 11, cont’d in September 1864, the church was at the center of the Union effort to burn out the Confederate “breadbasket” in this part of the Valley. Civil War Tourism Attraction, Trails sign at 5 Grand Caverns Drive, Grottoes VA 24441 – Confederate soldiers camped nearby made candlelight tours of Weyers Cave (now Grand Caverns) following their victories at Cross Keys/Port Republic in June 1862. At least some Union soldiers visited the cave more than two years later following the Third Battle of Winchester. More than 230 Civil War-era signatures have been identified on the cave walls. Dayton Dayton is located on Route 42 south of Harrisonburg, just west of I-81 and Route 11. The Heritage Museum, 382 High St. – The famous electronic map outlining the 1862 Valley campaign has been refurbished and located here. Open Tuesday–Saturday 10 am–5 pm, Sunday 1–5 pm. $5. www. heritagecenter.com. Site of the death of Lt. Meigs, two Trails signs located on Route 713 just off Route 42 between Harrisonburg and Dayton. Turn east from Route 42 onto Route 713 (Meigs Lane). The site is 1/4 mile Bridgewater Trails signs in town park – Interpretation highlights Civil War activities here, including Bridgewater’s role as Confederate logistics center. Stonewall Jackson’s Valley army moved through here May 18, 1862. The famed general attended a church service near this spot. 150 th Anniversary Reenactment New Market! May 16-18, 2014 The nation’s oldest reenactment — fought on the original ground! Interstate 81, Exit 264 in Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley Staunton See the Route 250 section. Lexington Home to Stonewall Jackson before the Civil War and Robert E. Lee after, Lexington retains much of its 19th-century flavor. Lee and Jackson both chose to be buried in this small city. The centrally located Lexington Visitor Center, 106 E. Washington St., is a good place to start. It’s open daily. Lee Chapel, on the Washington and Lee University campus – Robert E. Lee and his family are buried here. The exConfederate commander served as college president after the war, dying at his home here in 1870. Lee’s office was in a room in the lower level of the Chapel. It remains as he left it. Museum displays highlight his life. Lee’s horse Traveller is buried just outside the Chapel. 9 am–5 pm Monday– Saturday; 1–5 pm Sunday April–October. Closes one hour earlier other times. Free. For more info: www.leechapel.wlu.edu or 540-458-8768. Virginia Military Institute Museum – VMI’s signature Civil War displays, including Stonewall Jackson’s horse, Little Sorrell, are on display. Soak up the atmosphere at the historic military school that was virtually destroyed by Union Gen. David Hunter in 1864. Open daily 9 am–5 pm. Free. 540-464-7334 or www.vmi.edu/ museum. Stonewall Jackson House, 8 E. Washington St. – This 1801 house was home to VMI Professor Thomas Jonathan Jackson for two years before the war. Restored, it now contains many of Jackson’s possessions and period pieces. Open daily for guided tours. Hours: 9 am–5 pm Monday–Saturday; 1–5 pm Sunday (March–December). $8/ adult. 540-464-7704. stonewalljackson.org. Stonewall Jackson Memorial Cemetery, south Main Street – Jackson lies among hundreds of his fellow Confederates, two Virginia governors and Revolutionary War soldiers in this 18th-century cemetery. The statue of Jackson above his grave was dedicated in 1891. Open dawn to dusk. Hunter’s Raid, Civil War Trails signs in Jordan’s Point Park – Union Gen. David Hunter crossed the North (Maury) River here on his way into Lexington. After a brief fight June 11, 1864, Hunter occupied the town and ordered the burning of the Virginia Military Institute and several other buildings. The buildings housing Washington University were pillaged. Hunter left town June 13 to threaten Lynchburg, where he was repelled. See also “Hunter’s Raid” tour. ◆ New Market Battlefield State HiStorical Park New Market, VirgiNia 1.866.515.1864 30 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War VALLEY & MOUNTAINS: Route 340 Corridor T he modern US 340 corridor between U.S. Route 50 and Interstate-64 encompasses some of the most beautiful landscapes and intriguing Civil War history in Virginia. During the war, the territory east of the Massanutten Mountain was connected by a variety of roads, most of them inferior to the “improved” and more famous Valley Pike west of the mountain. Stonewall Jackson made good use of these roads during his 1862 campaign as his little army used the Massanutten to screen his movements from various Federal armies operating in the Valley. The area also saw action in 1864 as competing commanders maneuvered for advantage. Here’s a tour of the corridor from north to south. Begin with the Battle of Front Royal. Then continue south along the Route 340 corridor. “Valley Campaign” with victories at Cross Keys and Port Republic June 8–9 before joining Robert E. Lee in Richmond. Tour highlights, interpreted by Civil War Trails signs, include Asbury Chapel, Bel Air, the bridges over the Shenandoah River and Prospect Hill Cemetery. Battle of Front Royal Driving Tour ~ ~ For a free map/brochure of the Battle of Front Royal driving tour, stop at the town visitor center or request a copy by calling 800-338-2576. Two Civil War Trails markers just outside the visitor center give general information about Front Royal during the war. The Virginia Civil War Trails driving tour follows the action as Confederate troops under Stonewall Jackson swept through town May 23, 1862, sweeping aside light Federal resistance. The stunning Southern victory outflanked the main Union force under Gen. Nathaniel Banks located to the west of the Massa nutten Mountain in Strasburg. From Front Royal, Jackson marched northwest toward Winchester hoping to cut off and destroy Banks. Jackson was partially successful. Banks, soundly defeated at Winchester May 25, did manage to escape. Front Royal museums Bel Air, home of Lucy Buck, who left a vivid account of the battle. Jackson’s rapid successes alarmed Washington DC and froze Union troops supposedly on their way to the Richmond area to join Gen. George McClellan’s campaign against the Confederate capital. President Abraham Lincoln saw a chance to trap Jackson in his exposed position and sent several Federal armies against him. Jackson eluded them all and capped his dramatic Belle Boyd Cottage, 101 Chester St., Front Royal 22630 – House museum decorated in Civil War style. Tour topics include Confederate spy Boyd (who visited Front Royal often and played a role in the 1862 battle), women, slavery and journalists in the war. Call for hours. warrenheritagesociety.org/belleboyd.php or 540-636-1446. Warren Rifles Confederate Museum, 95 Chester St., Front Royal 22630 – Battle flags, arms uniforms and items relating to Belle Boyd, Stonewall Jackson, Jubal Early, Turner Ashby and others are displayed here. Open April 15–Nov. 1, 9 am–4 pm weekdays and noon–4 pm Sunday. Fee. 540-636-6982. ◆ South of Front Royal The following sites are marked with Civil War Trails signs unless noted. Yager’s Mill, Trails sign on US 340 0.5 miles north of Luray near the Route intersection – In September 1864 Union cavalry attempted to move south on the east side of Massanutten Mountain while the main body of Federal troops advanced to Fisher’s Hill on the Valley pike to the west. Union Gen. Philip Sheridan wanted to cut off any retreat by defeated Confederates. The advance in this area was stalled by Confederates Sept. 22 and the Southern withdrawal from Fisher’s Hill was not disrupted. White House Bridge, Trails sign on Route 211 about three miles west of Luray – Stonewall Jackson’s cavalry chief, Turner Ashby, burned a bridge here June 2, 1862, to delay Federal pursuit. The battles of Cross Keys and Port Republic were fought a week later. New Market Gap, Trails sign on Route 211 in National Forest parking lot, four miles west of White House Bridge site – Near here on Nov. 23, 1862, Jackson announced that his Army of the Valley had become the Second Corps of the Army of Northern Virginia and soon would join Robert E. Lee’s troops on east of the Blue Ridge. Pass Run Church, Trails sign about five miles east of Luray just off Route 211 on Route 674 (access from Route 211 West) – Confederate units camped here following the retreat from Gettysburg. The Chapman-Ruffner House, Trails sign just east of US 340, north part of Luray – This 1739 house was home to the colorful “Fighting Chapmans,” who served with John S. Mosby’s Rangers during the war. Catherine Furnace, Trails sign just west of US 340 on Route 613 north of Shenandoah – Remains of a once-busy iron furnace, one of three operating in the area during the war. Wagons transported pig iron, produced here, to Richmond’s Tredegar Iron Works. The furnace produced solid cannon shot. Shenandoah Iron Works, Trails sign just west of US 340 in Shenandoah – Iron furnace here consumed an acre of wood per day in peak use as it produced the raw materials for Confederate guns. Although thousands of soldiers, Union and Confederate, marched past this site, the furnace was never destroyed. Willow Grove Mill, Trails sign on Business Route 340 a mile south of Luray – The mill here and several other buildings in the area were burned in early October 1864 by Union troopers. The action was part of “The Burning” of the Valley ordered by Union Gen. Philip Sheridan. Grave’s Chapel, Trails sign just off Business Route 340 on Route 611 between the towns of Stanley and Shenandoah – In late November 1862, Jackson led 32,000 troops across the South Fork of the Shenandoah River en route to Fisher’s Gap and the Army of Northern Virginia. This would be the last time Jackson would see the Valley. He died following the Battle of Chancellorsville in May 1863. Red Bridge and Somerville Heights, Trails signs 6.7 miles east of US 340 on Route 650 at boat landing – In late April 1862, Jackson ordered the bridges burned here to keep Federal troops at bay while he planned the next phase of his campaign. Only one bridge was burned, leading to a rift between Jackson and his cavalry chief Turner Ashby. In early May, while Jackson feinted east, Union soldiers stumbled into Confederate infantry here, which resulted in a brief but bloody battle. Luray Caverns – Kiosk near the Garden Maze at Luray Caverns, 101 Cave Hill Road, Luray, features map of the Shenandoah Valley Battlefields Historic District and locates area Civil War sites. More local Civil War information in the Luray Valley Museum on the grounds. Fee for museum, other attractions. Shields Advance and Retreat, Trails sign off US 340 just south of the town of Shenandoah – Union Gen. James Shields crossed Naked Creek here June 7, 1862, in pursuit of Jackson’s army, then camped at Port Republic. After losing to Jackson two days later, Shields’ men halted here during the retreat. Jackson’s Headquarters, Elkton (Conrad’s Store during the war), Trails sign one block east of US 340 on Rockingham Avenue – Stonewall Jackson made this home (now known as the Miller-Kite House) his headquarters April 19–20, 1862, while planning his spring campaign. The house was built in 1827. Jackson’s sparse living quarters were on the first floor. House open 1–5 pm Sundays from May 23 to Sept 3. Donations welcome. 