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Middle Creek Battlefield In Kentucky Opens In July

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  • Middle Creek Battlefield In Kentucky Opens In July

    Middle Creek Battlefield In Kentucky Opens In July

    By Kathryn Jorgensen

    -
    July 2004 PRESTONBURG, Ky. — The battlefield where future president
    Col. James A. Garfield made his name and earned promotion to brigadier
    general will open to the public this month.

    Middle Creek National Battlefield is the privately owned 450-acre
    battlefield where Union and Confederate Kentucky troops fought in
    hand-to-hand combat during the Jan. 10, 1862, action that drove
    Confederates back to Virginia.
    The site's expected June opening was delayed after one of the worst
    floods in history struck the battlefield over Memorial Day weekend.

    Frank Fitzpatrick is founder and president of The Middle Creek
    National Battlefield Foundation Inc., the nonprofit formed in 1998
    when the Fitzpatrick family donated the farm that their family owned
    since 1798.

    The farm, which was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1992,
    "has had very little change in 142 years," says Fitzpatrick. He
    describes it as ridge and valley, hay fields and pasture. The house
    that sat in the middle of the farm during the battle is no longer there.

    High water isn't new to Middle Creek. It was high the night before the
    battle. Fitzpatrick recounts soldier reports about Union troops
    fording the chest-high creek and Garfield and his men being so wet and
    cold they slept leaning against trees. On Feb. 1, a few weeks after
    the battle, the area was under water from what Fitzpatrick calls a
    500-year flood.

    Middle Creek is the largest and most significant Civil War battlefield
    in eastern Kentucky, he says. It's within easy travel from major
    cities in Kentucky, West Virginia and Tennessee and is included in the
    Kentucky Civil War Trail.

    The foundation has been working for two years to get the site ready
    for visitors with walking trails and interpretive panels.

    Tourists will find a parking lot large enough to accommodate buses and
    trucks. Four large double-sided panels "explain almost in its entirety
    about the battle, why it took place, where it did and who the players
    were and what it meant to either side," says Fitzpatrick. The panels
    also tell about the foundation and its preservation and interpretation
    efforts.

    Two trails, Union and Confederate, offer full interpretation
    explaining battle events and what occurred near each panel. The
    Confederate Loop Trail is a little less than a quarter-mile, while the
    Union Loop Trail is a little over a quarter-mile long. Together they
    have seven interpretive markers, and two more will be set within the
    battlefield.

    Three interpretive signs in Prestonburg mark the Samuel May House,
    which was a Confederate recruiting post; May's gristmill, which Union
    troops raided the night before the battle; and the Garfield Place, a
    home that Garfield used as headquarters after the battle.

    The foundation welcomes private and public donations, grants and
    members, as well as volunteers, now busy doing cleanup. The foundation
    is raising funds for a 9,000-square-foot educational facility that
    will include a research library, multi-media theater, restrooms and
    exhibit area.

    Information is available at www.middlecreek.org.
    [FONT=Lucida Sans Unicode][SIZE=4]Matt Crouch[/SIZE][/FONT]

    [COLOR=Blue][I]All of the top achievers I know are life-long learners... Looking for new skills, insights, and ideas. If they're not learning, they're not growing... not moving toward excellence. [/I][/COLOR] [B]Denis Waitley [/B]
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