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  • Third Winchester and CWPT

    Civil War Preservation Trust News Release

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    September 18, 2009

    For more information, contact:
    Elizabeth Stern, SVBF, 540-327-7097
    Jim Campi, CWPT, 202-367-1861, ext. 7205

    Sen. Jim Webb Joins Preservationists to Celebrate Protection
    of Third Winchester Battlefield

    Ambitious Project Required Cooperative Efforts from SVBF,
    CWPT, the Commonwealth of Virginia, Frederick County and the
    Federal Government

    WINCHESTER, Va. -- Nearly a year after the announcement of an
    ambitious effort to protect a landscape that the National Park Service
    described as some of the "most sanguinary fields of the Civil
    War," representatives of the Shenandoah Valley Battlefields
    Foundation (SVBF) and Civil War Preservation Trust (CWPT) gathered
    today in Winchester, Va., with government officials and guests to
    celebrate the success of that undertaking.

    On August 7, 2009, SVBF officially closed on the 209-acre Huntsberry
    property, which was part of the bloodied Middle Field during the Third
    Battle of Winchester, fought on September 19, 1864. Fighting on
    this land was especially fierce -- the Union Army's 19th
    Corps suffered devastating losses, with 40 percent of its men and
    every one of its regimental commanders either killed or wounded.

    Speaking at today's event, U.S. Senator Jim Webb praised the
    cooperative nature of the project, citing the importance of Civil War
    battlefield preservation to Virginians and all Americans.

    "As someone with ancestors who fought on both sides of the
    American Civil War, the preservation of these battlefields has
    personal significance," said Senator Webb. "The need to
    protect our nation's battlefields is far too great for any one
    well-intentioned federal program. That's why the partnerships with
    groups like the Civil War Preservation Trust and the Shenandoah Valley
    Battlefields Foundation are so critical. They are in this fight for
    all the right reasons. This partnership truly serves as a model of
    bringing all stakeholders to the table to tackle pressing national
    issues."

    Webb was joined at the podium by Kathleen S. Kilpatrick,
    Virginia's Director of Historic Resources, Richard C. Shickle,
    chairman of the Frederick County Board of Supervisors, Paul Hawke,
    program chief of the American Battlefield Protection Program, SVBF
    chairman Dr. Irvin E. Hess, CWPT chairman emeritus Theodore Sedgwick
    and SVBF executive director W. Denman Zirkle. The involvement of
    each group was absolutely critical to the project's successful
    completion.

    Preservation Made Possible Through Partnership

    The $3.35 million purchase price was funded through a partnership
    between the Battlefields Foundation and the Civil War Preservation
    Trust, together with government grants from the federal, state and
    local levels.

    The federal Civil War Battlefield Preservation Program, funded by
    legislation championed by Senator Webb in Congress, issued a $1.23
    million matching grant toward the effort, and a $1 million Virginia
    Land Conservation Foundation grant to protect important natural and
    historic landscapes was applied to the project. Frederick County
    contributed $112,000 from its Historic and Open Space Preservation
    Fund, which is supported by proffers from a residential development in
    the Third Winchester battlefield study area. Remaining funds had
    to be raised by the two nonprofit organizations through private
    donations. Preservationists stressed that while they closed on
    the land last month, payments remain and fundraising efforts are
    ongoing.

    Welcoming guests to the event, Zirkle stressed that while the
    protection of this land has been a long-standing SVBF goal, the
    endeavor would not have been successful without the cooperation of the
    various organizations and agencies working in tandem.
    "Without tremendous advocates at all levels of government and
    stalwart friends in the preservation community, today's
    celebration would not have been possible," he said.

    The county's Shickle concurred, saying "Frederick County
    has many historic resources of national significance. We
    acknowledge that it is our duty to be thoughtful stewards of these
    resources, and the county is proud to have been a part of this
    preservation effort."

    Connecting Already Preserved Battlefield Areas

    Protection of this property at the heart of the Third Winchester
    battlefield is particularly significant since it links areas
    previously protected by the Battlefields Foundation and CWPT.
    Its addition to the existing preserved landscape creates a 567-acre
    battlefield park that stretches from Interstate 81 in the west to
    Millbrook High School in the east.

    "The landscape that has been preserved here at Third Winchester
    is irreplaceable," said Hawke, who administers the American
    Battlefield Preservation Program, an arm of the Park Service
    responsible for issuing federal matching grants for historic
    preservation. "This land retains enough of its historic
    character that the men who fought here almost exactly 145 years ago
    today would recognize its features. It is an unparalleled
    resource for understanding the battle's history."