540-298-1717. Port Republic/Cross Keys Battlefields – A significant section of the Port Republic battlefield “The Coaling” is preserved just off U.S. 340 north of Route 659. For more on these battlefields, see the “Up the Valley” tour in the beginning of this section. Battle of Piedmont, Trails sign on Route 608 north of New Hope – Sharp fighting north of here June 5, 1864, cleared the road to Staunton, Lexington and Lynchburg for new Union Valley commander David Hunter. Confederate Gen. William “Grumble” Jones, fighting his outnumbered and ultimately defeated troops, was killed here. Plumb House, Waynesboro – See the Route 250 Corridor section. ◆ EXPERIENCE THE LIFE STONEWALL JACKSON S TONEWALL J ACKSON H OUSE T HE VMI M USEUM Explore the only home Jackson ever owned in the community he served with piety and dedication for a decade. Stroll his gardens. Gain insight into the man before the legend. Meet Professor Jackson and his horse, Little Sorrel, at the Virginia Military Institute Museum. Explore unique artifacts spanning his academic and military careers. Follow Jackson’s military exploits from First Manassas to Chancellorsville. Located at New Market Battlefield State Historical Park, site of the 1864 battle made famous by the VMI Cadets. Lexington, VA. PH: (540) 463.2552 www.stonewalljackson.org Lexington, VA. PH: (540) 464.7334 www.vmi.edu/museum New Market, VA. PH: (866) 515.1864 www.vmi.edu/newmarket Experience his home, his service, and the war that made him a legend. V IRGINIA M USEUM OF THE C IVIL W AR 32 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War VALLEY & MOUNTAINS: Route 250 A West View, about 7 from the rail station in 1861. miles west of Staunton on In June 1864 Hunter ordered Route 254 – Confederate it destroyed. The American Gens. Edward “Alleghany” Hotel across the street dates Johnson began his move from the war. Other sites west from his camps here on in Staunton worth a visit May 6, 1862, with Stonewall include the Thornrose CemJackson close behind. The etery, established in 1849, Confederates would meet which contains a large ConUnion Gen. Robert Milroy’s federate section. During the troops a few days later at summer check out weekend McDowell. Trails sign. concerts by the Stonewall Jackson’s March, Trails Brigade Band. A city visitor sign at the Mountain House center operates just west of Stonewall Jackson picnic area in the national I-81 and U.S. 250 at the Muforest on U.S. 250 – Johnson and Jackson seum of Frontier Culture. moved through here and met some Federal Barger Farm, Trails sign located on the resistance in the area in May 1862 before grounds of the Frontier Culture Museum, moving on to McDowell, three miles west. near the I-81 Route 250 exit at Staunton Fort Johnson, just off U.S. 250 west of – This typical Shenandoah Valley wartime Mountain House – Overlook, walking trail farmstead has been relocated to this site. Civil War Trails interpretive sign puts a face and roadside markers here begin a trail of fortifications built by Johnson’s troops in on a typical family experience during the April 1862 as he fell back from Camp Alwar. You do not have to pay admission to legheny. Good stop to set up the battle at the site to see the Trails sign and get a view McDowell. of the farm. Site is also the Staunton visitor McDowell Battlefield – A critical part center. of this battlefield just east of the town of McDowell has been preserved and a trail Hunter's Raid constructed from U.S. 250 to the area of the fighting on May 8, 1862. Confederate forces nother option for touring sites associated with the various Valley campaigns is to use U.S. Route 250 east and west. The road west of Staunton roughly parallels the old Staunton-to-Parkersburg Turnpike. This route will take you, sometimes on the original road, from rolling landscapes in the Valley into beautiful and nearly unspoiled areas in the Allegheny Mountains. The following tour takes Route 250 west from Waynesboro. Call the local visitor centers in this section for a free, full-color Civil War map outlining the route west to the mountains. Waynesboro, Trails sign at the Plumb House, 1012 W. Main St. – A battle here March 2, 1865, closed the fighting in the Valley. A small Confederate force under Early was swept aside by Federals under Sheridan. The Union general then pressed on to Scottsville on the James River, then to Petersburg to join Grant. Staunton, Trails sign at the train station downtown – This city was an important Confederate supply depot with rail connections to Richmond and access to the Valley Turnpike. Confederate Gen. John Imboden led his fellow townsmen to war ~ Driving Tour T his Civil War Trail follows the path of Union Gen. David Hunter as he led 18,000 soldiers deep into the Valley, then east across the mountains to Lynchburg in the early summer of 1864. His mission was to disrupt Confederate supply lines and open up a “Western Front” while Confederate Gen. Hunter Robert E. Lee’s diminished army was digging in at Cold Harbor near Richmond. This trail offers some of the most dramatic scenery in the state as it crosses the Blue Ridge Mountains near Peaks of Otter. Many of the soldiers on both sides remarked on the beauty and some took the opportunity to visit the famous Natural Bridge. Trails signs follow the Raid from start to finish. See www.HuntersRaid.org for more. Pick up a map a local visitor centers, download a copy from www.civilwartraveler.com, or call 800-732-5821. ~ Highlights: See the Lexington, Lynchburg, “more Valley sites” and the “250 Corridor” sections for more Hunter’s Raid sites. Natural Bridge – Trails sign near the entrance describes visits to this natural wonder by soldiers of both sides. Buchanan –Several Trails signs tell the story of Hunter’s disputed crossing of the James River here. Confederates burned the bridge to delay the raiders. The stone pilings of that bridge are still visible from the town’s riverfront. Peaks of Otter – Trails sign at park visitor center offers wonderful views remembered by soldiers as they crossed the mountains. They also remembered the bad roads and hard marching. Bedford – Trails sign describes the occupation of this town beginning June 15. Hunter’s soldiers destroyed Confederate facilities here before moving on to Lynchburg. Another Trails sign east of town on Route 460 describes a challenge delivered by Confederate cavalry. ◆ in position on the mountain were able to fend off attacks made by Union forces attacking from the town. The Southern victory gave Stonewall Jackson his first Valley Campaign victory. A Trails sign describing the battle is located in the town, just across the Bullpasture River on the south side of the road. Civil War orientation center with panel displays and a film is now open in the Highland Museum and Heritage Center. Hours are 11 am–4 pm Wednesday–Saturday and 1–4 pm Sunday year-round. Call 540-396-4478 or see www.highlandhistoricalsociety.com. Monterey, Trails sign at the Courthouse – This small town was used as headquarters by both sides during the various campaigns in the mountains in 1861 and 1862. Union soldiers retreated through here after the fighting at McDowell. Camp Allegheny, Trails sign just off U.S. 250 at the West Virginia border – Beautiful site, scene of a Confederate winter camp used by Johnson’s troops, was attacked unsuccessfully Dec. 13, 1861. Johnson withdrew shortly after the battle to West View. Actual camp is located south of U.S. 250 and parts are preserved and interpreted by the Monogahela National Forest. 304-6361875. ◆ MORE VALLEY & MOUNTAIN INFO Front Royal 800-338-2576 www.DiscoverFrontRoyal.com Harrisonburg 540-432-8935www.harrisonburgtourism.com Lexington 877-453-9822www.lexingtonvirginia.com Luray/Page County 540-743-3915 www.luraypage.com Shenandoah County 888-367-3965 www.shenandoahtravel.org Staunton 540-332-8917www.visitstaunton.com Winchester/Frederick County 877-871-1326 www.visitwinchesterva.com What is Virginia Civil War Trails? The Virginia Civil War Trails is a state-wide effort to identify and interpret Civil War sites and create driving tours following the great campaigns. Interpretive signs with maps, illustrations and text have been installed by the project at more than 400 previously uninterpreted Civil War sites. Regional driving tours have been created that connect significant sites in the Peninsula Campaign (1862), the Overland Campaign (1865) and Lee’s Retreat (1865). Colorful map-brochures cover regional sites in Northern Virginia, Tidewater, the Shenandoah Valley, Central Virginia and the Route of Lee’s Retreat from Petersburg to Appomattox. A state map also lists most of the interpreted Civil War sites in Virginia. Virginia Civil War Trails is a continuing program administered by a non-profit corporation and supported by local communities and the state tourism office. Free information about the Trails is available at most of the visitor centers and museums listed in this newspaper and at state welcome centers. To get information by mail, call toll-free 888-CIVIL WAR or visit www.civilwartraveler.com and click on the “Free Info” button at the top of the homepage. ◆ Shenandoah at war ShenandoahAtWar.org • (540) 740-4545 Shenandoah Valley Battlefields National Historic District VIRGINIA “The World on Fire”: 1864-2014 Sesquicentennial in the Valley Front Royal-Warren County In 1864, the Civil War returned to the Shenandoah Valley with a vengeance… The stories of 1864 in the Valley are some of the most famed of the Civil War, from the charge of the VMI cadets at New Market, Jubal Early’s drive to the gates of Washington, and the stone wall at Second Kernstown – to the “Basin of Hell” at Third Winchester, the devastation of “The Burning,” and Philip Sheridan’s dramatic ride to turn the tide at Cedar Creek. By the end of the year, the war in the Valley – and the world – had changed forever. In 2014, sites throughout the Shenandoah Valley will commemorate the 150th anniversary of that year with a series of programs that will allow you to walk in history’s footsteps, at the actual battlefields and sites where the pivotal events took place. Come explore the history while traveling through the beautiful landscapes that remain much as they did 150 year ago – when the war returned to the Valley. For free information about Civil War sites and 1864-2014 Sesquicentennial programs in the Shenandoah Valley, please contact these organizations: Shenandoah Valley Battlefields National Historic District Front Royal-Warren County Visitor Center www.discoverfrontroyal.com (800) 338-2576 Harrisonburg Tourism & Visitor Services www.VisitHarrisonburgVA.com (540) 432-8935 Lexington-Rockbridge County Rockingham County Shenandoah County Tourism www.shenandoahtravel.org (888) 367-3965 Shenandoah Valley Battlefields Foundation www.ShenandoahAtWar.org (540) 740-4545 Lexington-Rockbridge Visitor Center www.lexingtonvirginia.com (877) 453-9822 Waynesboro Tourism www.visitwaynesboro.net (540) 942-6512 Rockingham County Tourism www.rockinghamcountyva.gov/visitors (540) 574-1896 Winchester-Frederick County Visitors Center www.VisitWinchesterVA.com (877) 871-1326 www.Virginia.org Harrisonburg www.CivilWarTrails.org www.VirginiaCivilWar.org Shenandoah County Waynesboro Winchester-Frederick County 34 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War VALLEY & MOUNTAINS: More to See Battle of Wytheville – A series of five Civil War Trails interpretive signs describes the action on July 18, 1863, as a Federal raiding party marched to the Wytheville area intending to destroy the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad tracks and bridges. In addition, the force planned to destroy telegraph lines and the salt and lead mines nearby. After some skirmishing and confusion on the advance, Union Col. John Toland ordered his men into Wytheville. Hastily organized Confederate resistance succeeded in killing Toland and limiting the damage to the railroad track and stock. Landmarks of the battle and its aftermath are noted in the Trails tour. Begin the battlefield tour at the Big Walker Overlook (take I-77 exit 52 south on Route 52) For more about the battle and other area history, contact the Wytheville Museum at 276-223-3426. Saltville, north of I-81 on Route 107 – Salt wells here were crucially important to the Confederate war effort, important enough to be the focus of Union attacks late in 1864. Civil War Trails interpretation at two sites. More info: www.saltvilleva.com Battlefield at Cool Spring, Trails sign off Route 7 at Route 603, east of Berryville – State historical markers cite the action here when Confederate Gen. Jubal Early was pursued after his July 1864 foray to the Washington D.C. suburbs. Union forces were repulsed bloodily. Engagement at Marion, Civil War Trails sign on Route 11 in Marion – Confederates, outnumbered four to one here, managed to hold off Union forces raiding the Virginia & Tennessee Railroad and the salt and lead mines in the area for two days in December 1864. Local heros saved county records and other town resources. Marion – Civil War Trails sign in a small cemetery on East Main Street tells the story of Col. William Elisha Peters, who enlisted as a private in the Confederate army and quickly rose in the ranks. He was arrested briefly for refusing to join in the burning of Chambersburg, Pa. Wounded three times, he surrendered with his unit at Appomattox. He is buried nearby. Hanging Rock Battlefield, near Roanoke just off Route 311 about one-half mile north of I-81 exit 41 – Markers and monuments mark the spot of a running battle fought June 21, 1864, between Confederate forces under Jubal Early and Union troops under David Hunter as Hunter was withdrawing from Lynchburg. A new park with an interpreted battle trail and Civil War Trails interpretation is open. J.E.B. Stuart Birthplace, Patrick County, 25 miles west of Stuart and 5 miles of Mt. Airy, N.C., on Route 773 – A self-guided walking tour is available at the site of the famed Confederate cavalry commander’s birth. 