Spotsylvania leads charge
Planning begins for Civil War's 150th anniversary
By RUSTY DENNEN
Free Lance-Star [Fredericksburg, Va.]
May 23, 2007
Camera-toting tourists converge on Civil War sites and cemeteries during Memorial Day weekends, but there's an even bigger draw on the horizon.
Beginning in 2011, the Fredericksburg area will be part of a national commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the conflict.
Since Virginia was an epicenter of the war, it's not surprising that planning for the 2011-2015 sesquicentennial has already begun here.
Spotsylvania County was the first jurisdiction in the state to form a planning committee for the historic milestone. The Board of Supervisors adopted a resolution May 8, creating the panel.
Along with having all or parts of four major battlefields, fast-growing Spotsylvania has been at the forefront of local land preservation efforts.
"It's not too early at all to start getting things ready," said Russ Smith, superintendent of Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park. He noted that this year's 400th anniversary of Jamestown took a decade to plan.
Smith is heading up the National Park Service's efforts. He met last week with counterparts from four other park service regions with Civil War sites.
He's using a plan written several years ago by John Hennessy, the local military parks' chief historian, "to lay out a framework for the anniversary," Smith said. "This is important to Virginia because there are 12 national parks with Civil War themes."
Here, the Wilderness, Chancellorsville, Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania Courthouse battlefields spread over 8,000 acres and are visited by more than 200,000 people every year.
Smith said there's much to be done to put the anniversary in perspective.
"What we're trying to do, first of all, is redefine what a Civil War site is. It's not just strategy and tactics," he said.
"We're using the motto: 'The Civil War is not just battles anymore.'"
More than 70 sites nationwide, he noted, have themes related to the war. Even locales such as the Martin Van Buren National Historical Site in New York could be mentioned because of the eighth president's stand on anti-slavery politics.
Some of the overall themes would include causes of the war, the military experience, ethnicity, race, industry and economics, the role of women and civilians, the ordeal of the border states, Reconstruction and reconciliation.
There's legislation in Congress to establish a national sesquicentennial commission, which would include funding for related projects.
Though it's still awaiting action, "We're going to forge ahead," Smith said.
Virginia is out front. Last year it became the first state to form a Sesquicentennial of the American Civil War Commission. Heading up that panel are local heavy hitters. House Speaker Bill Howell, R-Stafford, is chairman; and Senate Finance Committee Chairman John Chichester, R-Northumberland, is the vice chairman.
Area nonprofit groups such as the Civil War Preservation Trust and Central Virginia Battlefields Trust, will be involved.
"We're trying to help out on federal legislation," said CWPT spokesman Jim Campi.
Erik Nelson, secretary of CVBT, said, "We know about it and we're supportive."
With the relentless pace of development in Central Virginia, "there are only a couple years left to do any meaningful preservation work," Campi said. "You can safely say that anything not done" prior to the anniversary, "is not likely to be done."
The trust, with the help of its 70,000 membership and groups such as CVBT, last year purchased Slaughter Pen Farm, a crucial part of the southern end of the 1862 Battle of Fredericksburg.
Campi says localities such as Spotsylvania and Fredericksburg could be winners.
"This is going to be a big tourism generator. If it's anything like the centennial [in 1961] there will be a big surge of interest in the Civil War--people researching their ancestors and wanting to visit places where they fought or lived."
Campi said he's not surprised that Spotsylvania has taken an early interest.
"There's been a lot of growth and it's a great tourism location on [Interstate] 95. It doesn't get much better than that."
Eric
Planning begins for Civil War's 150th anniversary
By RUSTY DENNEN
Free Lance-Star [Fredericksburg, Va.]
May 23, 2007
Camera-toting tourists converge on Civil War sites and cemeteries during Memorial Day weekends, but there's an even bigger draw on the horizon.
Beginning in 2011, the Fredericksburg area will be part of a national commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the conflict.
Since Virginia was an epicenter of the war, it's not surprising that planning for the 2011-2015 sesquicentennial has already begun here.
Spotsylvania County was the first jurisdiction in the state to form a planning committee for the historic milestone. The Board of Supervisors adopted a resolution May 8, creating the panel.
Along with having all or parts of four major battlefields, fast-growing Spotsylvania has been at the forefront of local land preservation efforts.
"It's not too early at all to start getting things ready," said Russ Smith, superintendent of Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park. He noted that this year's 400th anniversary of Jamestown took a decade to plan.
Smith is heading up the National Park Service's efforts. He met last week with counterparts from four other park service regions with Civil War sites.
He's using a plan written several years ago by John Hennessy, the local military parks' chief historian, "to lay out a framework for the anniversary," Smith said. "This is important to Virginia because there are 12 national parks with Civil War themes."
Here, the Wilderness, Chancellorsville, Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania Courthouse battlefields spread over 8,000 acres and are visited by more than 200,000 people every year.
Smith said there's much to be done to put the anniversary in perspective.
"What we're trying to do, first of all, is redefine what a Civil War site is. It's not just strategy and tactics," he said.
"We're using the motto: 'The Civil War is not just battles anymore.'"
More than 70 sites nationwide, he noted, have themes related to the war. Even locales such as the Martin Van Buren National Historical Site in New York could be mentioned because of the eighth president's stand on anti-slavery politics.
Some of the overall themes would include causes of the war, the military experience, ethnicity, race, industry and economics, the role of women and civilians, the ordeal of the border states, Reconstruction and reconciliation.
There's legislation in Congress to establish a national sesquicentennial commission, which would include funding for related projects.
Though it's still awaiting action, "We're going to forge ahead," Smith said.
Virginia is out front. Last year it became the first state to form a Sesquicentennial of the American Civil War Commission. Heading up that panel are local heavy hitters. House Speaker Bill Howell, R-Stafford, is chairman; and Senate Finance Committee Chairman John Chichester, R-Northumberland, is the vice chairman.
Area nonprofit groups such as the Civil War Preservation Trust and Central Virginia Battlefields Trust, will be involved.
"We're trying to help out on federal legislation," said CWPT spokesman Jim Campi.
Erik Nelson, secretary of CVBT, said, "We know about it and we're supportive."
With the relentless pace of development in Central Virginia, "there are only a couple years left to do any meaningful preservation work," Campi said. "You can safely say that anything not done" prior to the anniversary, "is not likely to be done."
The trust, with the help of its 70,000 membership and groups such as CVBT, last year purchased Slaughter Pen Farm, a crucial part of the southern end of the 1862 Battle of Fredericksburg.
Campi says localities such as Spotsylvania and Fredericksburg could be winners.
"This is going to be a big tourism generator. If it's anything like the centennial [in 1961] there will be a big surge of interest in the Civil War--people researching their ancestors and wanting to visit places where they fought or lived."
Campi said he's not surprised that Spotsylvania has taken an early interest.
"There's been a lot of growth and it's a great tourism location on [Interstate] 95. It doesn't get much better than that."
Eric
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