Gettysburg National Military Park
The Oxford Companion to American Military History
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2000
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© The Oxford Companion to American Military History 2000, originally published by Oxford University Press 2000. (Hide copyright information)
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Gettysburg National Military Park. The nucleus for the park began shortly after the
Battle of Gettysburg, when the state‐sponsored Gettysburg Battlefield Memorial Association sought to raise private funds for a permanent Soldier's National Cemetery there. In October 1863, the association began exhuming 3,354 bodies of Union soldiers for permanent burial on a site at the edge of the battlefield. In November 1864, at the dedication ceremonies for the cemetery, President
Abraham Lincoln delivered what later became known as the
Gettysburg Address, a brief address in which he defined American democracy and sanctified the war for the Union.
In 1895, in order to forestall railroad lines being built through the battlefield, Congress established the Gettysburg National Military Park. The National Park Service succeeded the War Department in administering the site in 1933. In 1972, a controversial privately owned observation tower was constructed. Many preservationists and Civil War organizations continue to express alarm over the commercialization of parts of the battlefield not under federal control.
Despite its national symbolism, the battlefield retained strong regional and local ties. State governments and veterans’ groups, on both sides, erected commemorative statues, markers, and other memorials. For decades,
Civil War veterans gathered at Gettysburg for reunions, which by the 1890s often included ex‐Confederates. In recent years, reenactments have taken place outside the park boundaries, except for the motion picture
Gettysburg (1993), which was filmed inside the park.
[See also
Battlefields, Encampments, and Forts as Public Sites;
Cemeteries, Military Commemoration and Public Ritual.]
Bibliography
John S. Patterson , A Patriotic Landscape: Gettysburg, 1863–1913, Prospects, 7 (1982), pp. 315–33.
Edward Tabor Linenthal , Sacred Ground: Americans and Their Battlefields, 1991.
Garry Wills , Lincoln at Gettysburg, 1992.
G. Kurt Piehler
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News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 7/28/2008; 446 words
; ...Wyoming Department of State Parks and Cultural Resources...dedication of the new Jim Bridger Statue will be held at Fort Bridger State Historic...with the opening of the Fort Bridger Museum at 8...presentations. Admission to Fort Bridger State ...
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FORT BRIDGER HOSTS LINCOLN LECTURE
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; ...Wyoming Department of State Parks and Cultural Resources...news release Experience Fort Bridger State Historic Site during...m. Visitors will see Fort Bridger from a different...local volunteers. See the fort in a different light...
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Newspaper article from: Wyoming Tribune-Eagle; 1/11/2004; 700+ words
; ...and Teton national parks. Thus, these Midwesterners...drive all across the state twice in getting...the task of the state and the counties...trips to places like Fort Laramie, the Wyoming Territorial Park, the Frontier Prison, Curt Gowdy State Park, the Wind...trips to the ...
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Newspaper article from: Wyoming Tribune-Eagle; 5/15/1998; 700+ words
; ...scholarship to one of the state's community colleges...call 772-2595. FORT BRIDGER -- In observance of Memorial Day, Fort Bridger State Historic...by Wyoming State Parks & Historic Sites...VFW Post 7798, the Fort Bridger staff and...
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; ...of Camp Floyd, park staff in partnership with the Fort Douglas Museum...20 and 21 from Fort Bridger, Wyo., to Camp...new route from Fort Bridger to Camp...ride will tour Forts Bridger and Scott...War. Camp Floyd State Park is located...
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FOUR NATIONAL HISTORIC TRAILS
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; ...miles of trail in each state and the total miles...then southwest to Fort Bridger in the extreme southwestern...Wyo., southwest to Fort Bridger, and west...the U.S. National Park Service begins in...southwest through Fort Bridger, Wyo...
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Bridger, Fort
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BRIDGER, FORT BRIDGER, FORT, on Black's Fork, Uinta County...trading post and later a U.S. Army fort. In 1843, James Bridger and his partner...1890 finally abandoned it. It is now a state park. BIBLIOGRAPHY Janin, Hunt. Fort Bridger...
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Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
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Fort Bridger
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Fort Bridger see Fort Bridger State Park .
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Oregon Trail
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...route in the United States from the Missouri...the North Platte to Fort Laramie, while the...trail continued from Fort Laramie to the present...rejoined the route E of Fort Bridger. From Fort Bridger...Trail (see National Parks and Monuments , table...
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Ferdinand Vandiveer Hayden
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
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