276-251-1833 or www.jebstuart.org. Civil War Trails interpretation. Cumberland Gap National Historical Park, extreme southwestern tip of Virginia into Kentucky on U.S. Route 58 – Exhibits and videos outline the history, including the Civil War era, of the great mountain gap, a gateway for armies passing between theaters during the war. Call 606-248-2817 about visiting the park. Bedford, Trails sign located at the intersection of Main and Bridge streets – Union troops under Gen. David Hunter began arriving here June 15, 1864, and continued their mission of tearing up railroads and burning buildings used as Confederate supply depots. Following his occupation, Hunter marched to Lynchburg where he was defeated by Confederates under Jubal Early June 18. Cedar Bluff – Two Civil War Trails interpretive markers describe the action here as Federal raiders made their way to the salt works at Saltville in 1864. Signs located at the Cedar Bluff Overlook Park off US 460 and at the Old Post Office, which was looted during the action. Skyline Drive, Civil War signs located at Franklin Cliffs Overlook, just north of Big Meadows and the Byrd Visitor Center – Great views from here locate the New Market Gap and the Page Valley used so effectively by Stonewall Jackson during the war. A large map describes Jackson’s various marches. Another sign tells of the last time Jackson crossed the mountains. New River Bridge, Radford. Trails sign at far west end of Bisset Park off Route 11. Union troops attacked and burned this critical railroad bridge May 10, 1864, following their victory at Cloyd’s Mountain the day before. Booker T. Washington National Historic Monument, located in Franklin County, 25 miles southeast of Roanoke – The Civil War homefront on a small plantation is portrayed here. Washington was born here in 1856 and, as a boy, saw the white family go off to war. Freed following the war, Washington went on to become a pioneer educator. Open daily 9 am–5 pm. Free. www.nps.gov/bowa or 540-721-2094. Chilhowie, Trails sign at welcome center, I-81 – Union Gen. George Stoneman headed into southwestern Virginia from Tennessee aiming to destroy railroads and the mines at Saltville. He camped here enroute at a switching station on the critical Virginia and Tennessee Railroad. ◆ 1864–2014 Arlington House in 1864 Arlington National Cemetery hosts Civil War events The Arlington National Cemetery is hosting several special tours and events commemorating the 150th anniversary of the first burial there. The programs begin with a wreath laying ceremony May 13 and continue through mid-June. For details, visit www.arlingtoncemetery.mil/Events/ANC150.aspx. Valley conferences cover 1864 topics Tour covers 1864 Washington forts The Shenandoah Valley Battlefields Foundation is sponsoring two sesquicentennial conferences focusing on spring and fall events in the Valley. “ “‘May God forgive me for the Order’: The War Returns to the Valley,” at the Virginia Museum of the Civil War in New Market March 8 covers May and June 1864. “‘Is the World Being Set on Fire?’ Sheridan’s Shenandoah Campaign and the Burning” is set for Lord Fairfax Community College in Middletown Aug. 2. See www.ShenandoahatWar.org for details about both. A tour visiting the 1864 defenses of Washington DC is scheduled March 22. The day-long bus tour, sponsored by the Friends of Fort Ward in Alexandria, covers several of the remaining remnants of the capital’s fortifications, featuring those connected with the July 1864 Confederate assault on Fort Stevens. For more information or to register, call the Fort Ward Museum, 703-746-4848. Medical living history at Winchester hospital site Civil War medical demonstrations highlight the 150th anniversary commemoration of a Union hospital established by Union Gen. Philip Sheridan’s army in Winchester in the fall of 1864. The hospital, near the modern-day Winchester/Frederick County visitor center, is thought to be the largest field hospital operating during the war. The Oct. 25 living history programs are on the historic ground 10 am-4 pm. See ShenanodahatWar.org for more info. 150th conference takes world view “The American Civil War in a Global Context” is the theme for the 2014 Virginia Signature Conference. This year’s event is set for May 31 at George Mason University in Fairfax. Register at www. virginiacivilwar.org. Richmond 1864 focus of symposium, tours Boat tours of James River Civil War sites and an evening symposium highlight the “Campaign Before Richmond Sesquicentennial Weekend” June 20-21 in Henrico County near Richmond. A free symposium Friday evening is followed by the Saturday boat tours. Details: henricohistoricalsociety.org. Come to Lexington and Live the History. Each day in Lexington is an opportunity to tread in the footsteps of Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson. Each moment beckons you to become immersed in our American heritage at Lee Chapel or on the campus of Virginia Military Institute (VMI). Take a family carriage ride down a cobblestone street. Yes, every day is special in Lexington and Rockbridge County. But on certain days, history truly comes alive. UPCOMING EVENTS – All FREE to the public May 9–14 | Muster on the Maury Paxton House in Glen Maury Park | Buena Vista Wake up and smell the gunpowder at this fast-paced and information-filled reenactment of Civil War life. May 15 | VMI New Market Parade and Ceremony | VMI This stirring VMI tradition honors the memory of the ten cadets who were lost at the Battle of New Market, fought on May 15, 1864. Contact the VMI Communications Office for up-to-date schedule information. May 23–24 | 15th Biennial Stonewall Jackson Symposium | VMI The Stonewall Jackson Symposium examines the complex and fascinating career and personality of General Jackson through lectures by leading historians and biographers. Sept. 11–14 | Thunder in the Valley | Virginia Horse Center Be a part of the 150th anniversary events of Hunter’s Raid and Confederate Resistance through Virginia. Activities include cavalry ride, reenactment, dance and conference. visitstonewall.com | Toll-free: 877-453-9822 or 540-463-3777 36 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War SOUTHSIDE VIRGINIA T he area of Virginia between the James River and the North Carolina border was virtually untouched by warring armies during most of the war but certainly was not unaffected by it. ~ Lee’s Retreat Driving Tour Important supply depots at Danville, Lynchburg and Petersburg kept the Confederate armies fed and supplied. The behind-the-lines nature of this area made it a relatively safe place for hospi- tals and prisons. By the summer of 1864, however, things changed. A powerful Union army threatened Petersburg, and another made a stab at Lynchburg. Cavalry raids ~ Sutherland Station / Historic Fork Inn, west of Petersburg on U.S. 460 at Namozine Road – Confederates fought for the doomed South Side Railroad near here on April 2, 1865. The building just beyond the Lee’s Retreat wayside is the Historic Fork Inn, a restored 14-room 1803 plantation house. The house served as a Union army hospital and later one of Southern Virginia’s first post offices. Guided tours are offered year-round by appointment. 804-943-2283 or email [email protected]. F ollowing successful Union attacks on his far right flank at Five Forks on April 1, 1865, Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee decided to abandon Petersburg and head west and south in an attempt to join Gen. Joseph Johnston’s army in North Carolina. Union commander Gen. U.S. Grant followed aggressively. Rapidly moving Federal forces blocked Lee’s turn to the south, forcing the Confederate army west. The armies clashed at Sailor’s Creek, substantially weakening Lee as he continued his agonized march across southern Virginia. Grant finally cornered Lee at Appomattox Court House. Out of options, Lee surrendered his Army of Northern Virginia there April 9. The Lee’s Retreat driving tour follows the course of that critical action on roads that were used April 2–9, 1865. Shortrange radio messages at more than 25 waysides along the way explain the activity. Tune your radio to AM 1610 (near Appomattox, AM 1600) to hear the messages. You must stop at the waysides to listen. The signal does not reach much beyond them. Civil War Trails interpretive markers now enhance the radio stops with battle maps, photographs and additional description of the sites. For more information, see www.varetreat.com. For a copy of the map and more, call 800-6-RETREAT. Or download a copy of the map from www.civilwartraveler. com. See also Richmond-area listings (Powhatan County) for the story of Confederate soldiers who evacuated Richmond. South Side Station (Old Town Petersburg) – Civil War Trails sign and Lee’s Retreat radio message tell of the Confederate’s turbulent last days in the city and their forced evacuation. This stop is a natural end for the Lee vs. Grant Overland Campaign route and beginning of the Lee’s Retreat tour. This is the oldest railroad station in the state. It was heavily damaged by a tornado several years ago. Campbell’s Bridge, Trails sign located on the Petersburg side of the Route 36 disturbed previously peaceful areas far from the war zones. Then, in April 1865, citizens of this area witnessed the final great drama of the war as Lee’s army limped to Appomattox. The following Lee’s Retreat tour stops follow the day-to-day (sometimes hour-to hour) progress of the armies on their way west: High Bridge in 1865 Bridge over the Appomattox – Part of Robert E. Lee’s Confederate army crossed to the north bank of the Appomattox River here the night of April 2, 1865, as he evacuated Petersburg. Lee ordered all the bridges burned following the crossing to impede Union pursuit. This portion of the Confederate army turned west, later recrossing the Appomattox near Amelia. The retreat ended at Appomattox. April 9. The following four sites highlight the story of the successful Union attacks against the Confederate right flank in late March and early April 1865. They are located just a few miles south and west of downtown Petersburg. Use U.S. Route 1 or I-85. Pamplin Historical Park and the National Museum of the Civil War Soldier, entrance on U.S. Route 1, south of Petersburg and the I-85 intersection – Lee’s Retreat radio message and park describe the Union breakthrough in this area. For more on the museum and the park, see the Petersburg area section in “Central Virginia.” White Oak Road, walking trail located near the intersection of Routes 613 (White Oak Road) and 631 – A new six-stop interpreted walking trail in the well-preserved Confederate trenches protecting this road tells the story of Union advances (late March 1865) that isolated the far right of the Confederate line at Five Forks. Five Forks (west of Petersburg, south of U.S. 460 on Route 627; four miles west of the White Oak Road site on Route 613) – Part of the Petersburg National Battlefield. This important and nearly pristine place was the site of April 1, 1865, battle that turned the flank of the Confederate line. Often called “the Waterloo of the Confederacy.” Visitor contact station open daily 9 am–5 pm. 804-265-8244 or 804732-3531. FOR MORE INFORMATION Appomattox 434-352-8999www.HistoricAppomattox.com Best Part of the Civil War www.BestPartoftheCivilWar.com Lynchburg 800-732-5821www.DiscoverLynchburg.org Namozine Church – Church still stands where cavalry clashed April 3, 1865. Building was headquarters and hospital after fighting. Amelia Court House – The two streams of Lee’s army, coming from Petersburg and the abandoned Confederate capital at Richmond, met here April 4–5, 1865. Here, Lee expected to receive food that never came. The delay proved costly. Federal cavalry cut off the planned retreat route to the south at Jetersville. Jetersville – Entrenched Federal soldiers here deflected Lee to the west April 5, 1865. Amelia Springs – The opposing forces brushed up against one another as Lee turned west on April 6, 1865. Deatonville – The entire Confederate army passed through here April 6, 1865, with Union forces closing in. Sailor’s Creek Battlefield – A cluster of stops here — Holt’s Corner, Hillsman House, Marshall’s Crossroads, the Lockett House and Double Bridges — create a tour of the Sailor’s Creek battlefield where Lee’s army began disintegrating in earnest April 6, 1865. Centerpiece of the battlefield is a state park surrounding the Hillsman House where Federal forces gathered to attack the Confederates across the creek. Radio messages at all stops. Hillsman House open seasonally. Visitor center open 10 am–5 pm Monday–Saturday, noon–5 pm Sunday. 