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Publication: European Stars and Stripes Sunday, July 3, 1988

You are currently viewing page 13 of: European Stars and Stripes Sunday, July 3, 1988

   European Stars And Stripes (Newspaper) - July 3, 1988, Darmstadt, Hesse                                A photo a Nelson second from left at peace Light memorial who teaches nearby at army War College in Carlisle pa., guides tourists through Gettysburg Battle site. By David Morris associated press Obert Winn stands silently in the tall wet grass studying the gently sloping Field. This is ground Zero the Field where Confederate maj. Gen. George Pickett s charge was thwarted in the climactic action of the civil War s Battle of Gettysburg. More than 6,000 men ended up dead wounded or missing in this Field on july 3, 1863. With them historians say died the Confederate states of America s attempt to withdraw from the United states to form a separate nation. Although the combat took place 125 years ago Winn of Washington iii., can see it clearly even through the Haze of a Rainy Day. So can Gabor Britt a historian who lives on a nearby farm that was used As a civil War Hospital. Shut your eyes and you can see the whole thing he says. Think about it too much and the tears Well up in your  Winn can also see a lesson in the bloodshed of Pickett s charge and the two Days of fighting that preceded it. It s history that i Hope never repeats itself he says softly. Army capt. Phil Toms views the same Field thinking about what he would do if history does repeat. When i look at a piece of ground i try to think what i would do if i had to fight Here says the kentuckian who had an ancestor in the Confederate army. The Battlefield is a Good place to study Small unit leadership  Winn and Toms Are two of the More than 2 million visitors the National Park service expects to tour the South Central Pennsylvania Battlefield during an Observance of the 125th anniversary which officially began with a memorial Day Parade. Attendance was expected to Peak july 1, 2, and 3 the actual dates of the Battle and again nov. 19, the anniversary of president Abraham Lincoln s Gettysburg address at the opening of the military cemetery. Even without special events about 1a million tourists come each year to retrace the Steps of the Union and Confederate armies through the Boulder strewn Woods and Fields where they fought the Only major Battle on Northern soil. Residents and what the publisher of the town s newspaper Calls Purist Type historians Are up in arms about cars and congestion the proliferation of fast food restaurants and souvenir shops and an observation Tower that soars 307 feet above cemetery Ridge. While one faction worries about development and its effect on the historical site another group Battles a Park service plan to continue restoring the Battlefield and limit vehicle Access to Devil s Den where Confederate sharpshooters hid among the rocks and fired on Union troops holding Little round top. Bob Moore the Park service s Media director expects 40,000 visitors a Day at the beginning of july More than five times the town s population. Thousands More Are Likely to crowd into the cemetery in november. That crowd probably would have surprised a writer for the Harrisburg Patriot Union newspaper Back in 1863. About a week after Lincoln s speech the unknown scribe noted we pass Over the silly remarks of the president. For the credit of the nation we Are willing that the veil of oblivion shall be dropped Over them and that they shall be no More repeated or thought  in the speech itself Lincoln predicted the world will Little note nor Long remember what we say  but he added it can never forget what they did  Park service officials say the typical visitor stops for a few hours on a Day trip usually while on the Way to another vacation spot. Winn who enjoys Reading about Battles but does t consider himself a civil War Buff made a Quick Detour to the Battlefield on the Way to visit his daughter in Richmond. Many of the Short term visitors Are schoolchildren on Field trips. Indeed on some Spring Days the Fields where wave after wave of Confederate soldiers marched to their doom Are filled with endless columns of students whose primary interests seem to be when to eat and where to buy souvenirs. Other visitors including Donald Southwell stay for Days. They tour every Corner of the Park closely inspecting some of the 2,700 monuments and markers and visiting the museums and shops that crowd the roads. Many also make Side trips to the nearby Eisenhower farm where president Dwight d. Eisenhower lived when he was t in the White House. Serious visitors can spend an hour or More in one place solemnly surveying the rows of Stark Marble cubes marking the Graves of unknown soldiers in the cemetery or replaying the heroics of Joshua Chamberlain at Little round top Southwell s favorite spot. Chamberlain a College professor commanding a regiment of volunteers earned a Niche in history on the Rock strewn Hillside by ordering his men who had run out of ammunition to use bayonets to hold off Confederate fighters on the second Day of fighting. Southern forces could have surrounded the Union lines if Chamberlain s defense had failed. You could spend a couple weeks Here and still not see everything says Southwell a self professed civil War nut from grand rapids mich., As he packs maps and other souvenirs into the trunk of his car. Regardless of How Long they stay the visitors spend Money. A recent study by a graduate student at Shippensburg state University estimates tourists pump $42.7 million a year into the local Economy. Tourism is the second biggest Industry in surrounding Adams county behind agriculture. Since the Day after the Battle people have continued to come Here in great numbers Park official Moore says. You re Able to put your hand on history  As he guides a visitor along the starting Point of the Confederate s main attack Britt a professor who directs the civil War Institute at Gettysburg College says the civil War is the Central event of american mythology. It goes beyond history. It is brother against brother. It is War on a human  the Union Victory Here was the key event in the War because it ended a string of losses by the army of the Potomac and because it forced Gen. Robert e. Lee and the Confederate army to Retreat from Northern soil. A Southern Victory could have forced the North to give up some scholars say. Or it could have persuaded european governments to increase Aid to the Confederate cause. Britt an intense Man in his late 40s, became drawn to the civil War after he left Hungary As a teen in 1957. Studying the War he says is part of a love that i found for America. You adopt a country and you make an Effort to become part of it. How better to do it than to get involved in the american civil War the professor escorting some guests around the Field recounts Lee s message to the Confederate fighters who straggled Back from Pickett s failed attempt to break the Center of the Union line. It s All my fault the demoralized general is quoted As saying. When a guest who suggests the outcome might have been different if it. Gen. James Longstreet had moved his men into position faster on the second Day of the Battle Britt retorts he was the brightest general on this  col. Hal Nelson who teaches at the . Army War College in nearby Carlisle says Longstreet s action is just one of a number of questions military buffs continue to debate 125 years later. They also argue about Lee s decision to March on the Union Center. They wonder if the fighting could have ended sooner if on the first Day Confederate fighters had moved to the High ground of cemetery Ridge after cracking one flank of the Union line. Nelson says touring the Battlefield is Good training for officers because the civil War was the first modern War and the tactics used then Are still helpful in conventional warfare. Several times each year he brings students from the War College and officers from regional army bases at Gettysburg to debate tactics and study the terrain. Sunday july 3,1988 the stars and stripes Page 13  
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