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Gettysburg National Military Park
News
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The News from Gettysburg
There are many exciting developments in the park given the progress of battlefield rehabilitation, success of the new museum and visitor center, summer events, ranger programs, and special events throughout the year. Check our news releases and Park Newspaper for current park happenings and updates.
Park News is a service of the Public Affairs Office of Gettysburg National Military Park, 1195 Baltimore Pike, Suite 100, Gettysburg, PA 17325. Questions or comments can be sent via e-mail to: Katie Lawhon, Management Assistant at Gettysburg National Military Park.
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| (National Park Service) | | The Museum & Visitor Center at Gettysburg. |
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The New Gettysburg Museum and Visitor Center
A partnership between the National Park Service and the Gettysburg Foundation, based on the 1999 General Management Plan for Gettysburg National Military Park, has resulted in the construction of a new Museum and Visitor Center to located on the Baltimore Pike in Cumberland Township, Adams County. The new building, which opened in April 2008, orients visitors to the park and Gettysburg, hosts a museum on the Civil War from beginning to dramatic end featuring items from the massive museum collection of Civil War and Gettysburg artifacts, and houses the fully restored Gettysburg Cyclorama. The $135 million dollar project has been funded through generous donations of corporations and individuals alike.
For additional information on the Gettysburg Foundation and the work this organization is undertaking at Gettysburg, visit the Foundation's web site at www.gettysburgfoundation.org.
For facts at a glance about the new museum and visitor center as well as other park features, check our "Facts at a Glance" page:
The New Visitor Experience at Gettysburg (pdf)
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| Artist rendering of the David Wills House in Gettysburg after its extensive rehabilitation project, completed in 2009. |
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The David Wills House Project
The historic David Wills House in downtown Gettysburg is now open to the public! Wills’ home was in the center of the immense clean-up process after the Battle of Gettysburg. In a second-floor bedroom, President Abraham Lincoln put the finishing touches on his Gettysburg Address - the speech transformed Gettysburg from a place of sorrow to the symbol of our nation's new birth of freedom.
The museum includes six galleries, including the restored office where David Wills coordinated post-battle recovery efforts and invited a President to deliver "a few appropriate remarks," and the famous Lincoln bedroom where the President finished revising the Gettysburg Address.
Main Street Gettysburg operates the Wills House museum in cooperation with the National Park Service. See the Park brochure for driving directions and parking, or take the downtown shuttle from the Gettysburg National Military Park Museum and Visitor Center, 1195 Baltimore, Gettysburg. There is an admission fee to the Wills House.
The David Wills House Facts and Figures (pdf)
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| (NPS) | | The Emmitsburg Road in 1948. |
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Battlefield Rehabilitation at Gettysburg
Battlefield rehabilitation is one of the major initiatives called for in Gettysburg National Military Park’s approved General Management Plan and Environmental Impact Statement. Rehabilitation of battlefield elements will follow a process that includes identification, treatment, and maintenance plans. The historical benefits of the project are obvious to many but there are clear environmental benefits as well. The rehabilitation project is based on a set of goals designed to better understand the battlefield landscape, provide a better learning environment for visitors, and to reestablish many of the natural elements long missing from the park landscape.
Many of the recent changes to the battlefield include removal of non-historic trees from southern portions of the park, Oak Hill, and Seminary Ridge. Historic orchards have been planted at several battlefield farms and historic fencing has returned to portions of the battlefield landscape. more...
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 Volunteer Opportunities at Gettysburg Volunteers needed to support Visitor Services, Park Watch Patrol, and Adopt a Position. more... | |  Battlefield Rehabilitation What is "Battlefield Rehabilitation" and how did the process begin at Gettysburg? more... | |  The New Visitor Experience at Gettysburg Facts at a glance about the new visitor experience at Gettysburg, June 2009. (pdf) more... | |  Park Weather Get the latest forecast for the Gettysburg area. more... | |
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Did You Know?
The statue of General Robert E. Lee atop the Virginia Monument at Gettysburg National Military Park was sculpted by F. William Sievers. A similar equestrian statue to Lee is located on Monument Avenue in Richmond, Virginia.
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Last Updated: October 12, 2009 at 09:08 EST |