804561-7510. Continued on Next page 2014 37 Lee’s Retreat, cont’d Rice’s Depot – Lee established headquarters here in advance of this army as it passed Sailor’s Creek. Wondering what was going on, Lee rode from the Depot toward the battles on April 6. Seeing his disintegrating army struggle through the lowlands, Lee remarked: “My God! Has the army been dissolved?” Cavalry Battle at High Bridge – Union cavalry slashed through the area before Lee’s arrival at Rice’s, hoping to destroy High Bridge across the Appomattox River. Confederate cavalry intercepted the force and captured most of the raiders. Farmville – Lee hoped to feed his stumbling army here on April 7, but Federal cavalry broke things up before his Confederates were fully fed. Lee crossed to the north side of the Appomattox hoping to find an unobstructed route west and buy some time from Union pursuit. Walking tour of historic Farmville available. High Bridge (High Bridge Trail State Park). The parking area for the bridge is on River Road northeast of Farmville. It’s about a mile walk to the bridge itself. Parking fee charged – This multi-use park is a “Rail-to-Trail” project following part of the route of the Civil War-era South Side Railroad. The centerpiece is this bridge, which when built in 1853 was a 2,400-foot-long marvel towering 160 feet above the Appomattox River. It was a key landmark during Lee’s Retreat. After the Confederates crossed it en route to Farmville, they tried and failed to burn it, allowing Union forces to continue their close pursuit. The parking area for the bridge is on River Road northeast of Farmville. It’s about a mile walk to the bridge itself. Parking fee charged. Cumberland Church – Fighting near here April 7, 1865, delayed Lee’s march west. Lee received the first message from Grant asking about surrender here. Clifton – Historic home west of the intersection of U.S. 15 and Route 636. Part of the Confederate army passed here April 8, 1865, with Federals on its heels. Grant spent that night in the house and received Lee’s message suggesting a meeting. New Store – Lee’s exhausted army passed this tiny settlement on April 8. They would be surrendered the next day. Lee’s Rearguard – The Confederate rearguard entrenched here while the army camped near Appomattox Court House. Radio message on AM 1600. Battle of Appomattox Station – Union cavalry delivered the finishing blow to Confederate hopes by capturing supplies here on April 8, 1865. The stop is located in the more modern Appomattox station, now a visitor center for the town, located in the postwar Appomattox Court House. Several stops following Union movements in early April 1865 are located between Petersburg and Burkeville near U.S. Route 460: Nottoway Court House – Grant spent part of the evening here as Union troops marched west April 5, 1865. Crewe – Grant made a cross-country night ride from here April 5–6 to join Gens. Philip Sheridan and George Meade at Jetersville. Burkeville – Important junction of the wartime South Side and Richmond and Danville Railroads served as logistics center during Union movements. Confederate President Jefferson Davis had passed through here by train to Danville after evacuating Richmond April 2. Also interpreted with a Lee’s Retreat radio stop near U.S. 460: Appomattox Court House National Historical Park Visitor center located off U.S. 24 near U.S. 460 D ramatic events in April 1865 made this tiny county seat a household name. Finally trapped after a lingering week-long retreat from Petersburg, Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee surrendered his Army of Northern Virginia to Union commander Gen. U.S. Grant on April 9, 1865. The National Park is a preservation and a reconstruction of the village as it was in 1865. The new county seat is a few miles away. The park visitor center is located in the restored courthouse building at the center of town. Open 8:30 am–5 pm. $3 per person, $5 maximum per carload; $4/$10 in summer. www.nps.gov/apco or 434-352-8987. Park highlight McLean House – Rebuilt structure was the site of the actual surrender. Rangers explain the circumstances. Tour includes restored rooms including the surrender parlor. Other park features include Lee and Grant’s headquarters sites, the Clover Hill tavern where the paroles were printed, a small Confederate cemetery and the Richmond-Lynchburg road where the final surrender of Confederate troops occurred. A 4-mile hiking trail connects all the park features. ◆ Looking ahead to 2015 P lans are taking shape for events commemorating the 150th anniversary of the end of the war in Virginia. The Appomattox National Historical Park is planning special ranger programs tours and living history commemorating Lee’s surrender there April 9, 1865. State parks at the Sailor’s Creek battlefield and at High Bridge, both on the Lee’s Retreat tour, also are planning events. Expect commemorations of the fall of Richmond and Petersburg. The 2015 Virginia Signature Conference is set for April 18 at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. Stay tuned to the events calendar at CivilWarTraveler.com for the latest info as plans are finalized. Battle of Nottoway – Engagement fought June 23, 1864, during a cavalry expedition led by Union Gens. August Kautz and James Wilson. The objective was to destroy portions of the railroads south and west of Petersburg that supplied Lee’s army. For more on the Wilson-Kautz raid, see list of sites in this section or call 800-6-RETREAT for a tour brochure. ◆ Virginia’s Destination for History & Outdoor Recreation History www.va retre at .co m Amelia County Appomattox County National Park Service Brunswick County Buckingham County Charlotte County Dinwiddie County Confederates surrender at Sailor’s Creek • Lee’sRetreat&CivilRightsDrivingTours • Virginia’sLargestLake&ManyRiversfor Fishing,Kayaking,Swimming • Festivals,Antiques,Boutiques&UniqueDining Halifax County Lunenburg County • • • • EightVirginiaStateParks HundredsofMilesofHiking,Biking&HorseTrails FromSkydivingtoNASCAR NEW!!!PassportProgram-receivesouvenirpatch Mecklenburg County Nottoway County Prince Edward County City of Petersburg 38 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War SOUTHSIDE VIRGINIA: Lynchburg Wilson-Kautz Raid Driving Tour ~ For more information about historic sites, stop by the Lynchburg Visitor Center, 216 12th St. T U nion Gen. David Hunter reached the outskirts of Lynchburg June 17, 1864, hoping to capture the important supply and hospital center. Hunter’s advance on Lynchburg followed a decisive victory over Confederates at Piedmont in the Shenandoah Valley two weeks earlier. Following Piedmont, “Black Dave” then occupied Lexington — burning the Virginia Military Institute — before turning east. See Hunter’s Raid Tour in the Valley section. Seeing the threat, Robert E. Lee rushed Gen. Jubal Early to the scene. Arriving just in time, Early turned back Hunter after fierce fighting on June 18. Hunter retreated all the way into West Virginia. Early then launched his own campaign that ended finally in the suburbs of Washington DC. Battle of Lynchburg Driving Tour A Civil War Trails driving tour of Lynchburg sites describes both the action and the city’s role in the war. An excellent tour tape (or CD) is now available for purchase at several places in town, including the Lynchburg visitor center. The tour starts at Sandusky, an 1818 Federal-style house that Hunter used as headquarters after arriving on the battlefield June 17. Open by appointment. $5. Information about visiting the house: historicsandusky.org or 434-832-0162. Tour highlights, interpreted by Civil War Trails signs, include Fort Early, Fort McCausland. Spring Hill Cemetery and Civil War hospital locations. Lynchburg museums, other sites The Lynchburg Museum in the Old Courthouse, 901 Court St. – Located in the 1855 Court House, the museum describes all of the area’s history including much on the Civil War. Flags, artifacts from the 1864 Battle of Lynchburg, and items used by Gen. Jubal Early are on display. Civil War Trails sign outside. ~ Historic Sandusky 10 am–4 pm Monday–Saturday; noon– 4 pm Sunday. $6/adult. 434-455-6226 or lynchburgmuseum.org. Point of Honor, 112 Cabell St. – Trails sign at the house museum tells the story of its wartime resident, Col. Robert Owen, president of the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad. The 1815 Federal-style building is part of the Lynchburg Museum system and is open Monday–Saturday 10 am–4 pm and Sunday noon–5 pm. $6/adult. pointofhonor.org. National Civil War Chaplains Museum, 2043 The Arthur S. DeMoss Learning Center, Liberty University – Exhibits with paintings, artifacts and other material highlight the role of Civil War chaplains, priests, rabbis and religious organizations. Call for hours. 434-582-2087 or chaplinmuseum.org. Old City Cemetery, Fourth and Taylor streets – A new visitor center is open daily 11 am–3 pm and Sundays 1–4 pm (closed winter Sundays) near the Pest House and Confederate section of the cemetery. This is a wonderfully restored cemetery, founded in 1806, with a well-interpreted Confederate and Civil War section. There were 2,200 Confederate burials here. Next to the Confederate section, the Pest House Medical Museum offers a glimpse of 19th-century medical practices. The building was a quarantine building for Confederate soldiers. A tape plays during exterior tours. You can look in the windows. The Pest House is the topic of a video played in the new Cemetery Center, which includes a museum featuring antique mourning items, a small gift shop and restrooms. Cemetery is open dawn to dusk. Free. www.gravegarden.org or 434847-1465. Prisoner-of-War Camp, Trails sign at Glass High School, 2111 Memorial Ave, Lynchburg 24501 – Union prisoner-ofwar camp established here on the site of an earlier Confederate training camp and town fairgrounds. Established as a POW exchange camp, the site quickly became overcrowded and disease-infested after the exchange system broke down in 1863. ◆ his 26-stop tour follows the route of the June 1864 Federal cavalry raid, led by Gens. August Kautz and James Wilson, which aimed to disrupt or destroy Confederate railroad lines leading into Petersburg, then under attack by U.S. Grant. The Union raiders succeeded in tearing up about 60 miles of track on three railroads, but the damage was repaired quickly. The raiders were turned back by a collection of Southern boys and old men at the Staunton River Bridge. This tour map is included on the Civil War Trails Lee’s Retreat map, free at local visitor centers or download a copy from CivilWarTraveler.com/maps. For more on both tours, see www.varetreat. com. Driving tour highlights: Battle of Nottoway – First sizable engagement on the WilsonKautz Raid. Charlotte Court House – After destroying railroad facilities at Burkeville Junction, Meherrin Station and Keysville, fears of local citizens were eased when the detachment burned no buildings. Staunton River Battlefield State Park (listing under Clover) – Confederate earthworks from the June 25, 1864, battle. Reams Station – Burned by Wilson-Kautz raiders on June 22, 1864. During the return to Petersburg June 28, a 10-hour skirmish ensued with Confederate Gen. William Mahone’s forces. ◆ NEWS Mt. Zion Church sets tours Cemetery at Mt. Zion Church Living history tours and demonstrations are offered the fourth Sunday of each month April–October, except June, at Mt. Zion Church, on U.S. 50 just east of U.S. 15 near Aldie. The historic church (1851) cemetery holds remains of both Union and Confederate soldiers. The programs are scheduled 1-5 pm. Donations are welcome. Details: www.nvrpa.org. Gettysburg is command conference focus Free City Point brochure “The First Day at Gettysburg” is the topic of this year’s annual Conference on the Art of Command in the Civil War, sponsored by the Mosby Heritage Area. The conference is scheduled Oct. 3–5 in Middleburg. For registration and details, see www. mosbyheritagearea.org. “The Civil War at City Point” describes sites associated with the vast Union supply base and headquarters established by Gen. U.S. Grant in 1864 in what is now Hopewell. To request a free copy of the brochure, call 1-800-863-8687. 