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Showing posts with label History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label History. Show all posts

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Vicksburg

Our first stop today was at the Vicksburg National Military Park and Cairo Museum.  So as I was saying yesterday, I love history!  Another passion I have is books!!  So when we entered the visitors center and I laid my eyes on all of those civil war history books...well, let's just say I spent some quality time in the gift/book store!  I did practice some restraint and chose only a few.
 Louisa May Alcott's Civil WarBeloved Bride: The Letters of Stonewall Jackson to His WifeMy Cave Life in Vicksburg (Civil War)
We watched an informative video of the siege and then proceeded outside to the canon demonstration.  The guide was very informative and several men and boys from the community participated.

 
Next was the 16-mile tour road which contains 1,330 monuments and markers and a National Cemetery.



The Shirley House, or the white house as union soldiers called it, is the only surviving wartime structure in the park.  It served as headquarters for the 45th Illinois Infantry.  
The Illinois Memorial




 
 



The Cairo, a Union Ironclad, was struck by a torpedo detonated by volunteers and sunk in 12 minutes with no casualties. 


Vicksburg National Cemetery...17,000 (13,000 are unknown) Union soldiers are buried here.
It was a very sobering drive through the cemetery...

Later we enjoyed sunset at the Vicksburg Riverfront Murals...



 A wonderful day...spent with the one my soul loves!


Friday, June 4, 2010

Anniversary Weekend Trip To Vicksburg!

Anyone who knows me at all knows that I love history...so we decided to make a trip over to Vicksburg for our anniversary trip!  We enjoyed a leisurely morning(something we rarely do) and then visited a few sights of interest.

We began our day at the Cedar Hill Cemetery and Soldiers Rest.  It is commonly known as City Cemetery and is the resting place for 5,000 confederate soldiers who died during the Siege of Vicksburg.




Church of the Holy Trinity (1869) was our next stop...unfortunately, we missed the tour!  It contains six Tiffany stained glass windows and is on the National Register of Historic Places.


We then headed south to visit the town of Port Gibson.  During The War Between the States, Port Gibson is best remembered as one of General Grant's first conquests after crossing the Mississippi River during the Vicksburg Campaign of 1863.   In a famous legend, Grant reportedly stated that the town was "too beautiful to burn." He left Port Gibson mostly unscathed on his northward trek to Vicksburg.

We drove on down the road to the Windsor Ruins, a four story mansion built in 1860.  It was used as a Union hospital and observation post during The War Between the States.  It was destroyed by fire in 1890 by a careless smoker.

Steel caps and wrought iron balusters topped and joined the orginal 29, 45 feet high Corinthian columns.  The mansion had 25 rooms and 25 fireplaces. 

Down the road was the Bethel Presbyterian Church (1824)

Next, we headed to Rosswood Plantation which was built in 1857 by David Shroder, architect of Windsor.
It took my breath away as we turned into the drive...

 We met the sweetest couple, the Hylanders, who own and operate a Bed and Breakfast in this Greek Revival mansion.  They make the plantation come to life with the historical facts about the people who lived there...and they have much to offer about their lives and travels as well!!  Very interesting and lovely folks...well worth the drive to meet them and see this beautiful plantation.


The original owner, Dr. Walter Ross Wade, kept a journal of his life on the plantation that describes life before and during the Civil War.  It is quite the love story for all of you romantics out there.  Dr. Wade was a widower with three children who had his eye on a lovely young widow on a nearby plantation with three children of her own...(now where have I heard a story like that before?) Mrs. Mabella Chamberlain.   He had the mansion built and the two married and were blessed with two more children.



A Union cannonball destroyed the kitchen and the mansion became a hospital for both sides...Mrs. Mabella helped round up the wounded and sent for a nearby doctor.

The mansion is furnished with many beautiful antiques which the Hylands have collected from their various travels...no pictures inside so I can't share the view from within...it was spectacular!

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