    CWPT's Sedgwick was enthusiastic about the additional public
    interpretation opportunities that the newly preserved acreage
    provides. "Since 2007, when we opened a five-mile
    educational walking and biking trail on our adjacent property, the
    Third Winchester battlefield has become a tremendous resource for the
    surrounding community. I look forward to working cooperatively
    with our partners at the Battlefields Foundation to expand our
    understanding of this battlefield through study, and to create one
    seamless battlefield park."

    Dr. Hess, chairman of SVBF pointed out that the protection of the
    Huntsberry property went a long way toward completing the preservation
    puzzle at Third Winchester. "This land is the largest
    remaining undisturbed portion of the battlefield," he
    said. "Now that it is protected, Third Winchester is ready
    to become a genuine destination for heritage travelers eager to better
    understand American history."

    Virginia's Ongoing Efforts to Protect Civil War Battlefield
    Resources

    While acknowledging that the preservation ceremony was scheduled to
    coincide with the battle's 145th anniversary tomorrow,
    Kilpatrick also looked toward the future, when our nation will
    commemorate the sesquicentennial of the Civil War. "There
    is no time more appropriate to encourage the study of the American
    Civil War than during this significant period," she said.
    "And there is no place more appropriate to do so than on the
    battlefields themselves, which provide a deeper level of understanding
    than any book or museum exhibit can hope to. While today is
    indeed a celebration, it is also a reminder that our work is not
    complete. Other landscapes, no less hallowed than this one, still
    deserve our attention."

    Senator Webb agreed, declaring, "No state is richer in
    significant historic Civil War-era landmarks than Virginia, and I am
    proud of the work that the Commonwealth has undertaken to safeguard
    its heritage. Our time to protect these sites is limited. I will
    continue my efforts in Congress to ensure such historic landscapes are
    preserved for future generations."

    At Third Winchester, intense fighting raged across an area covering
    almost eight square miles. Of these nearly 5,000 acres of core
    battlefield, only 830 are permanently protected. Throughout the
    Shenandoah Valley, more than 16,000 acres of battlefield land are
    vulnerable to development, and similar situations exist elsewhere in
    Virginia and across the country.

    Preservation Fits with Landowner Legacy

    The land's previous owner, the Huntsberry family, has roots in
    the Shenandoah Valley stretching back centuries. The property
    was originally granted to ancestor Jacob Huntsbarger by Lord Fairfax
    in 1762. Civil War-era maps clearly show the Huntsberry House as
    a battlefield landmark, and the building's remains can sill be
    found on the property today.

    Bob Huntsberry, a co-manager of his great-grandfather C.E.
    Huntsberry's estate, which sold the property to preservationist
    interests, fondly remembered childhood summers spent on the
    land. "This is an important place for my family--and
    growing up, we knew that it was historically important, too," he
    said last year, when the preservation initiative was announced.
    "We felt pretty strongly that it needed to be preserved so we
    are very happy that it will end up in good hands and that people will
    someday be able to come and learn about what happened here."

    Third Battle of Winchester

    The Third Battle of Winchester, or Opequon, was a significant action
    of Union Maj. Gen. Philip Sheridan's devastating Shenandoah
    Campaign--which ultimately decimated the Valley's
    agricultural bounty when farms as far south as Staunton were put to
    the torch. More than 54,000 troops were engaged in the battle,
    including two future Presidents -- Rutherford B. Hayes and
    William McKinley.

    In the early morning hours of September 19, 1864, Sheridan's
    troops marched west from encampments around Berryville, ultimately
    stacking up in the Berryville Canyon along the modern-day alignment of
    eastbound Va. Route 7. The traffic jam created by slow-moving
    supply wagons delayed the deployment of the Federal army east of
    Winchester and foiled Sheridan's plan to surprise and wrest the
    city from Gen. Jubal Early's Confederates.

    As Early moved troops south from Stephenson's Depot to meet the
    Union attack, Sheridan sent portions of his army north of the
    Berryville Pike (Va. Route 7) to confront the southerners'
    movement. The ensuing fighting at First Woods, Middle Field and
    Second Woods along Redbud Run--including the Huntsberry
    property--was fierce, close, and devastating. Nearly 1,500
    men were killed or wounded in this area alone and one soldier
    remembered the area as "that basin of Hell."

    In the 1992 National Park Service Study of Civil War Sites in the
    Shenandoah Valley, historian David W. Lowe wrote, "Third
    Winchester was the largest and most desperately contested battle of
    the Civil War in the Shenandoah Valley, resulting in more than 9,000
    casualties. The Union 19th Corps sustained 40 percent casualties
    (2,074 men) and lost every regimental commander during its assaults on
    the Middle Field and Second Woods...The Middle Field ranks with
    some of the most sanguinary fields of the Civil War, witnessing more
    than 3,000 casualties."