2014 39 The Battle of Staunton River Bridge The battle of Staunton River Bridge 150th anniversary commemoration Saturday and Sunday June 21-22, 2014 Staunton River Battlefield State Park 1035 Fort Hill Trail, Randolph, VA, 23962 www.historicstauntonriverfoundation.org Virginia State Parks | SP_PE_SRB_GuidetoCivilWar_ad.indd 1 | 2/3/2014 3:26:35 PM www.gohalifaxva.com Halifax County VIRGINIA Rich in History. Rich in Culture. Rich with Adventures. Blessed with Good People. This year in June, we will be celebrating 150 years of history. We have several adventures that share our history in an informative, family fun, and exciting way. Every visitor should visit our: Civil War Trails, War Memorials and Civil Rights Heritage Trails. Every adventure is truly a walk through history. We have so many surprising adventures, you won’t know where to begin. Let us help! Request a brochure at www.gohalifaxva.com or call 434.572.2543 • toll free: 1.866.464.2543 40 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War SOUTHSIDE VIRGINIA: More to See Appomattox The Museum of the Confederacy – Appomattox, 159 Horseshoe Road, Appomattox (intersection of US 460 and 24) This branch of the Museum of the Confederacy includes items from its collection relating to the Army of Northern Virginia’s surrender including the sword and uniform worn by Robert E. Lee April 9, 1865. The museum’s exhibits also will cover the days leading up to the surrender and the story of Confederate soldiers going home. Open daily 10 am–5 pm. $10/adult. Discounts available for those also visiting the Richmond museum/White House site. www.moc.org. Danville Civil War tour brochures are available at the Danville Welcome Center, 645 River Park Drive. Sutherlin Mansion (Danville Museum of Fine Arts and History), 975 Main St. — Confederate president Jefferson Davis and his family stayed here April 3–10, 1865. The remnants of the official Confederate government met here for the last time. Good permanent Civil War exhibit. Tuesday–Friday 10 am–5 pm; Saturday and Sunday 2–5 pm. $8/adult for house tours. www.danvillemuseum.org or 434-793-5644. The following Danville sites are marked with Civil War Trails signs unless otherwise noted. National, Freedman’s and Green Hill cemeteries, Lee Street – The National Cemetery here was established in 1867 to rebury the 1,323 Union soldiers who died in Danville’s six prisons. A memorial stands over the Confederate section of the nearby Green Hill Cemetery opened in 1863. Recently freed slaves and other black citizens are buried in the adjacent Freedman’s cemetery established in 1872. Civil War Prison No. 6, 300 Lynn St. – This much-altered building (originally built 1855) is the only survivor of the converted tobacco warehouses turned into prisons during the war. More than 7,000 Union soldiers were kept in Danville’s prisons, including black troops captured at the battle of the Crater near Petersburg. Civil War Earthworks, just off Route 58 approaching Danville – These earthen fortifications located on hills above the Dan River are interpreted as part of the Civil War Trails program. Richmond & Danville Railroad, signs located at railroad station off Craighead Street – Three Trails signs tell the story of the Richmond & Danville Railroad from its earliest days. The road’s role as a key supply route and later an escape route for the Confederate government is covered here. Chatham, Trails sign located on North Main Street two blocks north of the Pittsylvania Courthouse next to the visitor center – Site of the Bilhartz, Hall & Co., established in 1862, manufacturer of the rare “rising breech” carbine rifles for the Confederacy. Weapons made here had the distinctive feature of a curved bow which acts as the loading lever and trigger guard. Clover/Randolph Staunton River Battlefield State Park, located north of U.S. 360, take Route 600 from Clover to visitor center – A new walking/bicycle trail through the actual battlefield makes this well-done site even better. A visitor center/museum/shop tells the story of the June 25, 1864, battle between Union cavalry raiders hoping to destroy the bridge and about 500 “old men and young boys” who defended the position. The new trail explores Confederate earthwork defenses then crosses the Staunton River following the railroad right-of-way through the battlefield to Randolph. Parking is available at Randolph (Route 607) and at the main visitor center. Battlefield is open 8 am–dusk daily. www. stauntonriverbattlefield.org. Visitor center open Monday–Saturday 9 am–4:30 pm and Sunday 1–4:30 pm. 434-454-4312. Emporia Village View Manor House, 221 Briggs St. – Built in the 1790s, the front parlor of this restored home hosted Confederate Gens. W.H. Lee, Wade Hampton and Matthew Butler. The three led troops attempting to head off a raid south from Petersburg directed by Union Gen. Gouverneur Warren against railroad bridges in early December 1864 (the Hicksford Raid). Damage to the railroad was repaired quickly. Civil War Trails interpretation. Call 434-634-8687 or 434-634-2475 about visiting the house. ◆ the best part of the civil war... the end Hillsman House The High Bridge McLean House Museum of Confedera cy Appomattox Travel the path of Lee and Grant to the Surrender Grounds at Appomattox, where along the way, some of the best shopping, antiquing, dining, lodging and outdoor recreation are waiting for you. For More Information Visit: www.BestPartoftheCivilWar.org For a free gift, bring this ad to any Visitor Center or State Park in The Best Part of the Civil War region! (one per family) 2014 41 Come to Lynchburg and learn why General Grant was so interested in us in 1864! CSA General Jubal A. Early Jane Lathrop Stabler Spring New for Spring 2014: 2014 Downtown Lynchburg in the Civil War Walking Tour Confederate hospitals, railroads, canal, historic houses, museums, & more. April 2014 Randolph College • 2500 Rivermont Avenue www.randolphcollege.edu/slaverysymposium Facing the Past, Freeing the Future: Slavery's Legacy, Freedom's Promise April 3-5 • Randolph College and Poplar Forest symposium on slavery. June 2014 to Dec 2015 Lynchburg Museum • 901 Court Street • www.lynchburgmuseum.org Experience The James: Lynchburg's Pathway to the World June 6, 2014 - December 31, 2015 • The Lynchburg Museum's new exhibit on "America's Founding River" will cover exploration, settlement, war, ecology, and more through art, archaeology, and museum objects borrowed from museums across Virginia. Visit three historic cemeteries, the resting places of over 2,200 Southern soldiers and five Confederate generals. Our 11 Virginia Civil War Trails sites include Fort Early, Historic Sandusky, Union prisoner of war camp, and the historic house, Point of Honor, visited by Union spies during the Battle of Lynchburg. CSA Brigadier General John McCausland June 2014 USA General David Hunter Historic Sandusky • 757 Sandusky Drive • www.historicsandusky.org June 13-15 • Living History encampments, tours and more at Historic Sandusky. The home was used as Union headquarters by General Hunter during the Battle of Lynchburg in 1864. Guided Civil War Tours • Presbyterian Cemetery • 907 Bailey Street www.presbyteriancemeteryva.com The Legacy Museum of African American History • 403 Monroe Street www.legacymuseum.org June 20 • African American Genealogy - Organizing Your Family Tree June 21 • Slave Life during the Civil War: Gardening, music, and food preparation June 22 • Civil War Slave Narratives Old City Cemetery • 401 Taylor Street • www.gravegarden.org June 21 • Civil War Day event Lynchburg Museum and Point of Honor hours: Monday - Saturday 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Sunday, noon to 4:00 p.m. Visitor Information Center: 1-800-732-5821 • 216 12th St. Lynchburg, VA • www.discoverlynchburg.org • www.lynchburgmuseum.org • www.pointofhonor.org 42 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War NORTHERN VIRGINIA W hen Virginia seceded, the Federal government in Washington D.C. found itself virtually surrounded by a hostile foreign country. Abraham Lincoln moved swiftly to occupy a com- fort zone around his capital. Farther away from Washington, however, Union control was less certain. Confederate John Singleton Mosby was a feared raider of Union patrols and supply lines. Citizen loyalties were almost always in question. Today, many of the forts built by Union engineers during the war still exist in parks. The bloody battlefields at Manassas & area A visitor center is located in an old railroad station in the heart of Manassas and on the site of a critical Civil War rail junction. Two major battles were fought just a few miles north, along a creek known as Bull Run. The center is a good place to get oriented to the area and learn about the town’s railroad history. See Manassas National Battlefield Park, this page. The Prince William Civil War Heritage Trail – Dozens of Civil War sites and museums are described in a free brochure/ map of the Manassas area. Sites related to both battles of Manassas (Bull Run) are included. The map is available at area visitor centers or call 800-432-1792. Manassas Museum System. Main exhibit building located just east of Business Route 234, 9101 Prince William St. ZIP code 22110 – Explore the history of Manassas and the Northern Virginia Piedmont at this effective regional museum. Good Civil War exhibits. The building is near the historic railroad junction that precipitated two major battles. A Civil War Trails sign is on site. Also part of the museum system is Mayfield Fort, a Confederate-built earthwork designed to protect the railway junction and for use as a signal station. An eight-stop walking tour takes visitors through the fort. Stop at the museum for information about visiting the fort. Museum open daily 10 am–5 pm Memorial Day–Labor Day (closed Mondays other times). $5/adult. www.manassasmuseum. org or 703-368-1873. Downtown Manassas walking tour – A multi-stop walking tour beginning at the Manassas Museum describes life and Main visitor center off Route 234 just north of I-66. P ark boundaries encompass key sites associated with the First ( July 21, 1861) and Second (Aug. 28–30) Battles of Manassas (Bull Run). First Manassas is remembered as the first major land battle of the war, won by inexperienced Confederates who routed an equally raw Union force. Confederate Gen. Thomas J. Jackson became “Stonewall” for his role in the fighting. The second battle, also a dramatic Confederate View of the Manassas battlefield from the Stone House National Park Service Manassas National Battlefield Park victory, was much bloodier. More than 3,000 soldiers were killed during the battle. Henry Hill visitor center offers an audiovisual program, interactive displays, a big book store and ranger help. Frequent guided walking tours of Henry Hill offered. Driving tour information available. Visitor center open daily 8:30 am–5 pm. Other buildings open seasonally. Park open dawn to dusk. Three-day pass cost is $3/adult (16 and older). A 45-minute film is offered on the hour. www.nps.gov/mana or 703-361-1339. Park highlights Henry Hill – Self-guided walking tour outside the visitor center highlights key spots in the first battle. Stone Bridge – Key spot in the first battle as Union attacks spilled across Bull Run. Union line of retreat during both battles. Get Manassas have been preserved in a National Park, which is an oasis in a rapidly growing area of development. Farther west, the countryside remains much the same as Mosby might have found it. military events in the tiny railroad junction town during the war. Among the topics covered are the great Confederate feast in 1862, early battlefield relic collectors, camps and hospitals. For more information and a map of the new tour, see www. manassasmuseum.org. Bristoe Station Battlefield Heritage Park, 10604 Bristow Road – This county park includes walking trails related to the 1862 Battle of Kettle Run (a precursor to Second Manassas) and the Oct. 14, 1863, Battle of Bristoe Station. The 1863 battle was part of a short-lived Confederate offensive led by Gen. A.P. Hill. After suffering great losses attacking a strong Union position, the battle was judged a blunder by the Confederates. The