Friday, October 10, 2008

Gettysburg Semester: Winchester

It was another beautiful fall day as we headed out to the Shenandoah Valley to study the Valley Campaigns of 1862 and 1864. The Shenandoah was an important area in the Civil War since the Confederate Army could use it as an attack route on Harpers Ferry, the north, and Washington DC. Two campaigns were fought in the Valley: the campaign under Stonewall Jackson in 1862 was a Confederate victory and the one in 1864 under Jubal Early was a Confederate defeat.

We picked up Dennis Fry at Harpers Ferry and then continued on into the valley. The first three stops we made were on the side of the road: the first at the site of Mosby's Berryville Wagon Train Raid, the second at Beemer's Woods, and the third just before the Berryville Canyon. The battlefields of the Valley have not been well preserved. None of the sites are part of the National Parks System. Dennis Fry, with the Civil War Preservation Trust, worked hard to save pieces of the battles at Winchester and Cedar Creek. Dennis took us on a trail through the preserved part of the Battle of Third Winchester to give us a look at that battle which had occurred during the 1864 campaign. It was beautiful walking through the fields and woods around Red Bull Run, but the houses and highways visible around the property were a sad reminder of how much had not been preserved. We then drove to the location of the two battles of Kernstown (one in 1862 and one in 1864). The land around the Pritchard Farm and Sandy Ridge has been preserved by the Kernstown Battlefield Association, a local organization.

After a wonderful lunch at the historic Wayside Inn we headed out to Fisher's Hill to learn about the battle of Winchester in 1864. Dennis had also been part of the purchase and preservation of this site. We climbed the Confederate positions on Fisher's Hill to study the terrain and movements of both armies. There was a trail but we did a lot of "off-roading", and I have never seen so many crickets in my life! It was getting late so we made one final stop at Belle Grove Plantation to discuss the Battle of Cedar Creek. Part of our focus was turned towards the quarry that mars part of the landscape nearby.

As we made our way back to Harpers Ferry to drop off and say good-by to Dennis, I realized that this tour had educated us in more than just battles and troop movements. It was a reminder of how much history is threatened and how easily it can be lost.

Next time we start my favorite battlefield of all.......Gettysburg!

-Katie Logothetis

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