Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Chickamauga & Chattanooga NMP

With a reprieve from the forecasted rain, we drove to the Georgia border to the Chickamauga & Chattanooga National Military Park: the oldest and first national military park. It was dedicated in 1895 and is the sight of the second most deadly battle of the Civil War with 35,000 casualties!

chickamauga 01 chickamauga 16 some wild turkeys and deer wandering through the woods that were decimated by the battle

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It is a sobering experience to walk (and drive) where so many young men died. Col. John T. Wilder’s “Lightning Brigade” and their Spencer repeating rifles played a decisive role in the outcome of the battle. Armed with firearms that could get off 14 rounds per minutes compared with the 2-3 rounds of the conventional rifle, the death toll was staggering. In a article about the battle it was said, “The carnage caused by the rifles shocked even the Union men wielding them.  After the battle, Wilder wrote ‘It actually seemed a pity to kill men so.  They fell in heaps; and I had it in my heart to order the firing to cease, to end the awful sight.’ ”

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chickamauga 06chickamauga 07 chickamauga 10chickamauga 09“There are 705 commemorative features including monuments, markers, and tablets, spread across the units of the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park. Veterans began marking the battlefields in 1894 and the last commemorative feature was added in 1976.” nps.org

It seemed like everywhere you went in the park there was some kind of memorial…

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While I was there I also bought a book called Seen the Glory about a man named Mark Thrash. He was a former slave who was born in 1820 and died in 1943 (just a few days short of his 123rd birthday). He helped bury the dead at Chickamauga and said that, “you could walk a mile on dead bodies and never put your foot on the ground." He went on to work at the park until he was 101 years old! It was a fascinating story that I highly recommend!

 chickamauga 21 May we never forget the lives lost and the lessons learned from this chapter of American history…

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