property also is the site of several Confederate cemeteries established during a large winter camp here. Self-guided tour brochures are available at a kiosk in the parking area, or download a copy from CivilWarTraveler.com/maps. Battle of Kettle Run, Nokesville Road (Route 28) and Aden Road, Nokesville 20181 – As Stonewall Jackson’s troups occupied and looted the railroad junction at Manassas Aug. 27, 1862, Federal forces approached his rear guard at Kettle Run. The Confederates there managed to delay the Union force before withdrawing to the junction and then to the old Manassas battlefield. Ben Lomond Historic Site (Pringle House Civil War Hospital), 10321 Sudley Manor Drive, east of Route 234 – The interior has been restored to its July 1861 appearance when it served as a Confederate field hospital following the First Battle Continues on NEXT page information about walking trails at the visitor center. Stone House – Battlefield landmark was Union headquarters during the second battle. Served as a field hospital during and after both battles. Open seasonally and on special occasions. Unfinished Railroad Cut – Jackson defended this position against strong Union attacks during the second battle. The railroad grade is still visible. ◆ 2014 Manassas area, cont’d of Manassas. Civil War Trails and other interpretive markers (one indicating the old road trace used by soon-to-be “Stonewall” Jackson on the way to the battle) are on site. Guided tours Thursday–Monday 11 am–4 pm (May–October). Details: 703367-7872. Signal Hill, located just off Signal View Drive across the street from entrance to Signal Hill Park. For specific directions, contact the Manassas Museum or the Manassas National Battlefield – A Confederate observation post here warned of the Union effort to turn the flank of the Southern position during the initial stages of the First Battle of Manassas. It was the first use of wig-wag signals during wartime. Memorial cites first telecommunication on a battlefield. Parking. Trails sign. Old Stone Church, Trails sign located 1/4 mile east of the intersection of Routes 29 and 28 at Church of the Ascension on Braddock Road in Centreville – An inexperienced Union army marched past here on their way to the Manassas battlefield. Many soldiers returned wounded on the way back and were treated in the church. The area then became a Confederate campground during the winter of 1861–1862. Blackburn’s Ford, Trails sign located at the Ford, just off Route 28 – Signs here describe significant incidents prior to the First Battle of Manassas in July 1861. Union attackers July 18 at Blackburn’s Ford on Bull Run ran into well-placed Confederates on the other side and were unable to dislodge them. Three days later the armies would meet again in a much larger battle farther north along the same creek. McLean House site, Trails sign at the intersection of Centreville Road (Route 28) and Yorkshire Lane – The home of the Wilmer McLean stood near this intersection and became the headquarters for Confederate Gen. P.G.T. Beauregard July 18, 1861, when the Battle of Blackburn’s Ford erupted. The home sustained damage during the fighting with subsequent occupation and nearby skirmishing devastating 43 the property. McLean eventually moved his family to Appomattox Court House to get out of the war. But his home again was invaded April 9, 1865, during the surrender of Robert E. Lee’s army. McLean’s plight gave rise to the popular saying that “the war started in his front lawn and ended in his front parlor.” Battle at Bull Run Bridge, two Trails signs commemorate this Aug. 27, 1862, battle, a prelude to the Battle of Second Manassas (Aug. 28–30, 1862). Learning that Confederates had occupied Manassas Junction, Union Gen. John Pope sent infantry to the scene thinking that the occupiers were cavalry only. The Union detachment instead found Confederate infantry under Gen. Stonewall Jackson. The one-sided fight sent the Northerners fleeing back to Centreville. One sign is located at the corner of Portner and Breedon avenues near Liberia (near intersection of Route 28 and Liberia Avenue). The other is at the Conner House (see below). Conner House, Trails signs at the historic house. From Route 28, turn east on Manassas Drive, then south on Euclid Avenue, then east on Conner Drive – This house served as headquarters for Confederate Gen. Joseph Johnston following the Battle of First Manassas in 1861. A year later, the home was a occupied by Union troops as Stonewall Jackson advanced to the old battlefield prior to the Battle of Second Manassas. Brentsville, Trails sign located at the historic courthouse three miles west of Route 28 on Bristow Road (Route 619) – The Prince William County seat during the war, this town suffered severe damage during the war with many of its homes and public buildings destroyed or heavily damaged. Park open sunrise-sunset daily. Tours Friday-Sunday (May-Oct). 703-365-7895. Leesylvania State Park, entrance west of U.S. 1 on Neabsco Road, exit 156 from I-95 – Well interpreted remains of a Confederate artillery battery are located in this Potomac River park named for the former residents, the Lee family. The battery was in action Sept. 25, 1861, when it exchanged shots with Union vessels in the river. The fort is located and other Civil War stories are told on a history walking trail. Trails interpretation at the trailhead. Parking at the end of the park road. Restrooms. Great river views. Open daily. Parking fee. 703670-0372. Greenwich, Trails sign at Greenwich Presbyterian Church, 15305 Vint Hill Road, Nokesville – Federal units pursuing Stonewall Jackson to Manassas Junction camped here in August 1862; fighting involving John S. Mosby’s rangers flared near here, and Confederates marched past toward nearby Bristoe Station in October 1863. Haymarket, two Civil War Trails signs on Route 55, 1/2-mile east of Route 15 – This small town’s location put it directly in the path of marching armies throughout the war. Soldiers passed through here on the way to both battles at Manassas and uncounted smaller actions. After Confederate bushwhackers fired at Federal troops near here in 1862, a Union general ordered the entire town burned, leaving only one house and the shell of a church. Chapman’s Mill, Trails sign at the mill near Haymarket – Built between 1737 and 1742, this massive mill served as a Confederate meat curing and distribution center early in the war. The mill changed hands several times as the Battle of Thoroughfare Gap swirled around it on Aug. 24, 1862. The battle, a Confederate victory, immediately preceded the Battle of Second Manassas fought nearby. To get there from Haymarket: Take Route 55 west, turn north onto Turner Road, cross I-66 then turn left (west) onto Beverley Mill Road parking. Occoquan, Trails sign located adjacent to the Mill House Museum, 413 Mill St. in Occoquan – An important river crossing between Alexandria and Fredericksburg, this small settlement was a busy and sometimes dangerous place during the war. Confederate cavalry raided here in December 1862 and Union Gen. Joseph Hooker’s army constructed a 300-foot-long pontoon bridge here as he moved north toward Gettysburg in 1863. Dumfries, Trails sign located on southbound Route 1, just north of Main Street split (south of Route 234 exit from I-95) – Confederates evacuated their camps here in March 1862 and the town remained in Union hands throughout the rest of the war. A raid Dec. 27, 1862, by Confederate Gen. J.E.B. Stuart resulted in the destruction of many buildings. Hopewell Gap, Trails sign at Antioch Church 16513 Waterfall Road, Haymarket 20169 – This pass in the Bull Run Mountains was used as an avenue of approach and escape during the war. Federal cavalrymen escaped through here June 18, 1863, after being defeated at Middleburg. Confederate partisan John S. Mosby maintained a prisoner of war camp here in July 1863. Confederate Winter Encampments, Trails sign located at Ferlazzo Government Building, 15941 Donald Curtis Drive, Woodbridge 22191 – This area along Neabsco Creek was the center of Confederate wintercamps and fortifications in 1861– 1862. These troops were used to support the Potomac River batteries that successfully blockaded the Potomac River that winter.. Bacon Race Church, Trails sign located at Bacon Race Cemetery, 5213 Davis Ford Road., Woodbridge 22192 – This cemetery is all that is left of the Oak Grove/Bacon Race Baptist Church, which dated to the 1770s. In the winter of 1861-1862 this area became the supply depot for the Confederate troops camped in the eastern section of Prince William County. There were also several Confederate encampments in this area, including Wade Hampton’s famous “Hampton Legion.” There are several Civil War burials in the cemetery. Buckland, sign located at the 16211 Lee Hwy, Gainesville – Positioned along the Warrenton Turnpike, campaigning armies traveled and skirmished through this village numerous times during the war. On October 19, 1863 the Battle of Buckland Mills was fought here. As part of the Bristoe Campaign, Confederate cavalry under Gen. J.E.B. Stuart routed Federal cavalry under Gen. J. Kilpatrick inflicting nearly 300 casualties. ◆ NEWS Mobile tour follows Bristoe Campaign Discover all the key facets of the 1863 Bristoe Campaign in a free mobile tour. The tour covers 50 miles and seven stops ending at the Bristoe Station Battlefield Heritage Park near Manassas. QR codes at each stop link to a mobile website with maps, images and site descriptions. Details: pwcgov.org/bristoe. HistoryMobile hits the road The Virginia 150 HistoryMobile is on the road again in 2014. Follow the free traveling exhibit schedule at www.virginiacivilwar.org. Brandy Station car caravan battlefields tours scheduled Car-caravan tours of various sections of the Brandy Station battlefield near Culpeper are set. The two-hour tours leave at 10 am from the Graffiti House visitor center, 19484 Brandy Road, Brandy Station. Cost is $10. Here’s the schedule: • Beverly Ford and St. James Church: April 5, May 31 and July 26. • Kelly’s Ford and Stevensburg: April 19, June 14 and Aug. 9. • Fleetwood Hill: May 3, June 28 and Aug. 23. • Buford Knoll and Yew Ridge: May 17, July 12 and Sept. 6. See www.brandystationfoundation.com or call 540-547-4106 for more information. 44 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War NORTHERN VIRGINIA: Inner Suburbs of Washington DC Alexandria Fort Ward Museum and Historic Site, 4301 Braddock Road – One of the 68 forts that ringed the Federal capital has been restored and interpreted. Nearby museum offers excellent Civil War exhibits relating to Alexandria’s wartime experience and other topics. This is the place to get oriented for a tour of Civil War fortifications in the DC area. "The Masrshall House Incident" exhibit continues through 2012. Open 10 am–4 pm Tuesday–Saturday; noon–5 pm Sundays. Free, donations welcome. www. fortward.org or 703-746-4848. Alexandria National Cemetery, Wilkes and Gibbon streets – One of the earliest of the National Cemeteries, established as the Soldiers Cemetery in 1862. The City of Alexandria – Trails sign at the train station on King Street tells the story of the first officer killed in the war (Union Col. Elmer Ellsworth) and the initial Federal occupation of the city in 1861. A Civil War walking tour is available at the visitor center. Arlington Arlington National Cemetery and Arlington House – Robert E. Lee left his home in Arlington and his long career in the Federal army to take command of Virginia forces in April 1861. Union soldiers occupied his estate a month later. In 1864, burials of Union soldiers began on the grounds and by the end of the war 16,000 graves scarred the lawn and gardens of Lee’s former home. Today Arlington National Cemetery is studded with famous memorials including the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and the graves of John F. and Robert Kennedy. A small section is devoted to the remains of Confederate dead. Another section (27) is dedicated to the United States Colored Troops and residents of the Freedman’s Village. Don’t miss the self-guided tour of the restored Arlington House (Lee’s home). Admission is free but there is a parking charge. The cemetery is open 8 am–7 pm April–September. It closes at 5 pm other months. More info: www.arlingtoncemetery.org. Arlington House is open daily 10 am–4 pm (closed Monday–Tuesday. More info: nps.gov/arho or 703-235-1530. Freedman’s Village, historic location in what is now Arlington National Cemetery – Refugee slaves made their way to the Washington area after the outbreak of the war. The government selected this site to house and educate them. Civil War Trails interpretation located in Foxcroft Heights Park (corner of Oak Street and Southgate Road) overlooking Arlington National Cemetery. Fort C.F. Smith, county park located at 2411 N. 24th St. between I-66 and the George Washington Memorial Parkway, off Spout Run Parkway, (turn on Lorcom from Spout Run, right on Fillmore and right on 24th Street) – Well-preserved Union fortification built in 1863 to extend the Arlington defenses to the Potomac River. Nice county park. Call for programs. Civil War Trails interpretation. 