    Future Benefits of Preservation

    Containing almost a half-mile of Redbud Run, a tributary of Opequon
    Creek and, in turn, the Potomac River, the property also has
    ecological significance. Protecting its sloping, forested banks
    will enhance water quality at the site and in downstream watersheds,
    including Chesapeake Bay.

    The newly preserved property will remain in agricultural use while
    archaeological and cultural resource studies are conducted.
    Eventually, the land will be interpreted and fully opened to
    visitors.

    --------------------------------
    View a map of the Huntsberry Property
    http://members.civilwar.org/site/R?i=yHCgOo9tld3kJS6hZQg1EQ..

    Office of Senator Jim Webb
    http://members.civilwar.org/site/R?i=bvhSKBUbRspqCmppUlnIAQ..

    Shenandoah Valley Battlefields Foundation
    http://members.civilwar.org/site/R?i=C-9LVoz-sihY8mg43tWXaw..

    American Battlefield Protection Program
    http://members.civilwar.org/site/R?i=sq9JA0GwuYJWvBxcy_63DA..

    Virginia Department of Historic Resources
    http://members.civilwar.org/site/R?i=2HReAaslPTlKIagM-wAL4g..

    Virginia Land Conservation Foundation
    http://members.civilwar.org/site/R?i=NmupEJHX0fwWVG6r_mU5wQ..

    1992 NPS study of the Third Battle of Winchester
    http://members.civilwar.org/site/R?i=v_vt2x1HhVPVpw-CoS1crg..
    --------------------------------

    About the Shenandoah Valley Battlefield Foundation (SVBF)
    Created by Congress in 1996, the Shenandoah Valley Battlefields
    National Historic District encompasses Augusta, Clarke, Frederick,
    Highland, Page, Rockingham, Shenandoah, and Warren counties in
    Virginia and the cities of Harrisonburg, Staunton, Waynesboro, and
    Winchester. As authorized by the U.S. Secretary of the Interior,
    the Shenandoah Valley Battlefields Foundation serves as the non-profit
    manager of the Shenandoah Valley Battlefields National Historic
    District, partnering with local, regional, and national organizations
    and governments to preserve the Valley's battlefields and
    interpret and promote the region's Civil War story. The
    Shenandoah Valley Battlefields website is located at
    http://members.civilwar.org/site/R?i=rmduAD9cVsUM25NhiO8-0Q.. .

    About the Civil War Preservation Trust (CWPT)
    With 55,000 members, CWPT is the largest nonprofit battlefield
    preservation organization in the United States. Its mission is
    to preserve our nation's remaining Civil War battlefields and to
    promote appreciation of these hallowed grounds through education and
    heritage tourism. Since 1987, the organization has helped save
    more than 28,000 acres of battlefield land, including nearly 1,000
    acres in historic Frederick County, Virginia. In 2007, CWPT
    opened a popular walking and biking trail on its 222-acre Third
    Winchester property. The CWPT website is located at
    http://members.civilwar.org/site/R?i=xGqpcLaGfOdxkNv8t2ZIjw.. .

    For information about making a tax-deductible donation to this
    project, please contact Tom Robinson at the Shenandoah Valley
    Battlefields Foundation at 540-740-4545 x204 or David Duncan of the
    Civil War Preservation Trust at 202-367-1861 ext. 202.

    ###
    Mike "Dusty" Chapman

    Member: CWT, CVBT, NTHP, MOC, KBA, Stonewall Jackson House, Mosby Heritage Foundation

    "I would have posted this on the preservation folder, but nobody reads that!" - Christopher Daley

    The AC was not started with the beginner in mind. - Jim Kindred

  • #2
    Re: Third Winchester and CWPT

    The CWPT keeps doing good work. I personally think that every member of this forum should be a member of the CWPT. They have done so much to purchase and protect ground. Private organizations like this can move so much faster than government when it comes to saving battlefield land.
    Michael Comer
    one of the moderator guys

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Third Winchester and CWPT

      Our cannon detachment was invited to the dedication and we thought that the dedication was very successful. Afterwards we were given a tour of the property. It's good to see that Winchester is getting preserved before it's completely gone, however, the Shenandoah Valley Battlefields Foundation still has a lot of work ahead of them.
      ________________
      John A. Miller
      John A. Miller, Director
      Monterey Pass Battlefield Park

      Comment

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