703-243-7329. Fort Ethan Allen, located just off the Old Glebe Road at the Madison School just south of the George Washington Parkway – Built in 1861 to command approaches to the Chain Bridge over the Potomac into Washington, this is a companion fortification to Fort Marcy (Fairfax County), on the Washington Parkway. Historical marker and school parking lot at the south face of the fort. Civil War Trails interpretation located near the south face of the fort past the soccer fields. Falls Church Falls Church, Civil War Trails interpretation near the Route 50 intersection, just off Route 7 – Material here highlights first Union occupation of this once-small farm town and the balloon ascensions here by the famed Thaddeus Lowe. Fairfax Fairfax Museum and Visitor Center, 10209 Main St. in City of Fairfax – Exhibits describe the rich history of this early court house site with emphasis on Civil War history. Open daily 9 am–5 pm. Free, donations welcome. 800-545-7950. Trails interpretation. Civil War Interpretive Center at Historic Blenheim, 3610 Old Lee Highway, Fairfax – This 1855 home was shelter and hospital for soldiers during the Civil War. Many left their names, poetry and art behind on the walls, creating one of the finest collections of Civil War graffiti in the country. The interpretive center highlights the history of the house and Civil War Fairfax. Open Tuesday–Saturday 10 am–3 pm. House tour at 1 pm. Free. 703-591-0560. Chantilly (Ox Hill) Battlefield – A small but excellent park located a short distance south of US 50 is devoted to the Sept. 1, 1862, battle that immediately followed the Second Battle of Manassas. Stonewall Jackson’s attempt to block the Federal retreat toward Washington was turned back here in a driving thunder- storm. The Union army lost two generals during the battle, Phillip Kearney and Isaac Stevens. Monuments to both generals are located along a paved pathway as well as excellent interpretive displays and signs. The 4.9-acre park represents only a tiny piece of this battlefield, now surrounded by modern development; but a kiosk near the parking lot does a good job setting the scene. A modern aerial photograph with troop movement overlays is especially helpful. Fairfax Station, 11200 Fairfax Station Road, Trails sign at station – Nurse Clara Barton played a role here as the wounded streamed in after the Second Battle of Manassas. Countless Union soldiers guarded the Orange and Alexandria Railroad stop against raids by J.E.B. Stuart and J.S. Mosby. Building now houses the Fairfax Station Railroad Museum, open most Sundays 1–4 pm. $4. Includes Civil War history. 703-425-9225. Stuart-Mosby Civil War Cavalry Museum, 13938 Braddock Road, Centreville 20120 – Features artifacts related to Confederate horsemen J.E.B. Stuart and J.S. Mosby. Open Saturday and Monday 10 am–4 pm. Free. 703-971-4984. Fort Marcy, parking lot off northbound George Washington Parkway near Route 123 – Part of the Washington defenses, these earthworks were built in 1861 to protect the Potomac River crossing at Chain Bridge. The fort boasted 17 guns and three mortars and was named for Gen. Randolph Marcy. A trail connects several hundred yards of well interpreted and preserved earthworks maintained by the National Park Service. For more information, contact the Park Service (George Washington Parkway) 703-289-2500 or www.nps.gov/ gwmp. Old Stone Church, Trails sign located at the Church of the Ascension, 13941 Braddock Road in Centreville – An inexperienced Union army marched past here on the way to the Manassas battlefield. Many soldiers returned wounded on the way back and were treated in the church. The area then became a Confederate campgound during the winter of 1861–1862. St. Marys Church, about 1.5 miles south of Fairfax Courthhouse near Fairfax Station – Civil War Trails sign at this 1858 church describes the action here Aug. 8, 1864, when Confederate horsemen led by John Singleton Mosby routed a Union cavalry encampment. Sully, historic plantation located off Route 28 just north of Route 50 – This late-18th-century estate, established by Richard Bland Lee (Robert E. Lee’s uncle), offers tours of the nicely preserved house and outbuildings. The estate was visited by troops of both sides during the war. The men of the Union-favoring family often fled to Alexandria escaping capture by Confederate visitors, leaving the estate’s management to the women during much of the war. Pick up a Civil War-oriented flyer with your ticket. Some Civil War material and exhibits offered during tours of the 1794 home. Trails sign. Open every day except Tuesday 11 am–4 pm. $7/adult. 703-437-1794. Dranesville Tavern, Trails sign just off Route 7, 1/4 mile east of Fairfax County Parkway – This 1820 roadside inn was in no-man’s land between armies in the winter of 1861. On Dec. 20 Union infantry and Confederate cavalry and infantry clashed here. Both sides withdrew from the area after the battle, but the Federals claimed a tactical victory, lifting their morale after the disaster at First Manassas. Orange and Alexandria RR (Lake Accotink), directions to Trails sign: From the Capital Beltway, take Exit 54B to Braddock Rd. E., turn south on Backlick Road, turn right on Highland Avenue and follow signs to the park – The park’s access road lies on top of the original roadbed of the strategic Orange and Alexandria Railroad. The area was occupied early by Federal troops, but the railroad continued to be the target of frequent Confederate raids. Herndon Mosby’s Raid, Trails sign at train station – Story here about a March 1863 raid by famous Confederate partisan John Singleton Mosby against this lightly protected rail station. Mosby’s action captured dozens of prisoners and forced Union outposts to move closer to Washington. Vienna The following sites in Vienna are marked with Civil War Trails signs. Freeman Store/Museum, 131 Church St. – Trails sign tells the story of the role of this site, used by Union and Confederate troops, and directs visitors to other historic sites. Civil War Fortification, near American Legion Post No. 180 – Star-shaped Civil War fortification is of undermined heritage but is one of many unidentified field works in the hotly contested Northern Virginia area. 703-938-9535 (Legion phone number). ◆ 2014 45 NORTHERN VIRGINIA: Route 50 Corridor T he John Singleton Mosby to remind visitors of the Heritage Area covers town’s Civil War associations. approximately 1,600 square Fighting raged through here miles in five Northern Virduring the “Prelude to Getginia counties west of Washtysburg” cavalry fighting June ington DC. Confederate Col. 19, 1863. The town also was Mosby’s irregular troopers a Mosby base. Trails sign in and tactics so controlled the front of Mosby Tavern. area that it became known as Battle of Unison, a series “Mosby’s Confederacy” durof Trails signs following the ing the later years of the war. course of the battle are loInformation about touring cated near Route 50 between the area is carried at the visiMiddleburg and Upperville John Singleton Mosby tor centers in Leesburg and – Urged by Lincoln to pursue Warrenton. Lee’s army following the September 1862 A variety of taped driving tours and Battle of Antietam, Union Gen. George maps covering Mosby’s exploits and other McCellan finally moved south Nov. 1 led Civil War area topics have been created by by cavalry under Gen. Alfred Pleasonton. the folks at the Mosby Heritage Area. For Pleasonton’s command soon encountered more, call 540-678-6681 or www.visitmosConfederate horsemen led by Gen. J.E.B. byheritagearea.org. Stuart. They fought a three-day running Mt. Zion Historic Park, just east of battle from near Unison (north of modern Route 15 on U.S. Route 50 – Built in Route 50) toward Upperville. The Confed1851, this building and its grounds served erates managed to evade the trap. McClelas hospital and battlefield during the war. lan was relieved of command Nov. 5. Confederate partisan rangers under John Rector’s Crossroads, Trails sign just S. Mosby routed Federal pursuers here July south of Route 50 at Atoka Road (between 4, 1864. Currently under restoration. Civil Middleburg and Upperville) – ConfederWar historical marker on site. Open for ates under J.E.B. Stuart fought a delaying tours the fourth Sunday April–October action just west of here allowing the main 1–5 pm. www.nvrpa.org. body of Southern cavalry to concentrate at Ewell’s Chapel, Trails marker just west a strong position on the west side of Goose of US 15 on Route 615, 2.7 miles north of Creek Bridge. In the parlor of the stone Route 234, south of Route 50 – A Federal house seen from the intersection, John S. trap set for John S. Mosby June 22, 1863, Mosby first wrote orders for his famous failed to capture the Confederate partisan “Rangers.” and his rangers. A Union casualty of the Goose Creek Bridge – The circa 1810 little fight is buried near the chapel. bridge is now bypassed by Route 50. J.E.B. Aldie Mill Historic Park, just west of Stuart’s Confederate cavalry held off Union Route 15 on U.S. Route 50 – Cavalry fightcavalry and infantry here for awhile during ing swirled around this four-story structure the fighting June 21, 1863. Trails sign. June 17, 1863. Horsemen from both sides Upperville, Trails signs at both the east were screening their main armies as both and the west sides of town along Route 50. marched north toward what would become Look for the wayfinder signs — Stuart’s the Battle of Gettysburg. Fighting eventutroopers again fought hard in and around ally extended west along modern US 50 to this small town as they attacked, gave Upperville. The mill is open for tours weekground and counter-attacked along the ends from mid-April to mid-November. road June 21. The Confederate resistance Civil War Trails signs. 703-327-9777. proved successful in the end as Lee moved Middleburg – Lots of rural charm his army to Pennsylvania unseen. ◆ and clusters of historic buildings remain NEWS Soldier art exhibit at Manassas Museum Bristoe battlefield tour schedule set Art by Union artist/soldier Robert Sneden is on display at the Manassas Museum June –August. The exhibit, “Civil War Journey: The Maps and Sketches of Private Robert Sneden,” offers selections from the Virginia Historical Society Sneden collection. More info: manassasmuseum.org Guided tours of the Bristoe Station Battlefield Heritage Park are offered the second and fourth weekends of each month May–October. Tours leave on the hour 11 am–3 pm. The tours include two battles fought on the ground (1862 and 1863) plus cemeteries and other features in the park. They are free, but donations are encouraged. The park is located off Iron Brigade Unit Avenue in Bristow, south of Manassas. More info: 703-366-3049. Manassas bike tours scheduled Two-hour guided bicycle tours of historic sites in Manassas are offered through the Manassas Museum the second Saturday morning of each month March–November. Bring your own bike. Cost is $5. Details: www.manassasmuseum.org. Crab Orchard hosts May reenactment The Crab Orchard Museum in Tazewell hosts its annual Civil War reenactment and living history weekend May 16–18. The “Skirmish at Jeffersonville” weekend features battles Saturday and Sunday with living history camps and demonstrations all weekend. See craborchardmuseum.wordpress.com for details. Civil War/Emancipation Day in Richmond: April 12 Shuttle busses take visitors to more than 25 sites in the Richmond area during Civil War and Emancipation Day April 12. Open houses at the major Civil War sites and attractions feature living history, special tours, music and more. Details: civilwar.emancipationday.net. Culpeper Remembrance Days A weekend full of living history, special tours, music and more is on tap for several locations in Culpeper. For more information, see www.visitculpeperva.com. Fort Ward Museum & Historic Site Civil War Defenses of Washington MORE NORTHERN VIRGINIA INFORMATION Alexandria Arlington County Fairfax County City of Fairfax Fauquier County Loudoun County 800-388-9119www.Funside.com 800-296-7996 www.stayArlington.com 800-732-4732 www.visitFXVA.com 703-385-8414 www.fairfaxva.gov 800-820-1021 www.visitFauquier.com 800-752-6118 www.visitLoudoun.org • Preservedand PartiallyRestored Union Fort • MuseumExhibits PleasevisitFORT WARD soon! 4301W.BraddockRoad Alexandria,VA22304 703-746-4848,www.fortward.org • Reconstructed Officers’Hut • LivingHistory • SeasonalEvents 46 Guide to Virginia’s Civil War NORTHERN VIRGINIA: More to See Loudoun County General information: VisitLoudoun.travel See also Route 50 section. Ball’s Bluff Battlefield, park located west of the Route 15 bypass north of Leesburg (route takes you through a large housing development) – A tiny National Cemetery and a 173-acre park represent this small but significant battle fought Oct. 21, 1861. Federal troops tried to cross the Potomac River here but were overwhelmed. Pushed off the bluffs on the Virginia side, the Union soldiers made easy targets for Southern guns as they tried to recross the river. Bodies floated downstret to Washington. Lincoln’s good friend Edward Baker was killed in the battle. Audio tour available on the park website. Guided tours offered weekends at 11 am and 1 pm (April–October). In addition to the park, a Civil War Trails sign locates a concealed Confederate battery that controlled the approaches to Leesburg. The sign is located about 3/4 mile from the bypass on Edward’s Ferry Road. 703-737-7800 or www. nvrpa.org/ballsbluff.html. Morven Park, Trails sign located at the mansion, 17263 Southern Planter Lane – Confederate troops used the land surrounding the mansion Swan’s Castle as a training ground from the summer of 1861 to March 1862. The soldiers were stationed here and elsewhere in Leesburg to guard the many Potomac River fords in the area. They built log structures here this winter. More than 50 of those sites have been located on the property. See www.morvenpark.com or call 703-777-2414 about visiting. Mile Hill, at Morven Park, north of downtown Leesburg – A surprise attack led by Confederate Col. Thomas Munford on Sept. 2, 1862, routed Federal forces. Trails interpretation at Tutt Lane, 1/4 mile west of Route 15, north of Leesburg. Loudoun Museum, 16 Loudoun St., Leesburg – Exhibits cover history of this rapidly changing area. Much Civil War content including information about Ball’s Bluff and the county’s role in the no-man’s-land of the war. Civil War Trails sign. Open Friday and Saturday 10 am–5 pm, Sunday 1–5 pm. $3/adult. 703-777-7427. Guilford Signal Station, site in Claude Moore Park, Sterling, entrance on Cascades Parkway just south of Route 7 – The First Corps of the Union Army of the Potomac commanded by Gen. John Reynolds camped here June 18–24, 1863, keeping a Federal force between Washington and the Confederate army then known to be on the move. The armies collided a few days later at Gettysburg. A telegraph/flag signal station was located on high ground here with a commanding view of the Potomac River Valley. Information about the Civil War history is available at the visitor center. Trails interpretation near visitor center. The site of the signal station, its view still commanding, is a short hike away. Free. Visitor center open 9 am–5 pm daily. 571258-3700. Oatlands, south of Leesburg on Route 15 – Confederate troops preparing for another Union attack after the Battle of Ball’s Bluff in October 1861 concentrated on the grounds here. Gen. Nathan “Shanks” Evans made the house his headquarters. Civil War Trails interpretation. Ambush at Heaton’s Crossroads, Trails sign at the Loudoun Valley High School, 340 N. Maple Ave., Purcellville – Union cavalry attacked a column of Confederates under Gen. Jubal Early here July 16, 1864, after the Southerners ended their campaign into Maryland, which briefly threatened Washington DC. The attack captured or destroyed dozens of Confederate wagons, many of which were filled with booty from the campaign. The Loudoun Rangers, Trails sign in town square, Lovettsville – The Rangers, composed of fewer than 200 men from Waterford and Lovettsville, were the only organized body of Union troops raised in present-day Virginia. The Rangers clashed frequently with Confederate units with the Southerners mostly getting the upper hand. An estimated 40 Rangers died in Union service. Fauquier County and Warrenton For more: www.FauquierCivilWar.com. The following sites in Fauquier County are marked with Civil War Trails signs unless otherwise noted. Warrenton Cemetery, off Business Route 17 – A dramatic new memorial to more than 600 Confederate soldiers who died in nearby makeshift hospitals stands near the grave of Confederate raider John S. Mosby. Spilman-Mosby House, 173 Main St. – Constructed 1859–1861 by Judge Edward Spillman, this home was owned by the famed Confederate cavalryman John S. Mosby, who bought the house in 1875. When his wife died Mosby sold the home to another famous Confederate, Eppa Hunton. Old Jail Museum, Warrenton – Good Civil War displays, with some great Mosby items, are included in the excellent small museum. Jail dates to 1808. 10 am–4 pm Tuesday–Sunday. Free. Trails sign begins a walking tour of the town. 540-347-5525. Thoroughfare Gap – Major route through the Bull Run Mountains was the site of dramatic Civil War events including those leading up to the Second Battle of Manassas. Trails signs located on Route 55 between The Plains and Marshall. Sky Meadows State Park (Mount Bleak), on Route 17 – Beautiful vistas and the historic Mount Bleak, home of the Abner Settle family, are highlights in the park. Stonewall Jackson’s troops camped here before leaving for the Battle of First Manassas. Many Mosby associations. Trails sign at house. Park open 8 am–dusk. Check at Visitor Center about house tours. 540592-3556. Rappahannock Station, Business Route 29 just outside Remington – The Orange and Alexandria Railroad crossed the Rappahannock River here, making this place a strategic goal for both armies. Fighting Nov. 7, 1863, put the crossing under Union control for the rest of the war. Catlett’s Station, Catlett – J.E.B. Stuart’s cavalrymen attacked this Union supply depot Aug. 22, 1862, capturing, among other things, Federal commander John Pope’s cloak, hat and dispatch book. Intelligence gathered here helped Stonewall Jackson plan his Second Manassas campaign. Delaplane (Piedmont Station) – Stonewall Jackson’s troops boarded trains here July 19, 1861, to travel to Manassas. It was the first time in history railroads were used to move soldiers to an impending battle. Many Delaplane buildings date to that time. Buckland Races, Trails sign at the commuter parking lot near the junction of U.S. 17 and 29 – Trap sprung by Confederate Gen. J.E.B. Stuart’s cavalry on approaching Union counterparts Oct. 18–19, 1863, resulted in precipitous Federal withdrawal. Marshall (historic Salem) – Trails sign features John Singleton Mosby’s Confederate raiders who fought (Oct. 5, 1864) and finally disbanded (April 21, 1865) here. Stonewall Jackson marched through here and was cheered silently on his way to the Battle of Second Manassas. Rectortown, near intersection of Route 713 and 710, north of I-66 – Sprawling Union campground around the small railroad town where Federal commander Gen. George McClellan was relieved of command, replaced by Gen. Ambrose Burnside, Nov. 7, 1862. Town of The Plains – Located on the Manassas Gap Railroad and the Warrenton Turnpike, The Plains was a busy place during the war. Spies of all sorts reported on the movements of campaigning armies (including Second Manassas) as they marched through. Trails sign at intersection of Routes 55 and 626. Rappahannock County See CivilWarTraveler.com for a complete list of Rappahannock County sites. Corbin’s Crossroads, Trails sign at Amissville Baptist Church, 776 Viewtown Road, Amissville VA 20106 – Confederate Gen. J.E.B. Stuart fought a series of running cavalry battles while screening Robert. E. Lee’s infantry march through the Blue Ridge following the Battle of Antietam in September 1862. The last fight was here. Stuart escaped but got a “close shave” when a bullet clipped his moustache. Sister Caroline,Trails sign at footbridge, 12018 Lee Highway, Sperryville VA 22740 – Born a slave, “Sister” Caroline Terry lived most of her life in Rappahannock County. Her owner bought several buildings in town including the Sperryville Hotel. “Twlight of Slavery,” Trails sign in parking lot, intersection of US 211 and VA Route 729, Rappahannock VA 20106 – Slaves in this area fled to Union lines when the Federals occupied the region in the summer of 1862. Commanding Gen. Robert Milroy put the men to work in various capacities and created a construction company composed of the ex-slaves. A year later, a local slave became a cook for Union Gen. George A. Custer. Confederate Monument, Trails sign at the Rappahannock County Courthouse, 250 Gay St, Washington VA 22747 – More than 1,000 county men served in the Confederate army and at least 115 died during the war. This monument, sculpted by William Randolph Barbee, was erected in the early 20th century. “Kitty Payne,” Trails sign on the Rappahannock County Courthouse grounds, 250 Gay St., Washington VA 22747 – Born in 1816 to her owner, Samual Maddox, and one of his slaves, Katherine Payne had to deal with the physical and legal constraints of slavery her entire life. She married a freedman, was emancipated by her owner, yet she and her children had to struggle in the courts over their status. They eventually used the “Underground Railroad” to freedom in Gettysburg, Pa. ◆ in Prince William County & Manassas, Virginia Potomac River Blockade Boat Tours on eria Plantati Historic Lib Attic Tours Basement to Ben Lomond Civil War Encampment rs oration Tou Liberia Resteum admission) April 12 & 26, May 10, June 14 & 28, September 13 & 20, October 11 & 25 February 22 mus (included with nday at Noon) t 31 (Every Su us ug June 1 - A April 11-13 The Cavalry Comes to Brentsville April 26 Joseph McGill Slave Quarter Project at Ben Lomond Historic Site May 17 U.S. Colored Troops in Richmond-Petersburg Campaign Bus Tour June 14 Pringle House Hospital Weekend at Ben Lomond Historic Site July 19-20 Kettle Run Weekend at Bristoe Station Battlefield August 26-27 Camp Jones Luminary at Bristoe Station Battlefield September 13 Bristoe Station Anniversary Weekend October 11-12 www.pwcgov.org/historicpreservation Experience a place where the past speaks and the present beckons. Visit the sacred ground where the nation’s history was forged and enjoy the hospitality of quaint towns and attractions beyond the battlefields. www.manassasbullrun.com mier Sketches Exhibit Pre e Maps and Th : ey rn u Jo r Civil Wa obert Sneden of Private R31 ldier art. t ar so June 1 - Augus on of Civil W e largest collecti th m . fro ty cie ns So tio Selec istorical The Vir ginia H On loan from t 22 - 24 eekend Augus Civil War Wfree events for all ages and interests. Enjoy dozens of ember 13 t Liberia Dec Holidays a rg smuseum.o a s s a n a .m www anassas.org www.visitm The American Civil War Museum CONFEDERACY UNION FREEDOM T WO R IC H M ON D I N S T I T U T ION S The Museum of the Confederacy and the American Civil War Center are joining together to create a brand new museum: The American Civil War Museum. Headquartered at the historic Tredegar Iron Works site, the American Civil War Museum will tell a multitude of military, political and civilian stories of the Civil War, through dynamic and interactive exhibits, and engaging educational programs. There is much work to be done as we prepare for our opening in 2015-16. In the meantime, we encourage you to visit our museums in Richmond and Appomattox. You’ll find it all at The American Civil War Museum. MUSEUM & WHITE HOUSE OF THE CONFEDERACY Open Daily 10 am to 5 pm 1201 E. Clay Street, Richmond VA Toll free: 855-649-1861 www.moc.org Civil War Traveler ad.indd 1 AMERICAN CIVIL WAR CENTER AT HISTORIC TREDEGAR Open Daily 9 am to 5 pm 500 Tredegar Street, Richmond VA 804-780-1865 www.tredegar.org MUSEUM OF THE CONFEDERACYAPPOMATTOX Open Daily 10 am to 5 pm 159 Horseshoe Road, Appomattox VA Rte. 24 at Rte. 460 Toll free: 855-649-1861 www. moc.org 1/31/2014 4:31:25 PM